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FrieslandCampina WAMCO Nigeria PLC
Dairy Development Programme Sustainability from Grass to Glass
Cover: F1 Crossbreed in Genius Farm, Iseyin Oyo State
About the Dairy Development Programme
Since 2011, FrieslandCampina WAMCO has been working together with the Federal
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD) on its Dairy Development
Programme (DDP) to improve local sourcing of milk and ensure that our programmes are
aligned to national development goals.
The Dairy Development Programme is a distinctive model for applying the theory of
“creating shared value” with an array of community activities, encouraging local economic
development which is based on social needs and businesses' strengths in producing and
processing milk to meet the needs of consumers, farmers, local communities, the
governments, and our business.
The programme also aims to make dairy farming more attractive to the next generation of
farmers, thereby making the sector more sustainable. Through various exchange
programmes - e.g. Farmer2Farmer - we share knowledge and expertise, bringing
goldstandard Dutch farming practices to local communities. It is the second chapter of our
history and a new era for the dairy industry in Nigeria.
Who we are
We are Nigeria’s foremost
dairy company.
An affiliate of
Royal FrieslandCampina
the Netherlands
Over 60 years of
nourishing Nigerians with
quality dairy nutrition
Extensive socio- economic
foot print:
>15,000 employed directly
and indirectly
>1000 suppliers and
vendors
Nigeria’s preferred partner for
local milk sourcing and expert
knowledge transfer.
Networked >3500 farmers
950 women empowered
through DDP
>100,000 impacted through
the DDP
Iconic brands
committed to healthy
nutrition, active lifestyle
and the goodness of milk
message
Quality of our process is
guided from grass to
glass
Golden Quality Rules
In 2011, FrieslandCampina WAMCO signed a Memorandum of Understanding with
the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and went on to set up a pilot Milk Collection
Centre (MCC) in Fashola Community, Oyo State.
So far, we have made a huge success with the Dairy Development Programme.
Progress on DDP
Target 100,000 Avg. ltrs/day
collection by 2025
1 Milk Bulking Center
5 Milk Collection Centers
20 Milk Collection Points
3,500 dairy farmers currently on the DDP
Introduced small holder dairy farming
4 Dairy Cooperatives established
On-going cross
breeding programme
4 Locations - Oyo state
1 Location - Ogun state
1 Location - Osun state
70,000 ltrs/day
storage current capacity
52 Solar boreholes
< 500,000 CFU /mL
milk quality
6 Major Partners
- Nigerian Federal Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development
- Dutch Government (FDOV)
- IFDC- 2SCALE
- Sahel Capital
- Animal Care Nutrition
- National Animal Production Research Institute
Highlights:
First Dairy Farmers’ Day
Celebration 2017
DDP is a unique and essential part of FrieslandCampina WAMCO’s inclusive - business model
Impacts DDP communities
•Better nutrition & improved food security
•A better living for farmers
•More sustainable dairy farming
Our unique business model
• Producing local dairy products
• Sharing Dutch dairy expertise to optimize the dairy chain in Nigeria
Sustains long term business relations
for FrieslandCampina WAMCO
•
Communities are empowered to provide solutions to everyday challenges
•More local content for Frieslandcampina WAMCO
Improving local economy
•
Farmer2Farmer programme (Expert Advice)
Knowledge partnerships
A variety of tools to develop local dairy farming
Training
Exhibitions
Infrastructure construction Field trips to the Netherlands
Engagement Engagement
Milk Collection Centers Established
On-going milk collection points
in key communities across Oyo
- 20 milk collection points
- 1.5 tons capacity cooling tank/point
- Boreholes
Iseyin
Est. April 2013
- Milk collection centre
- Milk bulking centre
- 22 tons capacity cooling tanks
- Borehole
- 745 farmers networked
- 2,648 litre/day
Saki
Est. June 2017
- Milk collection centre
- 12 tons capacity cooling tanks
- Borehole
- Water troughs for cattle
- Feeding troughs for cattle
- 491 farmers networked
- 2,914 litre/day
- Milk collection centre
- 12 tons capacity cooling tanks
- Borehole
- Earth dam
- Water troughs for cattle
- 752 farmers networked
- 5,688 litre/day
Alaga
Est. June 2012
- Milk collection centre
- 12 tons capacity cooling tanks
- Solar powered facility
- Borehole
- Water troughs for cattle
- 763 farmers networked
- 5,979 litre/day
Fashola
Est. November 2011
- Milk collection centre
- 12 tons capacity cooling tanks
- Solar powered facility
- Borehole
- 749 farmers networked
- 9,816 litre/day
Maya
Est. April 2013
Alaga Youth Dairy Cooperative: FDOV Dairy Cooperative:
Membership – 20 (16 young men and 4 young women)
Registered with Oyo State Government Cooperative department
Banker- First Bank Nigeria Plc
Operates Smallholder dairyfarms with crossbreed cows
4 master dairy farms
16 Commercial dairy farms
Pasture development
