Abia community leases 1040-hectare oil palm to Dufil Prima Foods

Medium_abia-community-
President-General, Chief Nwokoro (third from left), performing the ground-breaking ceremony; Mrs Ejekam, Dufil Prima Company Secretary/Legal Adviser, (third from right) and other community and company representatives at the ceremony at Item, Abia State
(Editor's note: De United Food Industries Limited  is a 49:49 joint venture between PT Indofood of Indonesia and Tolaram Africa Foods, which itself is a 50:50 joint venture between the Tolaram Group of Singapore and the multinational food giant Kellogg’s)

Guardian Nigeria | 7 January 2019

Abia community leases 1040-hectare oil palm to Dufil Prima Foods

By Gordi Udeaja
 
A 1040-hectare oil palm farm has been given by Amokwe and Okai villages of Item in Bende local government area to Dufil Prima Foods Plc to enable it source its raw materials.
 
Dufil Prima Foods Plc, manufacturer of Indomie Noodles and Power Oil, currently sources most of its palm raw materials abroad, hence this proposed project will reverse their importation.
 
The coming of this project is said to be timely following the time the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) reported directive to manufacturers using palm produce to explore available raw materials and establish their own plants for backward integration.
 
The Guardian gathered during the ground-breaking ceremony for the project on the last day of 2018 that both the palm farms and the factory would employ direct and indirect hundreds of workers in the villages.
 
According to Dufil Prima Foods Company Secretary, Mrs Nnenna Ejekam, who is a native of Item and played crucial role in attracting the project to her community, “there are three sides to the project namely acquiring the virgin land, the mill and leasing of existing palm trees from the communities. About 1,040 hectares of palm estates will be involved.”
 
She indicated that before the company’s own palm trees start fruiting, the company would be sourcing raw materials from the Item communities for use in the company’s oil mills.
 
Stressing the benefits of the project, the company secretary told Item people that by this project, seeds of prosperity were being sown in the era of technology. It would eliminate poverty, criminality, engage the youth gainfully and wealth would be generated.
 
In his remarks, the President-General of Item Development Association (IDA), Chief Kingsley Ogba Nwokoro, said that Item communities were elated with the location of the project, “hence our resolution to give it all the necessary support that can facilitate its take-off, completion and thereafter prosper as a business.”
 
While performing the formal ground-breaking, he said, “We love and welcome development and want more investors in our community.”
 
The choice of Item was, however, expected as historically the palm production and marketing was one of the major occupations of the people of Item.
 
“As far back as in the 1950s, we have developed skills in managing and promoting this precious resource and invested a great deal in it before the advent of crude oil.
 
“This palm produce business had produced notable Item produce merchants like late Chief Ugorji Eke, Elder Egesi Akwari and Chief Herbert Osoka became the foremost Director of Produce Inspection in the defunct Eastern Region of Nigeria. They formed and registered cooperative societies,” Comrade Ogbo Iheaka told The Guardian.
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