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Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers

Year 2022, Volume: 35 Issue: 3, 147 - 154, 02.12.2022
https://doi.org/10.29136/mediterranean.1086107

Abstract

Organic farming is gaining global recognition in terms of the role it plays in providing safe and healthy food, income, and maintaining a sustainable environment. Despite these aspects , it faces constraints that, if identified, will play a vital role in its development and formulating policy for its sustainability. Creating an effective policy to improve organic farming necessitates identifying the influencing factors in organic farming method selection as well as barriers encountered. This study, therefore, examined the common types of organic maize farming, their determinants, and their challenges in Nigeria. Primary data collected from 480 respondents were analysed with descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression. The result revealed that organic manure, compost manure, biocontrol, and cover cropping were used by the farmers to enrich the soil. Farming experience, membership in a farm-based organization, farm distance, education, income, extension contacts, farm size, and cultural compatibility were the influencing factors of different organic farming systems used in maize production. Inadequate organic food accrediting agencies, inability to meet export demand, high cost and scarcity of organic seeds, lack of financial support, poor marketing system, inadequate supporting infrastructure, poor technical know-how, and pest infestation were the most common problems encountered in organic farming. To enhance participation in organic maize farming practices, there is a need to support organic farmers with financial support, accessible organic accreditation centres, training, educational support, and inputs.

