The Federal Government has sealed a deal for a $500 million loan facility from the World Bank to accelerate growth across Nigeria’s agricultural value chains.
Head of information at the Ministry of Agriculture, Ezeaja Ikemefuna, disclosed this in a statement.
According to the statement, Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Senator Abubakar Kyari, made this known during a courtesy visit by a World Bank delegation led by the Head of the Agriculture Value Chains for Growth (AGROW Project), Hardwick Ichale, held recently at the ministry’s conference room in Abuja.
The minister said the loan would catalyse the growth of Nigeria’s agricultural ecosystem and help close long-standing gaps in smallholder farming by enhancing connectivity across the agricultural ecosystem.
Kyari also said the World Bank’s $14 billion, six-year Agri-Connect initiative aims to link farmers, processors, markets, and financial systems, ensuring stronger value chains, expanded agro-processing capacity, and improved rural livelihoods.
“The World Bank’s support will strengthen our agricultural base by improving connectivity across production, processing, and marketing systems. This is about turning smallholder farming into profitable, sustainable agribusiness,” Kyari said.
He noted that the initiative would support farmer aggregation, market linkages, and the integration of micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises into key value chains, while promoting accountability and transparency to maximise impact.
Kyari reaffirmed that the intervention aligns with President Tinubu’s priorities under the Renewed Hope Agenda, particularly in food security, job creation, and rural industrialisation.
He added that the Agri-Connect project would complement ongoing Federal Government programmes, including the Special Agro-industrial Processing Zones, to catalyse rural agro-industrial growth and expand opportunities for youth and women in agribusiness.
In his remarks, Ichale, said the Agriculture Value Chains for Growth Project would unlock Nigeria’s agribusiness potential by improving productivity, creating jobs, and promoting inclusivity.
“The key purpose is to enable farmers to see farming as a business,” Ichale said, adding that the project would prioritise key value chains such as rice, maize, soybean, and cassava.
The meeting reaffirmed both sides’ commitment to strengthening agricultural productivity and competitiveness, laying the foundation for sustainable food security and rural prosperity in Nigeria.






