PZ-Wilmar joint venture (JV) project in oil palm business worth $650
million, which had acquired 26, 000 hectares of oil palm plantations in Cross
River State, is asking the Federal Government to propose a backward integration
policy in palm oil sector, as it did in cement and sugar where the country’s
annual production has jumped tremendously.
Tunde Oyelola, Vice Chairman, PZ-Wilmar, told Akinwunmi Adesina,
Minister of Agriculture, who visited the company’ oil palm plantations in
Calaro and Ibiae near Calabar on Saturday, that, with a backward integration
programme, the JV between the two international companies would aggressively
expand the nations palm oil production to 240,000 hectares of plantations,
employing over 250,000 within five to six years.
According to Santosh Pillei, Managing Director, PZ-Wilmar, their JV
project under a robust backward integration programme would be saving Nigeria
up to $300 million yearly in foreign exchange, and drastically reduce the
current huge crude palm oil (CPO) importation.
Pillei said, soon their joint agricultural business would generate
30,000 direct and indirect jobs in the country, when it completes planting of
the oil palm plantations by 2015, saying they had developed 2 million high
yielding oil palm seedlings, imported from Malaysia, with each palm tree having
capacity to produce 30 bunches of palm fruits, and quality palm oil volume.
Currently, the JV is employing 2,500 direct jobs in Cross River, where
hundreds of workers are engaged in planting and nursing oil palm seedlings in
plantations at Calaro, Ibiae, Eyop, Kwa Falls, and Oban.
In the same token, should the Federal Government pull through with the
palm oil backward integration programme, Nigeria’s palm oil production, which
is suffering from 350,000 metric tons deficit, despite a domestic consumption
of 1.3 million to 1.6 million tons, would climb tremendously in five to six
years and this in turn will add 250,000 jobs to the Recent Job vacancies in Nigeria
Already, the PZ-Wilmar JV of which $165 million has so far been
invested, led to the building of a 1000-ton state-of-the-art oil refinery in
Lagos, which produces the Mamador and Devon King’s brands of cooking oil.
The minister had visited parts of the PZ Wilmar 26,000 hectares of oil
palm plantations scattered in estates in the Cross River. It emerged that
Nigeria, for neglecting its oil palm production, which had earned it the
world’s largest producer in the 1960s, is currently missing out in the 50
million ton global palm oil demand, worth billions of dollars.
Pillei, while addressing the minister, said: “Our goal is to help
support the development of a sustainable, profitable and self-sufficient palm
oil industry in Nigeria.”
“We will invest a total of $650 million (to date - $165m invested)
into the development of sustainable palm oil in Nigeria. We have developed 26,
000 ha of palm oil plantations. We have built a state-of-the-art refinery in
Lagos State. We are a member of POFON and aim to help revitalise the palm oil
industry by reducing Nigeria’s reliance on imports.
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