…warns against diverting the product.
Governor Babagana Zulum of Borno State, on Saturday, flagged off the sale of fertiliser and the distribution of free input support to vulnerable farmers for the 2025 wet farming season and Firgi farming.
Launching the exercise at the Fertiliser Blending Company, Farm Centre in Maiduguri, Zulum announced a 50% subsidy for all the 75 trucks to smallholder farmers, returnees in resettled communities, youth, women and the vulnerable groups across twenty-seven local government areas of the state.
“I have approved the sales of the fertilisers at a subsidised rate of 50 per cent, a strategic decision to make them affordable, accessible, and impactful. This decision is anchored in our broader agricultural policy under the Pillar Two of the 25-Year Development Plan and 10-Year Strategic Transformation Initiative of our administration”, Zulum stated.
“The first component of this event involves the subsidized sale of both Wet Blend and Dry Blend fertilizers. The Wet Blend fertilizer, being liquid-based, is less prone to misuse and will be distributed specifically in areas experiencing heightened security threats”.
“The Dry Blend fertilizer, which is granular and more storage-friendly, will be delivered to relatively secured locations. This distinction is designed not only for agronomic purposes but also for security management, ensuring fertilizers are not diverted for unauthorized or dangerous uses,” he added.
Governor Zulum emphasised that providing farmers with the fertiliser is essential to restoring livelihoods, enhancing soil fertility, increasing yields, reducing food prices, building household food security and reducing dependency on food importation.
“Let me remind us all that agriculture remains a pillar of peace and progress. And food security is national security. This administration will stop at nothing to empower our farmers, protect our communities and rebuild our local economy through the transformative power of agriculture,” the governor remarked.
Zulum has strongly warned against diverting the subsidised fertilisers, emphasising that doing this will have grave security risks. “We are acutely aware that fertilisers, particularly certain components, can be exploited for illegitimate and criminal uses. This is a threat we are addressing with the seriousness it deserves,”.
“Henceforth, all fertilizers will be strictly tracked by batch, source and destination. Distribution to sensitive areas will be restricted to wet blends only. Proxy purchases are prohibited. Every recipient must be verified. Community leaders and traditional institutions are strongly tasked with overseeing and ensuring transparency in their localities.”
“Fertilizer movement shall require relevant formal clearance and all agro-dealers must be registered, vetted and monitored. In the same vain, any individual or group caught diverting, hoarding, or illegally reselling these fertilizers will face the full wrath of the law. You are hereby directed to ensure that fertilizers are strictly used for farming, nothing more, nothing less. Your collaboration is vital to our collective mission for food security and public safety,” he announced.
The governor commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and development partners for their enormous support to the state government.
Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Engr. Bawu Musami expressed the commitment of the state government to growing its food, empowering its people, and rebuilding its economy through agriculture, noting that the support provided to 12,000 farmers has produced yields of over N3 billion in Baga and Monguno alone.
“Over 12,000 smallholder farmers, resettled households, women and youth received improved cowpea seeds, agrochemicals and a token for agronomical practices from the State Government, The results were exceptional. Cowpea Farmers in this two settlements produced an output valued at over ₦3.1 billion despite early cessation of rainfall,” Bawu declared.


