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06/09/2025

GMO, seed system, and food security question in Nigeria

I have received many requests for information on GMO seeds and their safety, and I have watched several video clips that criticize GMOs with serious accusations.
I decided to update my previous articles on GMOs and food security. Over the past seven years, I have written multiple articles on this subject, and this will be the fifth in a series about GMOs, covering their origins, threats, biosafety, and the launch of Tela maize and Pod Bora cowpea, the first GMOs in Nigeria.
The goal of this article is not to promote or discredit GMOs but to present facts about the Nigerian seed system, including GMOs, challenges, and the way forward. What is GMO?
A Genetically Modified Organism is a byproduct of biotechnology. In medicine, biotechnology has existed for many centuries as a source of innovation. Hitherto, biotechnology was a non-issue or, like any other technological breakthrough, until it widened its scope to include the latest globally controversial product: a genetically modified organism, GMO, or transgenic organism.

This recent status has brought biotechnology to the forefront of contemporary limelight, accompanied by hype and sensationalism, and elevated it to a global footing on a multilateral agenda. The first stage of biotechnology is breeding crops or animals.
Traditionally, breeding plants and animals aims to tailor the plant or animal for a particular character or trait improvement. For example, a new crop variety might be bred for drought tolerance or disease resistance.
Traditional breeding involves using germplasm from a pool of ancestors with desirable traits of interest and crossing them to produce progeny that carry the heritability of both parents and exhibit favourable traits from both.
Since the progeny carries half of the desired and undesired hereditary characteristics from the parents, they will be passed on. It takes several breeding cycles (backcrossing) to eliminate the undesired traits and build on the desired traits.
This certainly takes time. The final new plant variety or breed of animal, after several years of selection, will have the desired characteristics.
Thanks to Genetic engineering, which offers the means to breed crops with sexual incompatibility barriers. It also enables the transfer of genes between entirely unrelated organisms, such as bacteria and plants.
This cutting–edge technology allows scientists to silence genes in viruses, bacteria, or pests that attack plants or animals, thereby retarding growth and productivity or even ultimately killing such organisms.
While this incredible innovation can advance the cause of human progress, it can potentially have adverse effects on humanity, prompting concern among people. Those manipulating a gene from one organism to another can also introduce a harmful gene for ulterior motives.
Nothing stops an insane person from using this novel technology as biological warfare to wipe out certain people. The world must protect itself from this murderous insanity, not by shying away from using the technology, but by adopting a foolproof strategy for the safe utilization of the technology. In line with this thinking, a biosafety international agreement called the “Cartagena Protocol” was signed by 173 United Nations member countries to address the safe transfer, handling, and use of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) and their products.
Thus, all GMO products in countries with a Biosafety law go through a series of stringent food toxicity and environmental safety tests that include assessment of homology to known allergens and toxins of the target genes, protein digestibility, acute oral gavage study toxicity (in mice), compositional analysis for unintended effects on carbohydrate, protein, and minerals, gene flow studies, and impact on non-target insects, etc., before they can be used commercially for food or feed.
Safety was the main reason for adopting the Cartagena Protocol. Nigeria, along with other countries that signed the protocol, was advised to implement it domestically to ensure the protection of its citizens. The government has a clear and unwavering duty to safeguard people from food poisoning, contamination, and adulteration.
Food must be protected because it could be used as a biological weapon. A biological weapon is more deadly than a nuclear one due to its deception, slow damage, and ability to spread from localized outbreaks to global pandemics, as demonstrated by the deadly COVID-19 in 2020. Based on the fear of biological warfare, many countries are oversensitive to the importation of biological materials into their countries.
Such countries implement stringent measures and conduct thorough scrutiny of both processed and unprocessed foods before they are imported. I recalled my unpleasant encounter with security personnel when I accidentally brought a piece of kilishi (dry meat) onto the plane that I couldn’t finish and then declared it at the security desk. It took three hours of questioning and scanning before I was allowed to go after the kilishi I bought at Shagalinku Restaurant in Abuja on the day I travelled was confiscated.
It is against this background that the question of the safety of GMO seeds released in Nigeria is posed, as the world is divided into two camps: those who are pro-GMOs and those who are against them. More than 30 countries have comprehensive bans on GMOs, including members of the European Union and African countries such as France, Germany, Austria, Italy, Algeria, Madagascar, and Zimbabwe. However, the banning or strict regulation of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) is a complex issue driven by a combination of scientific precaution, economic interests, political factors, and public sentiment.
It is important to recognize that most major international scientific organizations, including the WHO, FAO, and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, have concluded that currently available GM foods are just as safe to eat as their conventional counterparts. They have found no validated evidence indicating that GMOs pose unique health risks.
However, the debate persists over environmental impacts and socio-economic issues, which are more about management, regulation, and the chosen model of agriculture than about absolute safety. While the controversy over GMOs continues, in early 2019, Nigeria’s Federal Government approved the commercial release of the pod borer-resistant PBR Cowpea. Four years after the PBR Cowpea was introduced, Tela maize was also released, followed by GMO cotton. Are the GMOs released in Nigeria safe for consumption? How is the Nigerian seed system performing? What are the challenges faced by the seed system, and how can we ensure food security? To be continued next week.
Prof. MK Othman

