Oyinlola Awofisayo September 15, 2021 3 minutes, 15 seconds
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Yemisi Iranloye is a Nigerian lady that currently runs a cassava processing outfit that is worth billions of naira at the moment The lady first relocated to a farm in Oyo from Lagos where she started out by growing cassava on a land What initially began as small cassava cultivation with a few farmers blew into a large-scale processing business that has Nigerian breweries and Nestle as clients.
A Nigerian lady Yemisi Iranloye left Lagos and relocated to a farm in Oyo state to pursue her goal of farming cassava for industrial purpose with a network of farmers.
How We Made it Africa reports that the lady had fallen in love with the cassava crop during her 10-year stint with Ekha Agro Processing Ltd - an outfit that processes cassava into syrup for glucose.
Yemisi saw the enormous potential cassava has and was determined to excel at it. She left Lagos for Oyo where she built a small house and stayed on the farm with about six staff.
Yemisi started from cultivating a land she bought with a few farmers The biochemistry graduate grew crops on the land she bought with her small staff strength and with time educated local farmers on the need to move from farming for consumption to doing it for industrial purpose.
Yemisi, according to MAcademy, then incorporated her own cassava processing firm called Psaltry International Limited. What her business outfit does Thanks to credit facilities from the CBN, Yemisi and her network of farmers were able to grow the piece of land into a factory.
Yemisi's business outfit grows cassava and also buys from smallholder farmers. They produce food-grade starch and high-quality cassava flour. At the moment Nigerian breweries and Nestle are some of her major clients with the business currently raking in over N5 billion in revenue per annum in the space of 10 years. Nigerian man dubbed king of yams shows off his huge yam barns Meanwhile, Legit.ng previously reported that a Nigerian man married to 7 wives had shown off his huge yam barns.
The man identified as Goddey said he has been growing the yams for about 45 years and has been dubbed the king of yams. Goddey is also said to be engaged in farming of other food crops namely okra, pepper, cassava and palm-oil. The polygamous man does livestock farming too.
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