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Sweet potato cultivation surges in Plateau amid food scarcity

Sweet potato is among the leading root crops being cultivated in large quantities by farmers in Plateau State.

Some farmers told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday in Jos that the current food scarcity and economic realities had forced many of them to cultivate the crop in large quantities.

A correspondent of NAN, who visited some communities in the state, reports that many residents had also planted the crop on available spaces within their homes.

One of the farmers, Mr Jonah Mahanan, said the increasing demand for sweet potato had forced most farmers in the state to cultivate the crop in large quantities.

He attributed the surge in demand to the crop’s enormous health benefits and resistance to diseases.

“Sweet potatoes have become a more viable and profitable option for farmers, especially in this hardship; the demand is also on the high side, and farmers earn more cultivating it,” he said.

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Mrs Rhoda John, a farmer and primary school teacher, attributed the surge to the current economic realities in the country.

She argued that the inability of most Nigerians to afford yam and Irish potato had made sweet potato a suitable alternative.

Dr Shaibu Khaya of the National Root Crops Research Institute (NRCRI), Kuru, near Jos, maintained that aside from the health benefits, sweet potato is environmentally friendly, particularly with the current climate change being experienced.

NAN reports that recently, the Justice Development and Peace Caritas (JDPC) of the Catholic Archdiocese of Jos had inaugurated a project aimed at boosting sweet potato production in the state. (NAN)

Polycarp Auta
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