ABUJA — The newly established Federal Ministry of Livestock Development (FMLD) has unveiled an aggressive roadmap to transform Nigeria from a net importer of meat into a global powerhouse in the red meat market. During a 2026 budget defense session on February 20, Minister Idi Mukhtar Maiha revealed that Nigeria is currently missing out on an international red meat market valued at over N3.2 trillion ($2.1 billion) annually.

Despite possessing one of Africa’s largest livestock populations, the Minister shared a startling statistic: 65% of the livestock consumed in Nigeria is currently imported. The 2026 strategy aims to reverse this trend by commercializing the value chain and meeting the “paddock-to-plate” standards required for global export.

The Infrastructure of Export: Traceability & Health

To enter high-value markets like the EU or the Middle East, Nigeria must move beyond traditional grazing. The Minister identified three non-negotiable pillars for 2026:

  • National Livestock Identification & Traceability System (NLITS): A digital framework to track individual animals from birth to slaughter. This is critical for disease control and curbing cattle rustling.

  • Genetic Improvement: Embarking on a massive upgrade of indigenous breeds to increase beef yield and dairy output.

  • Modernized Abattoirs: Transitioning from local slaughter slabs to export-grade processing plants with integrated cold chain logistics.

The Funding Crisis: “Lip Service” to Diversification

A significant tension point during the defense was the Ministry’s lean budget. Since its creation in 2024, the FMLD has faced severe fiscal constraints:

  • Take-off Grant: Only N20 billion of the approved N75 billion was released in 2024.

  • 2025 Budget: The Ministry reported zero releases for the capital vote in 2025.

  • Legislative Backlash: Senators expressed “disgust” at the funding gaps, calling it a contradiction of President Tinubu’s “Renewed Hope” agenda for economic diversification.

The 2026 Action Plan

Beyond the budget, the Ministry is moving on several operational fronts:

  1. Brazil-Nigeria-UK Partnership: A triple-threat collaboration to boost livestock productivity through shared technology and breeding practices.

  2. Grazing Reserve Rehabilitation: Fixing service centers to reduce seasonal migration and minimize farmer-herder conflicts.

  3. Vaccine Regulation: Strengthening the supply chain for livestock vaccines to maintain a “disease-free” status for export.

“Our objective is to move from subsistence production to a structured commercial system… the livestock sector must transition from traditional practices to modern enterprise,” Minister Maiha stated.

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