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Pineapple Cultivation in Benue State – A Sectoral INSIGHT for Agricultural Growth and Economic Prosperity

1.Pineapple cultivation refers to the organised agricultural production of Ananas comosus, a tropical perennial fruit crop grown for fresh consumption and industrial processing (juice, concentrates, canned fruit, fibre, vinegar and wine). It thrives in warm climates, well-drained sandy loam soils, and requires moderate rainfall.

Global Relevance

Globally, pineapple is one of the most traded tropical fruits. Major producers include Costa Rica, the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, Brazil and India. Pineapple plays a critical role in:

Export earnings

Agro-processing industries

Rural employment

Value-added food systems.

The global pineapple market is valued in billions of dollars annually, driven by rising demand for fresh fruit, juice, and health-oriented food products.

Local Relevance.

Benue State, widely known as Nigeria’s “Food Basket”, possesses agro-ecological conditions highly suitable for pineapple cultivation. While crops such as yam, rice and cassava dominate public attention, pineapple remains under-exploited despite its:

High market value per hectare

Short production cycle

Strong demand in urban Nigerian markets

Significant export and processing potential

2. Geographical Mapping within Benue State

LGAs and Areas with Natural Advantage

Pineapple cultivation—mostly at smallholder level—is practised or has strong potential in the following areas:

1. Vandeikya LGA

Towns/Villages: Tsar, Mbadede, Mbakyaha

Advantages:Deep, well-drained loamy soils

Moderate rainfall

Strong farming culture

Proven success with fruit crops

2. Konshisha LGA

Towns/Villages: Tse-Agberagba, Mbatsen

Advantages:

Undulating terrain ideal for drainage

Suitable rainfall pattern

Proximity to local markets

3. Oju LGATowns/Villages: Oju, Ibilla border communities

Advantages:

Warm climate year-round

Sandy-loam soils

Experience in fruit and vegetable production

4. Obi LGA

Advantages:

Transition zone between forest and savannah

Increasing interest in horticultural crops

5. Ado LGA

Advantages:

Suitable agro-climatic conditions

Cross-border trade opportunities with Enugu State

Why These Areas Are Best Suited

Rainfall range of 1,200–1,800 mm annually

Average temperature of 25–30°C

Low incidence of waterlogging

Availability of arable land

Labour availability and farming heritage

3. Historical & Cultural Linkages

While pineapple is not indigenous to Benue, its cultivation dates back to pre-colonial and early post-colonial trade exchanges, when missionaries and traders introduced exotic crops.

Culturally:Pineapple is widely consumed during festivals and ceremonies

It is valued as a hospitality fruit

Traditionally grown in compound farms and mixed cropping systems

These informal cultivation practices helped embed pineapple into local diets but never evolved into large-scale commercial systems.

4. Current Scale & Economic Contribution

Scale of Production

Predominantly smallholder-based (0.25–2 hectares)

Largely rain-fed

Minimal use of improved suckers

Low mechanisation

Economic Contribution (Estimates)

Employment: Thousands of smallholder farmers and traders

Revenue: Hundreds of millions of naira annually (largely informal)

Markets: Makurdi, Otukpo, Gboko, Abuja, Enugu

Despite favourable conditions, Benue contributes less than 5% of Nigeria’s total pineapple output—far below its potential.

5. Barriers & Challenges

Key Constraints

Lack of Improved Planting Materials

Poor access to high-yielding, disease-resistant varieties

Weak Value Chain DevelopmentNo major pineapple processing plants

High post-harvest losses

Infrastructure Deficits

Poor rural roads

Lack of cold storage and aggregation centres

Limited Access to Finance

Farmers rely on personal savings

Minimal participation of commercial banks

Policy Neglect

Pineapple absent from priority crop programmes

Little extension focus

Market Structure Issues

Price volatility

Dominance of middlemen

6. Future Potential & Economic Prosperity

Projected Economic Impact with Strategic Investment

If pineapple cultivation were intentionally developed over 10,000 hectares across Benue:

Direct Jobs: 40,000–60,000

Indirect Jobs: 100,000+ (processing, transport, marketing)

Annual Revenue: ₦40–₦60 billion

Export Earnings: Significant, especially to ECOWAS markets

Comparative Insights

Cross River State: Fruit cluster initiatives increased farmer incomes by over 200%

Ghana: Pineapple exports generate hundreds of millions of dollars annually

Benue can replicate and surpass these outcomes given its land availability and labour base.

7. Actionable Recommendations

Short-Term (1–2 Years)

Declare pineapple a priority horticultural cropEstablish certified sucker multiplication centres

Strengthen agricultural extension services

Support farmer cooperatives and aggregation centres

Medium to Long-Term (3–10 Years)

Develop pineapple processing hubs (juice, concentrates, dried fruit)

Introduce public-private partnerships (PPPs)

Improve rural roads and cold chain infrastructure

Promote export certification and standards

Encourage youth agripreneurship

Priority Investment Areas

Research and improved varieties

Agro-processing infrastructure

Market access and branding

Irrigation and climate-smart practices

Conclusion

Pineapple cultivation represents a high-value, under-utilised agricultural opportunity for Benue State. With intentional policy direction, infrastructure investment and private sector participation, pineapple can evolve from subsistence farming into a major driver of rural income, employment and export diversification—further solidifying Benue’s status as Nigeria’s true food and agribusiness powerhouse.