10/08/2025

🌾 How to Calculate Fertilizer for Any Crop 🌾

Like many agricultural graduates from Ahmadu Bello University Zaria, I’ve had the priledged experience of learning from the best. When it comes to soil fertility, the Department of Soil Science and Agronomy have giants in that field and I still use the knowledge learned when calculating fertiliser requirements for different crops and for different soils 👍

📊 Smart Farming Begins with Smart Inputs

Fertilizer application isn’t guesswork—it's a science! To maximize yield while minimizing waste, you need to calculate the right dose based on:

✅ Crop nutrient requirement
✅ Target yield
✅ Soil test report
✅ Nutrient content in the fertilizer

🔍 Here’s the Simple Formula:

Required Fertilizer (kg/ha) = (Recommended Nutrient Dose / % Nutrient in Fertilizer) × 100

Let’s break it down with an example for Wheat (per hectare):

💡 Recommended Dose:
• Nitrogen (N): 120 kg
• Phosphorus (P₂O₅): 60 kg
• Potassium (K₂O): 40 kg

💼 Using:
• Urea (46% N)
• DAP (18% N, 46% P₂O₅)
• MOP (60% K₂O)

🔸 DAP for P₂O₅:
60 / 46 × 100 = 130 kg DAP
(NOTE: This gives 23.4 kg N too)

🔸 Urea for remaining N:
(120 - 23.4) / 46 × 100 = 209 kg Urea

🔸 MOP for K₂O:
40 / 60 × 100 = 67 kg MOP

📌 Final Fertilizer Requirement (per ha):
✔️ Urea: 209 kg
✔️ DAP: 130 kg
✔️ MOP: 67 kg

📢 Tips for Success:
🔁 Split Nitrogen into 2-3 applications
🌱 Integrate organic matter (FYM, compost)
🧪 Test soil every season
💧 Ensure proper irrigation for nutrient uptake ent

08/08/2025

Bismillahi Arrahamani Arraheem.

Alhamdulillah

RIDI ALKHAIRI, ko da mai son 'kantu"

Barkan mu da Juma'a

AI for Plant BreedingSpeed breeding, which involves growing crops under artificial light and temperature conditions, has...
03/06/2024

AI for Plant Breeding

Speed breeding, which involves growing crops under artificial light and temperature conditions, has become crucial for accelerating breeding cycles.

This method can incorporate marker-assisted selection and advanced gene-editing tools for early selection and manipulation of crops with superior agronomic traits. Scientists are utilizing next-generation AI to explore the complex biological and molecular mechanisms influencing plant functions under environmental conditions. Let's consider just a few researchers published by Indian 🇮🇳 scientists - this will be a nice way to celebrate our new series "AI for Plant Breeding".

Speed Breeding for Major Crops: Time Savings

A recent article from the research team of Lovely Professional University explains what is speed breeding on real life examples. The research focuses on speed breeding for wheat, barley, rice, canola, soybean, chickpea, lentil, pigeon pea, tomato, and pea. Summarizing the main thoughts of the research, the team discovered the following numerical insights, which can be enhanced with AI:

1- Speed breeding can achieve 4-6 generations per year in various crops compared to 1-2 generations per year using conventional methods .
2- Maintaining temperatures around 20-22°C for wheat and barley allows for up to eight generations per year.
3- Using a 10-hour photoperiod with specific light conditions can result in soybean plants maturing in 77 days, enabling five generations per year.
4- In studies with rice, a germination rate of 95-100% was achieved by optimizing seedling tray conditions and thinning processes.
5- Speed breeding coupled with genomic selection and other advanced techniques can reduce the breeding cycle of wheat from 3-7 years to just 1-2 years

Speed Breeding Concept: Where is AI Applied?

