Features
How Nigeria’s Diaspora Can Support Agricultural Extension Services
Oluwaseyi Awokunle | 10th November 2025

Agricultural extension services constitute the primary mechanism for transferring scientific research outputs to end users: farmers and rural communities. 

In Nigeria, these services are instrumental in boosting crop productivity, ensuring food security, and promoting sustainable land management. These extension systems are hindered by problems related to infrastructure, finance, personnel capacity, and, crucially, the adoption of technology. 

The Nigerian diaspora, comprising highly-trained professionals in agronomy, engineering, finance, information technology, and policy analysis, possesses relevant expertise and resources that can augment domestic extension efforts.

1. Digital Knowledge Dissemination

Platform Architecture and Delivery Modes  

Diaspora experts can design and deploy scalable digital platforms, both web-based portals and mobile applications, to deliver advisory content. Some important technical requirements include:  

  • Responsive front-end interfaces compatible with low-end smartphones  
  • Back-end servers supporting asynchronous content updates and multilingual translations  
  • Data analytics modules to track user engagement metrics and adaptive content delivery  

Content Development and Localisation  

Content modules should integrate:  

  • Agronomic protocols for major staple and cash crops (e.g., maize, cassava, plantain)  
  • Pest and disease management algorithms based on Integrated Pest Management (IPM) principles  
  • Soil health monitoring guides calibrated to Nigeria’s agro-ecological zones (Derived from the 2014 Agro-Ecological Zone Classification)  

Content modules should be translated into the major languages of extension workers and pidgin for general communication. Region-specific case studies should also be included.

2. Capacity Building for Extension Personnel

Virtual and On-Site Training Curricula  

Diaspora professionals can  use their special knowledge to co-develop training curricula comprising:  

  • Precision agriculture techniques (e.g., variable-rate fertiliser application using GPS-enabled spreaders)  
  • Remote sensing data interpretation for crop stress detection (using Sentinel-2 imagery)  
  • Climate-smart agriculture techniques, including conservation agriculture and agroforestry integration  

Delivery of training can take the form of synchronous webinars with live demonstration of decision-support tools, asynchronous e-learning modules, and hybrid workshops that combine virtual instruction with in-field practicum. 

Mentorship and Professional Networks  

Structured mentorship programs facilitate knowledge transfer via:  

  • Monthly case consultations  
  • Collaborative research projects under scientific committees
  • Participation in international conferences and knowledge-sharing events

3. Financial and Input Facilitation

Diaspora-Backed Microfinance Schemes  

Nigeria currently ranks among the countries with the highest volume of remittances globally. Diaspora remittances can be pooled into agrifinance funds, structured as:  

  • Credit facilities with interest rates aligned to agricultural cycles  
  • Warehouse receipt financing linked to certified storage infrastructure  
  • Mobile money integration for remote disbursement and repayment monitoring  

Additionally, public-private partnerships can be initiated by diaspora investors to establish agro-input supply depots in underserved rural markets. Solar-powered irrigation systems with pay-as-you-grow mechanisms can be implemented to ease farmers’ planting efforts. 

Cold-chain logistics can significantly enhance the shelf life of perishable produce. Accountability should be ensured with tracking of indicators such as input delivery lead time and farmer adoption rates.

4. Research Collaboration and Technology Transfer

Nigerian agriculture stands to benefit significantly from research on plants and storage. Thus, diaspora researchers can assist in bypassing the usual financial and technological constraints to local research by researching the breeding of drought-tolerant crop varieties using marker-assisted selection. 

Bio-pesticides development can also be researched using indigenous plant extracts. Modern hermetic storage techniques can also be researched to solve the huge challenge of post-harvest losses. Results and data from research works should be stored in open-access cloud-hosted metadatabases. APIs should enable extension officers to access real-time data, informing their field advice and recommendations.

5. Value Chain Integration and Market Linkages

Diaspora supply chain experts can provide advice on lean inventory management for input suppliers, logistics network modelling to minimise transport costs per ton of produce, and implementing traceability systems using blockchain for export commodities. 

Additionally, they can offer technical support for compliance with international quality standards, including Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) protocols, Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) certification processes, and market intelligence systems for price forecasting in target markets such as the EU and the Middle East.

6. Youth Engagement and Technology Adoption

Diaspora-supported incubation centres can offer seed funding for agritech startups, such as IoT-based soil sensors, along with co-working spaces featuring high-speed internet and prototyping labs. 

They can also organise pitch events that connect young entrepreneurs with angel investors. 

Funding from the diaspora can support digital literacy and training in data analytics for precision farming applications, mobile app development for farm management systems, and drone piloting certification for crop monitoring and management. These initiatives would be geared toward integrating youth into extension service delivery as “para-extension” agents equipped with essential technical tools.

7. Cultural Alignment and Environmental Stewardship

Diaspora community liaisons can also conduct ethnographic studies to identify local land-tenure systems that influence adoption decisions and adapt communication styles to match communal norms, such as using storytelling methods in Hausa communities. 

The diaspora can also provide technical guidance on sustainable practices, including agroforestry designs that incorporate indigenous tree species to enhance soil fertility, conservation tillage systems to reduce erosion and increase carbon sequestration, and integrated watershed management frameworks. 

These approaches ensure alignment with both cultural values and environmental sustainability objectives.

In conclusion, the engagement of Nigeria’s diaspora in agricultural extension services presents a unique opportunity to bridge critical gaps in knowledge, technology, and resources. The active involvement of the diaspora can lead to a transformative impact on Nigeria’s agricultural landscape, ensuring food security and economic empowerment for rural populations.