Currently supplies raw milk individually to collection centers
Osomo Dairy Cooperative:
Membership – 85 (35 young men and 50 young women)
Registered with Iseyin LGA
Banker- Union Bank Plc
Operates Smallholder dairy farm with crossbreeds
Pasture development
Currently supplies over 200 litres daily to Alaga MCC
Established Dairy CooperativesFashola Dairy Cooperative:
Membership – 49 (22 young
men and 27 young women)
Registered with Atiba LGA
Banker- Union Bank Plc
Operates Smallholder dairy
farm with crossbreed cows
Pasture development
Currently supplies over 100 litres daily to Fasola MCC
Membership -180 (120 young women and 60 young men)
Registered with Itesiwaju LGA and Oyo State Government Cooperative department
Banker- Ipapo Microfinance bank (affiliated to First Bank Nigeria Plc)
Operates Smallholder dairyfarms with crossbreed cows
Pasture development
Currently supplies over500 litres daily to Alaga MCC
Commercial Dairy Farms (16)
Milk Collection Centers (5)
Master Farms (4)
Our Footprint
Farm on-going Programmes
- Animal health &
welfare
- Feed & pasture
development
- Farm
socioeconomics
- Farm milk hygiene
- Environment
sustainability
Good Dairy
Farming Practices
- Farmer2farmer
- Cooperative
development
- Access to finance
& inputs
- Capacity building
- Crossbreeding/
Artificial
insemination
Extension
Services
- Food safety
- Farm safety
- Farm quality
control
Quality Safety
Road Map
- Entrepreneurship
skills development
- Milkubator
approach
- Transformation to
small holders
Women & Youth
empowerment
Daily Milk Output (ltrs)
Product Development
Required factory under construction
in Lagos to be commissioned in
Q4, 2019
Product development of Peak Yoghurt
using local raw milk
2011
400
27,000
2019
100.000
2025
Actual
Projected
Upgraded cooling tanks & food grade milk cans
Insulated milk trucks of varying capacities
Artificial insemination schemeDairy Cooperative Pilot scheme farms
FDOV farm equipment
Pasture development scheme
Infrastructure
Critical Enablers for Success
Crossbreeding centers
Crossbreedingprogrammes
Pasture Development
Land and improved
seedling
Sustainable funding
Long-term funding for
DDP programmes
Federal Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural
Development
Federal Ministry of
Finance
Federal Ministry of
Trade and Investment
Central Bank of Nigeria
National Office for
Technology Acquisition
and Promotion
Strong partnerships
Road network
Road Infrastructure
A renewed winning concept to achieve more impact
Women and youth empowerment
Resulting in
• Economic empowerment of young and female farmers
• Increased voice and agency for young and female farmers
• A more attractive sector for young people
DDP adds value to our local and global business by leveraging 140+ years of Dutch dairy excellence to realize a better living for local farmers in selected countries. Indoing so we make a contribution to SDG’s 1, 2, 5, 8, 12 and 17
FrieslandCampina WAMCO’s DDP has strongly
demonstrated that SDGs can be achieved only when
the process is genuinely inclusive. Together, with our
partners, we have empowered traditional pastoralists
with modern animal husbandry methods, connected
them to a guaranteed market with fair prices; and
ensured that everyone in the community
participates in problem-solving.
DDP has improved food security and nutrition and
hugely improved the livelihoods of female local dairy
farmers; created more resilient rural communities,
fewer conflicts between crop farmers and
pastoralists, and a brighter future for young people in
small-scale agriculture.
The DDP emphasizes inclusion: the formal and
informal dairy sectors, public and private sector
partners, join hands to find new solutions for old
challenges. It places special emphasis on women,
recognizing their role in dairy farming and the barriers
they face.
So far, 950 women have been up-skilled through
training, enterpreneurship and skill acquisition
programme.
950 female dairy
farmers across 90 communities up-skilled through training
Improved ruralcommunities
Resulting in
• Stronger cooperatives
• More economically viable rural communities
• Improved access to basic needs e.g. water, sanitation and education
Improvedmilk quality & productivity
Resulting in
• Better nutrition for Nigeria
• Increased food security
• A better living for farmers
Sustainability
- Guaranteed market for raw milk
- Going green with collection centres
- Support Dairy cooperatives
- Women empowerment
- Entrepreneurship skills
- Access to Finance
- Small holder farmers
- Linkages with universities
Next Steps
- Expansion & development
of collection network
- Partner FMARD to set up
dairy zones
- Establish Premium
Cooperatives
- Dairy Village formation
- Infrastructure upgrade
throughout the value chain
It is good to be able to build on the experience of a
leading dairy enterprise such as FrieslandCampina
WAMCO. Thanks to the Dairy Development
Programme; I look forward to a bright future for the
dairy farmers in Nigeria…-Moyosore Olatunde Rafiu Owner, Genius Farm, Iseyin
A better future for Nigerian Dairy Farmers
www.frieslandcampina.com.ng