One more comprehensive overview of speed breeding is provided by the consortium of Indian agriscience research institutions. The team has reviewed the state of plant breeding for the following crop species:

Cereals
Legumes
Vegetables and Other Horticultural Crops
Oilseed Crops
Fibre

Advanced techniques like CRISPR-based gene editing, high-throughput phenotyping, and genomic selection can further optimize speed breeding protocols, enabling rapid development of crop varieties with desired traits. The use of AI-driven control systems to optimize environmental conditions will increase efficiency, allowing for simultaneous cultivation of multiple generations and diverse crops.

Plant breeding with AI vs. Conventional Breeding

Where exactly AI can be applicable in comparison with traditional plant breeding methods? The question is answered by the scientist Krishna Kumar Rai from Banaras Hindu University. In the paper published in February 2024 in Tropical Plant Biology, he compared conventional breeding techniques and speed breeding.

Conventional breeding technologies are limited, time-consuming, and labor-intensive, necessitating the acceleration of plant breeding cycles through AI to monitor plant responses to environmental changes in real-time. Next-generation AI facilitates the exploration of complex plant mechanisms and the analysis of OMICS datasets, essential for developing high-yield, adaptable crop plants.

A: Timeline comparison of speed breeding with other breeding techniques, photo credit: Chaudhary and Sandhu
B: Speed breeding coupled with modern breeding techniques, photo credit: Chaudhary and Sandhu
C: Demonstration of speed breeding in controlled environment (i) glasshouse (ii) and homemade low cost growth room (iii) applied on wheat by Watson et. al
D: Achievements of speed breeding: photo credit Chaudhary and Sandhu
E: Visual representation of different breeding methods for varietal development (each colour represents different steps of varietal development) : Black arrow - single generation, field condition- pink arrow single generations, speed breeding - photo credit: Imam et al
F: Important crop growth stages and different approach to reduce their duration (in light colour shown growth stages and in deep colour shown different approach to reduce growth stages duration. Photo credit: Imam et.al

Plant Nursery Tech is an emerging branch of artificial intelligence (AI), which is knocking on your nursery's door right...
01/06/2024

Plant Nursery Tech is an emerging branch of artificial intelligence (AI), which is knocking on your nursery's door right now. Integrating AI into plant nurseries offers significant advantages, from optimizing growing conditions and managing pests to enhancing breeding programs and improving supply chain efficiency. As AI technology continues to evolve, its applications in plant nurseries will expand, driving further advancements in horticulture.

1. Automated Monitoring and Control Systems First and foremost in the plant nurseries - environmental monitoring. AI-powered sensors can continuously monitor environmental parameters such as temperature, humidity, light intensity, and soil moisture. Machine learning algorithms analyze this data to optimize growing conditions, ensuring plants receive the ideal environment for growth. For example, Chinese 🇨🇳 researchers developed a highly precise predictive model for optimizing the greenhouse microclimate by integrating meteorological data through open-source APIs, employing a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network-based model optimized with the sparrow search algorithm, and enhancing the attention mechanism with Squeeze-and-Excitation (SE) Networks, resulting in significant improvements in predictive accuracy and seedling cultivation efficiency.

The second priority - for precise irrigation systems. Smart irrigation systems use AI to determine the precise water requirements of plants, reducing water wastage and preventing over- or under-watering. These systems can be integrated with weather forecasts to further refine irrigation schedules. For example, researchers from University of Tsukuba 🇯🇵 developed an IoT-based precision irrigation system for Momotaro tomato seedlings, comparing four soil moisture thresholds (5%, 8%, 12%, and 15%) and two irrigation methods (surface and subsurface drip irrigation). The 12% moisture threshold with subsurface drip irrigation significantly enhanced seedling growth, using 10% less water than surface drip irrigation. Additionally, in field tests, the subsurface drip system yielded 1243 g/plant compared to 1061 g/plant for surface drip irrigation. The study concluded that the LoRaWAN-based subsurface drip system is efficient and suitable for outdoor tomato production.

2. Pest and Disease Management
Pest and disease detection with IoT-sensors and smartphones is the direction where you need to look for the future.
The most popular way is to applying these technologies for early pest and disease detection. AI-based image recognition systems can identify early signs of pest infestations or diseases by analyzing plant images. These systems can detect subtle changes in leaf colour, texture, or shape that may indicate problems, allowing for timely interventions. Research team from CREA Ricerca 🇮🇹 published a review of digital-based detection trends and tools for treating fungal infections. Technologies were tested on rose plants for diseases like rust and powdery mildew using hyperspectral, multispectral, and thermal imaging, and fluorescence sensors. On practical level, enhancing these technologies with AI as well as conventional practices can improve disease management and reduce pesticide use.

A few figures of this research are provided below.

