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Biotechnology Act to Crash Medicine, Vaccines Import from 70% to 20% – Mustapha

…Says law will drive research, reinforces hope for Nigeria’s food security, others

By Hillary Asemota

The Director General, National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA), Prof. Abdullahi Mustapha, has expressed optimism that the Biotechnology Act signed by President Muhammadu Buhari will crash the importation of medicine and vaccines into the country from 70% to 20% in the next few years.

Reinforcing the conviction, he said the implications of this for national development is that the era of substandard drugs is coming to an end as local production will lead to quality enhancement, adding that when pharmaceutical companies start local manufacturing of drugs, the strength of the naira will increase.

He said the law which confers legal authority on the agency to conduct research in biotechnology will drive Nigeria’s food security, industry, job creation and environment for national development.


The NABDA boss commended the lawmakers for passage of the Act in April even as he added that they have demonstrated sound understanding of the dynamics of development in a globalized knowledge economy, specifically using biotechnology.

He said: “It is my considered opinion that the passage of the Act is a testament to Nigeria’s readiness to harness cutting-edge technologies for sustainable development, particularly, those that guarantee better life for all Nigerians.”

Briefing the Media on the significance of the law at NABDA Headquarters in Abuja, Mustapha, said the agency now has a legal framework that guides and guards its researches, aimed at boosting agricultural produce, promoting environmental sustainability, development of vaccines and drugs.

According to him, no nation can insulate science from its development plan and thrive. This is particularly true, if the nation seeks to replicate the amazing development miracle of the Asian Tigers. 

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As a developing nation with low-income economy, he said Nigeria must conduct research but to accelerate national development, lower Nigeria’s debt burden, and extricate it from the poverty trap.

Biotechnology, the NABDA boss, added is an accelerator of inclusive national growth that provides a knowledge-based approach to solving public challenges, and ensuring future sustainability, as witnessed in the height of COVID-19 Pandemic, where biotechnology provided a quick and safe solution.

He said: “It is my considered opinion that the passage of the Act is a testament to Nigeria’s readiness to harness cutting-edge technologies for sustainable development, particularly, those that guarantee better life for all Nigerians.

“With this development, we are optimistic that the agency will be able to consolidate Nigeria’s leadership in Africa’s biotechnology space, and launch the nation into the stratosphere of global economic players.

“The Act makes NABDA; “a body corporate with perpetual succession and a common seal.”  It is heartening to note that this development has moved NABDA from the realm of a promotional agency to that of a research institution.


“It has strategically poised NABDA to pursue its mandate of driving national development by ethically harnessing applications of biotechnology.  Some of these applications which are vital to Nigeria’s development are: First, green biotechnology, which encompasses the agricultural field; second, red biotechnology, which relates to the medical field; third, blue biotechnology, which consists of the aquatic field; fourth, white biotechnology, which is about the industrial domain.

“In addition, the Act will enable the agency draw up programmes and policies for biotechnology utilization in Nigeria as well as create an avenue to publish and disseminate research findings and recommendations of the agency on biotechnology.

“The passage of the Act will be a catalyst for the stimulation of rapid commercialization of Biotechnology Research and Development products.

“It will afford the agency a platform to collaborate with International Research Centres, NGOs, national and international biotechnology agencies and institutions, and ensure sustainable mechanism for adequate funding of biotechnology activities through national and international funding agencies.”

On Public Private Partnership (PPP), he said the Act recognises the imperative of the collaboration for groundswell private-sector participation in biotechnology enterprises, stressing that it stipulates that NABDA should coordinate and conduct “strong advocacy programmes, seminars, conferences and workshops” to foster multi-stakeholders’ cooperation for inclusive national development. 

“I am optimistic that private sector participation in biotechnology will extend the frontiers of economic development, and thereby, abate Nigeria’s over reliance on petrodollar.” he said.

Mustapha, said private sector participation is needed for the mass production, commercialization, and supply to end-users of the Bio-digesters invented by the agency, adding: As you are aware, the biodigesters which were locally fabricated with locally sourced material, would foster energy generation and efficiency.

He said: “The research efforts of the agency are contributing enormously to abate exchange rate volatilities in Nigeria. A good example is cotton lint, a raw material for textile manufacturing. It was key on Nigeria’s import list, he said.

“However, due to NABDA’s collaboration with the Institute of Agricultural Research (IAR), Zaria, and Bayer and Mahyco Agricultural Nigeria Ltd, for the development, commercialization and deployment of new varieties of transgenic hybrid cotton, import of cotton lint is declining.”

He said: “Very soon, we shall attain self-sufficiency in the production of cotton. The point to underscore is, this Act by extension, would catalyze a resurgence of Nigeria’s Textile Industry.

“Recall that the Textile Industry in Nigeria was a major employer of labour and revenue-earner in the 70s.

“Furthermore, the agency, recently, formalized partnership with the Government of Cuba. The main objective of the partnership is to promote joint research in Tissue Culture, Drug and Vaccine manufacturing.”

Speaking further, he said: “Because of my background as an academic and actor in policy making space, it gives me a certain sense of elation to inform you that the Act, also, underlines the important nexus between innovative practice of biotechnology and research.

“The Act encourages bridging the gap between laboratories and markets. It stipulates the formation of collaborative enterprises among research institutions and commercial sector.

“This is why since my assumption of office as the Director General of NABDA, the commercialization of research findings has been my clarion call.”

Let me end this opening remark by thanking you for attending this press briefing and for paying attention. More so, thank you for your patriotic efforts geared at educating the public about the centrality of biotechnology to national development.

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