Barbara Bako, Abuja.
In a strategic push to make Nigeria a top-tier supplier of premium beef, NIRSAL Plc, in collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development, has kicked off a Feedlot Management Training Program. An initiative aimed to equip livestock value chain players with the skills needed to benefit from a $2.5 billion FDI deal recently secured by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu with global meat industry leader, JBS.
NIRSAL In a statement on Tuesday said that the first cohort of the training program held in Abuja recently, comes at a critical moment when Nigeria is stepping into the spotlight as a global meat investment destination of choice.
The JBS partnership will see six modern meat processing plants built across the country—with two dedicated to beef, ushering in increased demand for premium feedstock from local producers.
Speaking at the opening session, Mr. Sa’ad Hamidu, Managing Director/CEO of NIRSAL Plc, laid out the program’s strategic intent.
He said, “This is not just another training; it is a targeted intervention aimed at creating bankable agribusinesses by improving feed formulation practices, reducing input waste, and optimizing livestock finishing cycles for increased market value. As it is, we are preparing Nigerian livestock producers to feed not just the nation, but the world. And this aligns directly with the Federal Government’s vision for an agriculturally empowered, export-ready nation.”
Amongst other accomplishments, the program targets the production of export-grade meat in Nigeria, while improving the productivity and profitability of the producers.
Though the $2.5 billion deal with JBS is the most notable in the series of investments bound for Nigeria’s livestock sub-sector, it is not the only one.
Local companies like ABIS Group are also making significant investments in the meat value chain, creating further demand for high-quality feedstock.
Read also:Nigeria eyes Cocoa processing, $25bn gas pipeline to Europe– VP Shettima
Participants in the first cohort of the training program were drawn from the Ministry of Livestock Development, the Agric Department of the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA), National Association of Cattle Dealers, Processors & Marketers of Nigeria (NACDPMAN), Amalgamated Union of Foodstuff and Cattle Dealers of Nigeria (AUFCDN), Maidoki Farms Ltd, and others.
The Director of Ranch and Pastoral Resources Development in the Ministry of Livestock Development, Shekamang Ayuba, himself a participant, praised the training as “eye-opening and apt”, urging its expansion nationwide.
Nigeria’s livestock sector, rich in potential but hampered by outdated practices, poor-quality feed, and limited financing, stands on the brink of genuine transformation.
NIRSAL’s intervention aims to unlock the full potential of the sub-sector by addressing structural gaps through a blend of Technical capacity-building, Risk-sharing incentives for lenders, End-to-end value chain support and Strategic public-private collaborations.