A: Schematic diagram of facility greenhouse and sensor deployment. Photo credit Shi etc al
B: 3-D design and overall set up for the indoor seed germination system. Photo credit: Sayer and Ahamed
C: Fungal disease detection through multi spectral imaging on rose. A and C are red-green-Blue (RGB) images while B and D are elaborations of the normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI). White arrows point a healthy leaf.

(Maryna kuzmenko PhD)

27/05/2024

There will be no better world, not unless we make it.
GOT.

"Schadenfreude"

25/05/2024

My Saturday Tribune column on the return of Sanusi as emir of Kano:

Sanusi Lamido and Kano’s Royal Ding-Dong
By Farooq A. Kperogi
Twitter:

Kano’s Muhammad Sanusi II has been rethroned the exact way he was initially enthroned and dethroned: in the melting pot of the politics of vengeance and recrimination.

And he just might be dethroned yet again by this, or another subsequent partisan government, given Sanusi’s infamous incapacity to rein in his tongue and to understand the wisdom in restraint and tact, which his position requires of him—and, of course, the juddering, hypocritical contradictions between what he says and what he does.

Recall that when he worked at the UBA, Sanusi had derided then Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso as a scorn-worthy “rural aristocrat” who “surrounds himself with provincials and places key posts in the hands of rural elite.” He characterized the Kwankwaso administration as “the classic comedy of the Village Headmaster in a village council.”

Kwankwaso was so incensed by Sanusi’s boorishness and Kano urban condescension that he threatened to pull out the Kano State Government’s money in UBA if Sanusi wasn’t fired from his job. Yet it was the same Kwankwaso who, for partisan, anti-Goodluck Jonathan political considerations, enthroned Sanusi as the emir of Kano even when he wasn’t the choice of the kingmakers.

And let’s not forget that Sanusi is a vicious, unashamed enemy of common people. His entire economic philosophy revolves around sheepishly advancing the annihilating policies of the IMF/World Bank, such as removal of every kind of subsidy for the poor while leaving intact the subsidies that sustain the sybaritic extravagance of indolent but overprotected elites like him.

Well, after destroying properties worth billions of naira and restoring Sanusi as emir all in the bid to get even with Ganduje, I hope the government will now get down to actually governing and improving the lives of the people who elected it.

The sense I get from people in Kano (many of whom are supporters of the government) is that governance has been on hold in Kano in the last one year in the service of retaliation. Not even the dirty water that Ganduje’s government caused to be distributed to homes is available now, Kano people tell me.

Anyway, when Abdullahi Ganduje dethroned Sanusi in March 2020, I wrote a column titled, “Ganduje is a Monster, But Sanusi Is Not a Victim.” On the occasion of his rethronement, I reproduce portions of it below:

Governor Abdullahi “Gandollar” Ganduje is no doubt a contemptibly philistine monster of avarice and debauchery who dethroned Sanusi Lamido Sanusi as Emir of Kano because he couldn’t stomach the former emir’s disapproval of the electoral fraud that brought him to power.

There is also no doubt that Sanusi’s unrelenting public censures of the rotten, if time-honored, cultural quiddities of the Muslim North discomfited many people who are invested in the status quo, and this became one of the convenient bases for his ouster.

But Sanusi isn’t nearly the victim he has been cracked up to be by his admirers and defenders. First, he rode to the Kano emirship in 2014 on the crest of a wave of emotions stirred by partisan politics and came down from it the same way.

Even though he wasn’t initially on the shortlist of Kano’s kingmakers, APC's Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso (who is now in PDP) made Sanusi emir in 2014 to spite PDP’s President Goodluck Jonathan and shield Sanusi from the consequences of his [false] unmasking of multi-billion-dollar corruption at the NNPC. Apart from his unceremonious removal as CBN governor for his [false] whistle blowing, he was going to face other untoward retributions from the Jonathan administration, but his appointment as emir put paid to it.

Now, Sanusi lost his emirship to the same partisan politics that got it for him in the first place. In an ironic twist, he was made emir by an APC government for making privileged [if false] revelations that disadvantaged a PDP government and was removed as an emir by an APC government for his overt and covert acts that could have benefited the PDP in 2019.

In other words, Sanusi’s emirship was molded in the crucible of partisan politics and was dissolved in it.

Nonetheless, Sanusi, given his intellectual sophistication and pretenses to being an advocate of egalitarianism, had no business being an emir. Monarchy is way past its sell-by date not just in Nigeria but everywhere. It’s an anachronistic, vestigial remnant of a primitive past that invests authority on people by mere accident of heredity. Any authority that is inherited and not earned, in my opinion, is beneath contempt.