References

  • Adamteya N, Musyokab MW, Zundelc C, Coboa JG, Karanjab E, Fiaboeb KKM, Muriukid A, Mucheru-Munae M, Vanlauwef B, Berseta E, Messmera MM, Gattingera A, Bhullara GS, Cadischg G, Fliessbacha A, Mädera P, Nigglia U, Foster D (2016) Productivity, profitability and partial nutrient balance in maize-based conventional and organic farming systems in Kenya. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 235: 61-79.
  • Ashari S, Mohamed ZA (2017) Factors determining organic farming adoption: international research results and lessons learned for Indonesia. Forum Penelitian Agro Ekonomi 35(1): 45-58.
  • Atoma NC, Anyoha PN, Chikairem UJ, Uyoyuo S (2020) Adoption of organic farming practices in the rural household of South-South, Nigeria - a case study. Organic Agriculture 10: 173-178.
  • Bello WB (2008) Problems and prospects of organic farming in developing countries. Ethiopian Journal of Environmental Studies and Management 1(1): 36-43.
  • Bui HTM, Nguyen HTT (2020) Factors influencing farmers’ decision to convert to organic tea cultivation in the mountainous areas of northern. Organic Agriculture 11: 51-61.
  • Choudhary VK, Kumar PS (2013) Maize production, economics and soil productivity under different organic sources of nutrients in the eastern Himalayan region, India. International Journal of Plant Production 7(2): 167-186.
  • Digal LN, Placencia SGP (2019) Factors affecting the adoption of organic rice farming: the case of farmers in M’lang, North Cotabato, Philippines. Organic Agriculture 9: 199-210.
  • Falola A, Mukaila R, Ahmed AO (2022a) Commercialization of Bambara nut production in Nigeria. Yuzuncu Yil University Journal of Agricultural Sciences 32(2): 351-361.
  • Falola A, Mukaila R, Abdulhamid KO (2022b) Informal finance: its drivers and contributions to farm investment among rural farmers in Northcentral Nigeria. Agricultural Finance Review 82(5): 942-959.
  • Fawole WO, Rahji MAY (2016) Determinants of productivity among farmers in Ondo State of Nigeria. Asian Journal of Agricultural Extension, Economics & Sociology 9(4): 1-7.
  • Knoema (2020) Maize production quantity 10,000 (thousand tonnes) in 2020. Available at https://knoema.com/atlas/Nigeria/topics/Agriculture/Crops-Production-Quantity-tonnes/Maize-production?mode=amp. Accessed 8 July 2021.
  • Läpple D (2010) Adoption and abandonment of organic farming: An empirical investigation of the Irish dry stock sector. Journal of Agricultural Economics 61: 697-714.
  • Läpple D, Kelley H (2013) Understanding the uptake of organic farming: Accounting for heterogeneities among Irish farmers. Ecology Economics 88: 11-19.
  • Liverpool-Tasie LSO, Omonona BT, Sanou A, Ogunleye WO (2017) Is increasing inorganic fertilizer use for maize production in SSA a profitable proposition? Evidence from Nigeria. Food Policy 67: 41-51.
  • Łuczka W, Kalinowski S (2020) Barriers to the Development of Organic Farming: A Polish Case Study. Agriculture 10: 536.
  • Mucheru-Muna M, Mugendi D, Pypers P, Mugwe J, Kung’u J, Vanlauwe B, Merckx R (2014) Enhancing maize productivity and profitability using organic inputs and mineral fertilizer in central Kenya small-hold farms. Experimental Agriculture 50(2): 250-269.
  • Muhammad S, Fathelrahman E, Ullah RUT (2016) The significance of consumers’ awareness about organic food products in the United Arab Emirates. Sustainability 833(8): 1-12.
  • Mukaila R, Falola A, Omotesho OA (2020) Food security status: its drivers and coping strategies among vegetable farming households. Cercetări Agronomice În Moldova 53(4): 414-425.
  • Mukaila R (2021) Nexus between real effective exchange rate misalignment and rubber export in Nigeria. Economic Journal of Emerging Markets 13(2): 123-133.
  • Mukaila R, Falola A, Egwue LO (2021) Income diversification and drivers of rural smallholder farmers’ income in Enugu State, Nigeria. Scientific Papers Series Management, Economic Engineering in Agriculture and Rural Development 21(3): 585-592.
  • Mukaila R, Falola A, Akanbi SO, Aboaba KO, Obetta AE (2022) Drivers of poverty among rural women in Nigeria: Implications for poverty alleviation and rural development. Journal of Rural and Community Development 17(1): 32-48.
  • Mwangi M, Kariuki M (2015) Factors determining adoption of new agricultural technology by smallholder farmers in developing countries. Journal of Economics and Sustainable Development 6(5): 208-216.
  • National Bureau of Statistics (2020) “Nigeria gross domestic product report (2019)”, available at: https://nigeriastat.gov.ng/elibrary?queries[search]5GDP. Accessed 8 July 2021.
  • Oyawole FP, Akerele D, Dipeolu AO (2016) Factors influencing willingness to pay for organic vegetables among civil servants in a developing country. International Journal of Vegetable Science 22(2): 121-128.
  • Sodjinou E, Glin LC, Nicolay G, Tovignan S, Hinvi J (2015) Socioeconomic determinants of organic cotton adoption in Benin, West Africa. Agricultural and Food Economics 3(12): 1-22.
  • Ullah A, Shah SNM, Ali A, Naz R, Mahar A, Kalhoro SA (2015) Factors affecting the adoption of organic farming in Peshawar-Pakistan. Agricultural Sciences 6: 587-593.
  • Yazdanpanah M, Moghadam MT, Zobeidi T, Turetta APD, Eufemia L, Sieber S (2022) What factors contribute to conversion to organic farming? Consideration of the Health Belief Model in relation to the uptake of organic farming by Iranian farmers. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 65(5): 907-929.
  • Yokouchi T, Saito K (2016) Factors affecting farmers’ adoption of NERICA upland rice varieties: the case of a seed-producing village in central Benin. Food Security 8(1): 197-209.

Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers

Year 2022, Volume: 35 Issue: 3, 147 - 154, 02.12.2022
https://doi.org/10.29136/mediterranean.1086107

Abstract

Organic farming is gaining global recognition in terms of the role it plays in providing safe and healthy food, income, and maintaining a sustainable environment. Despite these aspects , it faces constraints that, if identified, will play a vital role in its development and formulating policy for its sustainability. Creating an effective policy to improve organic farming necessitates identifying the influencing factors in organic farming method selection as well as barriers encountered. This study, therefore, examined the common types of organic maize farming, their determinants, and their challenges in Nigeria. Primary data collected from 480 respondents were analysed with descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression. The result revealed that organic manure, compost manure, biocontrol, and cover cropping were used by the farmers to enrich the soil. Farming experience, membership in a farm-based organization, farm distance, education, income, extension contacts, farm size, and cultural compatibility were the influencing factors of different organic farming systems used in maize production. Inadequate organic food accrediting agencies, inability to meet export demand, high cost and scarcity of organic seeds, lack of financial support, poor marketing system, inadequate supporting infrastructure, poor technical know-how, and pest infestation were the most common problems encountered in organic farming. To enhance participation in organic maize farming practices, there is a need to support organic farmers with financial support, accessible organic accreditation centres, training, educational support, and inputs.

