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HomeUncategorizedNigeria Set to have Five New Cassava Varieties

Nigeria Set to have Five New Cassava Varieties

Five new cassava varieties developed with support from NextGen Cassava have been approved for release in Nigeria.

This was contained in a recent report by NextGen Cassava Breeding Project, an international partnership led by Cornell University.

According to the report published Thursday, these next generation varieties deliver promising options for smallholder farmers in resisting cassava diseases and marketing their crops to consumers.

Premium Times reports that these next generation varieties reportedly deliver promising options for smallholder farmers in resisting cassava diseases and marketing their crops to consumers.

It said the new varieties were named Game-Changer, Hope, Obasanjo-2, Baba-70 and Poundable.

“The five next generation varieties feature high yields and robust disease resistance important for farmers and characteristics sought by consumers,” the report said.

It noted that “Poundable” is the first fresh market variety released in Nigeria, while ‘Hope’ and ‘Baba-70’ have excellent gari and fufu quality to address the processed food market.

The report, however, said ‘Game-Changer’ and ‘Obasanjo-2’, have high and stable starch content, which is desired by industrial processors for flour, starch and ethanol.

“The varieties were approved December 17 by Nigeria’s National Variety Release Committee,” the report added.

Sabo Nanono, minister, Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD), was quoted to have said “The foundation of a solid crop value chain is based on best-bet varieties,”

He said, “As a country, we are excited that the new NextGen cassava varieties address the needs of the cassava industry and we look forward to providing millions of Nigerian cassava growers access to these varieties.”

The NextGen report highlights that the releases by the National Root Crops Research Institute (NRCRI) in collaboration with the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) are the first varieties released using the modernized breeding technologies supported by NextGen Cassava.

The report said the project is based in Cornell University’s Department of Global Development and implemented by IITA and NRCRI, along with the national programmes of Uganda and Tanzania.

Launched in 2012, it said, the project utilises new breeding tools to enhance the speed and efficiency of cassava breeding to empower smallholder growers across Africa.

The report stated that innovations from the use of genomic selection, the deployment of digital tools for all data collection, and a commitment to robust social science pushed the project to develop the five new varieties, which were tailored to specific needs and market niches in Nigeria, the world’s largest producer of cassava.

The NextGen Cassava project director, Chiedozie Egesi, a plant breeder, said cassava is the foundation of food security and agricultural development in Nigeria, and that the country’s health is inextricably tied to the health of its cassava.

“These five new varieties represent not only a culmination of years of collaborative work among our partners, but also new opportunities for cassava growers and processors in Nigeria,” he said.

He said the released varieties have been through years of rigorous testing and evaluation with farmers and processors, and that the breeding team prioritized input from farmers (particularly women) who play a critical role in the cassava value chain to drive breeding decisions and produce varieties for release.

In a similar manner, Ismail Rabbi, a molecular geneticist and plant breeder at IITA, who is also a member of the NextGen project, said “Cassava farmers and processors in Nigeria have long faced hurdles, whether from diseases like cassava mosaic disease or cassava crops that do not have the desired color or texture necessary for processing.”

He said these new varieties will serve growers whether they are growing cassava for food consumption or for processing.

The report said more than 500 million people in Africa eat cassava daily, and that unlike cereal crops such as wheat and maize, cassava is less vulnerable to the deleterious effects of climate change and is expected to play an important role in ensuring food security in Africa in the decades ahead.

It says fresh cassava plays a vital role in meeting consumers’ nutritional requirements, and its derived products are crucial as industrial raw material.

Peter Kulakow, a cassava breeder and NextGen Cassava team leader at IITA, said “Through our collaboration with NextGen Cassava, IITA is pleased to be able to bring these next generation varieties to the people of Nigeria.

“Improved cassava varieties enrich everyone in the cassava value chain and thus will have a great effect on livelihoods,” he said.

The report said the new varieties are expected to be available to farmers and processors in Nigeria soon through the newly formed early generation cassava seed companies, IITA, GoSeed and Umudike Seeds, which have proactively multiplied stems of the new varieties in anticipation of the official release.

It states that these companies will be the channels for early generation seed projection, marketing, and distribution of certified planting materials of the five NextGen Cassava varieties throughout Nigeria.

NextGen Cassava currently has improved varieties in the release pipeline in Uganda and Tanzania, according to the report.

“We are hopeful that this release in Nigeria will serve as a guide for future releases in other regions of Africa,” Mr Egesi said.

NextGen Cassava is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and United Kingdom’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, the report noted.