Emirship isn’t only a primeval anomaly in a modern world, it is, in fact, un-Islamic. In Islam, leadership is derived from knowledge and the consensus of consultative assemblies of communities called the Shura, not from heredity.

Monarchies in the Muslim North, which have constituted themselves into parasitic, decadent drains on society, but which pretend to be Islamic, are grotesque perversions of the religion they purport to represent. Anyone, not least one who makes pious noises about equality, that is denied the unfair privileges of monarchy is no victim.

Most importantly, though, Sanusi embodies a jarring disconnect between high-minded ideals and lived reality. He rails against child marriage in public but married a teenager upon becoming an emir. When the late Pius Adesanmi called him out, he told him to “grow a brain.” He suddenly became the patron saint of conservative Muslim cultural values.

He expended considerable intellectual energies critiquing polygamy among poor Muslim men, but he is married to four wives. His defense, of course, would be that he can afford it, and poor Muslim men can’t. Fair enough. But transaction-oriented reformists lead by example.

Fidel Castro, for example, stopped smoking when he campaigned against it. It would be nice to say to poor, polygamous Muslim men, “Why are you, a poor man, married to four wives when Sanusi, a wealthy man and an emir, is married to just one wife?”

That would have had a much higher impact than his preachments. In spite of their moral failings, Buhari, Abba Kyari, and Mamman Daura would be much more effective campaigners against disabling polygamy by poor Muslim men than Sanusi can ever be because they are monogamists even when they can afford to marry four wives.

This is a legitimate critique since Sanusi has a choice to not call out poor Muslim men who marry more wives than they can afford since polygamy is animated by libidinal greed, which is insensitive to financial means.

Sanusi habitually fulminates against the enormous and inexorably escalating poverty in the north, but even though he is an immensely affluent person, he has not instituted any systematic mechanism to tackle the scourge of poverty in the region in his own little way.

Instead, he spends hundreds of billions of naira to decorate the emir’s palace, buy exotic horses, and luxuriate in opulent sartorial regality.

And, although, he exposed [what he thought was] humongous corruption during Goodluck Jonathan’s administration and dollar racketeering during Buhari’s regime, he is himself an indefensibly corrupt and profligate person. In two well-researched investigative pieces in 2017, Daily Nigeria’s Jaafar Jaafar chronicled Sanusi’s mind-boggling corruption as emir of Kano, which apparently didn’t abate until he was dethroned.

Sanusi was ostensibly a Marxist when he studied economics at ABU, which explains why he exhibits flashes of radicalism in his public oratory, but he is, in reality, an out-of-touch, unfeeling, feudal, neoliberal elitist who is contemptuous, and insensitive to the suffering, of poor people.

He supported Jonathan’s petrol price hike in 2012 and even wondered why poor people were protesting since they had no cars, and generators, according to him, were powered by diesel, not petrol!

When his attention was brought to the fact that only “subsidized” and privileged “big men” like him use diesel-powered generators, he backed down and apologized. But I found it remarkably telling that until 2012 Sanusi had no clue that the majority of Nigerians used petrol-powered generators to get electricity.

In a September 1, 2012, column titled, "Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s Unwanted 5000 Naira Notes," I noted that Sanusi was "one of the most insensitive, out-of-touch bureaucrats to ever walk Nigeria’s corridors of power."

Again, in my December 10, 2016, article titled, "Dangerous Fine Print in Emir Sanusi's Prescription for Buhari," I wrote: "If you are a poor or economically insecure middle-class person who is writhing in pain amid this economic downturn, don’t be deceived into thinking that Emir Sanusi is on your side. He is not. His disagreements with Buhari have nothing to do with you or your plight. If he has his way, you would be dead by now because the IMF/World Bank neoliberal theology he evangelizes has no care for poor, vulnerable people."

31/03/2024

1,800 bags of 50kg Dangote Urea
Location Kano
Price 35,500 (close of business 2morrow)
08037016266

08/03/2024

From Mahmud Ibrahim status

"If you are kind, people may accuse you of selfish ulterior motives, BE KIND ANYWAY.

What you spend years building someone could destroy overnight, BUILD ANYWAY.

The good you do today people will often forget tomorrow, DO GOOD ANYWAY.

Give the world the best you have and it may never be enough. GIVE THE WORLD THE BEST YOU'VE GOT ANYWAY.

You see, in the final analysis, it is between you and your God anyway"

Jumu'at Mubarak.

A. TIJJANI

Boss like no other
20/02/2024

Boss like no other

03/02/2024

"Stay hungry and stay foolish"
Steve Jobs

Address

Kano
234

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