References

  • Adamteya N, Musyokab MW, Zundelc C, Coboa JG, Karanjab E, Fiaboeb KKM, Muriukid A, Mucheru-Munae M, Vanlauwef B, Berseta E, Messmera MM, Gattingera A, Bhullara GS, Cadischg G, Fliessbacha A, Mädera P, Nigglia U, Foster D (2016) Productivity, profitability and partial nutrient balance in maize-based conventional and organic farming systems in Kenya. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment 235: 61-79.
  • Ashari S, Mohamed ZA (2017) Factors determining organic farming adoption: international research results and lessons learned for Indonesia. Forum Penelitian Agro Ekonomi 35(1): 45-58.
  • Atoma NC, Anyoha PN, Chikairem UJ, Uyoyuo S (2020) Adoption of organic farming practices in the rural household of South-South, Nigeria - a case study. Organic Agriculture 10: 173-178.
  • Bello WB (2008) Problems and prospects of organic farming in developing countries. Ethiopian Journal of Environmental Studies and Management 1(1): 36-43.
  • Bui HTM, Nguyen HTT (2020) Factors influencing farmers’ decision to convert to organic tea cultivation in the mountainous areas of northern. Organic Agriculture 11: 51-61.
  • Choudhary VK, Kumar PS (2013) Maize production, economics and soil productivity under different organic sources of nutrients in the eastern Himalayan region, India. International Journal of Plant Production 7(2): 167-186.
  • Digal LN, Placencia SGP (2019) Factors affecting the adoption of organic rice farming: the case of farmers in M’lang, North Cotabato, Philippines. Organic Agriculture 9: 199-210.
  • Falola A, Mukaila R, Ahmed AO (2022a) Commercialization of Bambara nut production in Nigeria. Yuzuncu Yil University Journal of Agricultural Sciences 32(2): 351-361.
  • Falola A, Mukaila R, Abdulhamid KO (2022b) Informal finance: its drivers and contributions to farm investment among rural farmers in Northcentral Nigeria. Agricultural Finance Review 82(5): 942-959.
  • Fawole WO, Rahji MAY (2016) Determinants of productivity among farmers in Ondo State of Nigeria. Asian Journal of Agricultural Extension, Economics & Sociology 9(4): 1-7.
  • Knoema (2020) Maize production quantity 10,000 (thousand tonnes) in 2020. Available at https://knoema.com/atlas/Nigeria/topics/Agriculture/Crops-Production-Quantity-tonnes/Maize-production?mode=amp. Accessed 8 July 2021.
  • Läpple D (2010) Adoption and abandonment of organic farming: An empirical investigation of the Irish dry stock sector. Journal of Agricultural Economics 61: 697-714.
  • Läpple D, Kelley H (2013) Understanding the uptake of organic farming: Accounting for heterogeneities among Irish farmers. Ecology Economics 88: 11-19.
  • Liverpool-Tasie LSO, Omonona BT, Sanou A, Ogunleye WO (2017) Is increasing inorganic fertilizer use for maize production in SSA a profitable proposition? Evidence from Nigeria. Food Policy 67: 41-51.
  • Łuczka W, Kalinowski S (2020) Barriers to the Development of Organic Farming: A Polish Case Study. Agriculture 10: 536.
  • Mucheru-Muna M, Mugendi D, Pypers P, Mugwe J, Kung’u J, Vanlauwe B, Merckx R (2014) Enhancing maize productivity and profitability using organic inputs and mineral fertilizer in central Kenya small-hold farms. Experimental Agriculture 50(2): 250-269.
  • Muhammad S, Fathelrahman E, Ullah RUT (2016) The significance of consumers’ awareness about organic food products in the United Arab Emirates. Sustainability 833(8): 1-12.
  • Mukaila R, Falola A, Omotesho OA (2020) Food security status: its drivers and coping strategies among vegetable farming households. Cercetări Agronomice În Moldova 53(4): 414-425.
  • Mukaila R (2021) Nexus between real effective exchange rate misalignment and rubber export in Nigeria. Economic Journal of Emerging Markets 13(2): 123-133.
  • Mukaila R, Falola A, Egwue LO (2021) Income diversification and drivers of rural smallholder farmers’ income in Enugu State, Nigeria. Scientific Papers Series Management, Economic Engineering in Agriculture and Rural Development 21(3): 585-592.
  • Mukaila R, Falola A, Akanbi SO, Aboaba KO, Obetta AE (2022) Drivers of poverty among rural women in Nigeria: Implications for poverty alleviation and rural development. Journal of Rural and Community Development 17(1): 32-48.
  • Mwangi M, Kariuki M (2015) Factors determining adoption of new agricultural technology by smallholder farmers in developing countries. Journal of Economics and Sustainable Development 6(5): 208-216.
  • National Bureau of Statistics (2020) “Nigeria gross domestic product report (2019)”, available at: https://nigeriastat.gov.ng/elibrary?queries[search]5GDP. Accessed 8 July 2021.
  • Oyawole FP, Akerele D, Dipeolu AO (2016) Factors influencing willingness to pay for organic vegetables among civil servants in a developing country. International Journal of Vegetable Science 22(2): 121-128.
  • Sodjinou E, Glin LC, Nicolay G, Tovignan S, Hinvi J (2015) Socioeconomic determinants of organic cotton adoption in Benin, West Africa. Agricultural and Food Economics 3(12): 1-22.
  • Ullah A, Shah SNM, Ali A, Naz R, Mahar A, Kalhoro SA (2015) Factors affecting the adoption of organic farming in Peshawar-Pakistan. Agricultural Sciences 6: 587-593.
  • Yazdanpanah M, Moghadam MT, Zobeidi T, Turetta APD, Eufemia L, Sieber S (2022) What factors contribute to conversion to organic farming? Consideration of the Health Belief Model in relation to the uptake of organic farming by Iranian farmers. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management 65(5): 907-929.
  • Yokouchi T, Saito K (2016) Factors affecting farmers’ adoption of NERICA upland rice varieties: the case of a seed-producing village in central Benin. Food Security 8(1): 197-209.
There are 28 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Agricultural Engineering
Journal Section Makaleler
Authors

