Global food crisis: 50 youths embrace gardening

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50 young Nigerians were instructed on gardening and the global perspective to tackling the country’s food crisis in order to reinvent agriculture.

Adbond, an agro-to-home development company, made the gesture as part of its green wealth summit, during which it distributed seeds to encourage people to “employ 2,000 youths both directly and indirectly as virtual staff, who work passionately to realise the vision and they remain the backbone of our success.”

Adbond’s Chief Executive Officer and Founder, Oluwagbemiga Adekoya, revealed this in Lagos during the firm’s 7th-year celebration, claiming the company had reached a key milestone after seven years of transformative growth.

Over the years, he claims that the firm’s unique concept has benefited over 3,900 people.

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Dekoya emphasized that their unwavering commitment to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has yielded results, contributing to economic growth, agriculture, and community development through Urban-Rural Migration and Rural-Urban Development Projects from one village community to another.

Though house may be the pleasant source desired by Nigerians to produce money, he stated that agriculture has been the fundamental vocation of Africans/forefathers since genesis and has been the source of national, cooperation, and individual prosperity.

“We set out to create an environment in which families, individuals, businesses, cooperative societies, Nigerians and Africans in Diaspora could secure their future spaces,” he went on to say.

“What began as a variety of real estate options and locations for our clients quickly evolved into something more profound.” We were on a mission to assist our clients in accumulating wealth through “agro-to-home” development initiatives.

“Our belief is simple but powerful: by integrating agriculture and residential development, we not only redefine comfortable living but also pave the way for African communities to be sustainable and prosperous.” Whereas one generation refers to it as a farm, another as home.


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