Abraham Falola 0000-0002-5265-9355

Ridwan Mukaila 0000-0001-8584-0858

Publication Date December 2, 2022
Submission Date March 11, 2022
Published in Issue Year 2022 Volume: 35 Issue: 3

Cite

APA Falola, A., & Mukaila, R. (2022). Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences, 35(3), 147-154. https://doi.org/10.29136/mediterranean.1086107
AMA Falola A, Mukaila R. Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences. December 2022;35(3):147-154. doi:10.29136/mediterranean.1086107
Chicago Falola, Abraham, and Ridwan Mukaila. “Organic Maize Farming Practices in Nigeria: Drivers and Barriers”. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences 35, no. 3 (December 2022): 147-54. https://doi.org/10.29136/mediterranean.1086107.
EndNote Falola A, Mukaila R (December 1, 2022) Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences 35 3 147–154.
IEEE A. Falola and R. Mukaila, “Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers”, Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences, vol. 35, no. 3, pp. 147–154, 2022, doi: 10.29136/mediterranean.1086107.
ISNAD Falola, Abraham - Mukaila, Ridwan. “Organic Maize Farming Practices in Nigeria: Drivers and Barriers”. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences 35/3 (December 2022), 147-154. https://doi.org/10.29136/mediterranean.1086107.
JAMA Falola A, Mukaila R. Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences. 2022;35:147–154.
MLA Falola, Abraham and Ridwan Mukaila. “Organic Maize Farming Practices in Nigeria: Drivers and Barriers”. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences, vol. 35, no. 3, 2022, pp. 147-54, doi:10.29136/mediterranean.1086107.
Vancouver Falola A, Mukaila R. Organic maize farming practices in Nigeria: Drivers and barriers. Mediterranean Agricultural Sciences. 2022;35(3):147-54.

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