By Oyo Amebo
Agriculture is often framed in modest terms — land tilled, crops harvested, yields recorded and traded within familiar borders. Under the stewardship of Dr Debo Akande in Oyo State, it assumed a far more expansive identity. It became a navigational tool, steering the state from local production into the complex currents of international agribusiness.
What Akande engineered was not an increase in output alone, but a strategic redirection of purpose. Agriculture was repositioned as an instrument of diplomacy, industry and economic signalling.
Through it, Oyo State began to speak confidently to the global market, not as a peripheral producer, but as a structured, investment-ready partner.
This shift represented a decisive break from conventional sector management.
Rather than isolating agriculture as a self-contained portfolio, Akande treated it as an interface, a meeting point between local capacity and global systems. Farms were no longer endpoints. They became gateways into international value chains where scale, standards, sustainability and market access carried as much weight as soil quality and rainfall.
Central to this transformation was a disciplined strategy of engagement beyond Nigeria’s borders. International cooperation was pursued with intent, not ceremony.
Relationships with foreign governments, development finance institutions, multinational agribusiness firms and trade organisations were carefully sequenced and purpose-driven. Each engagement advanced a clear objective within a broader economic architecture.
Memoranda of understanding were crafted as operational frameworks rather than symbolic agreements. Investment conversations were anchored in verifiable capacity, land banks, infrastructure readiness, policy coherence and institutional alignment. The message was consistent and credible: Oyo State was open, prepared and aligned with the expectations of modern global agribusiness.
This outward-facing momentum drew strength from the development vision of Governor Seyi Makinde, whose administration reframed agriculture as an industrial catalyst rather than a subsistence obligation. Akande emerged as the chief navigator of that vision, translating it into international language with coherence and confidence.
His proposition was straightforward yet compelling: sustainable agricultural growth depends on value addition, processing infrastructure, logistics and structured markets, not raw output alone.
What made the strategy resonate was its grounding in substance. Global partnerships were directly linked to on-ground transformation. Agro-industrial zones expanded in both scope and functionality.
Production systems modernised. Logistics networks improved. Foreign investment complemented rather than displaced local enterprise, accelerating scale while strengthening institutional capacity.
Agriculture became integrated into a wider industrial ecosystem connecting farms to factories, markets and transport corridors.
Akande was equally deliberate about the nature of cooperation itself. Capital inflows were only one part of the equation. His engagements prioritised technology transfer, quality assurance, standards harmonisation and export readiness.
Collaboration with European and African trade institutions enhanced compliance with international requirements, while alignment with African Continental Free Trade Area frameworks repositioned Oyo’s producers within continental and global trading networks.
As a result, the expectations placed on local agriculture shifted fundamentally. Farmers were no longer producing solely for informal or proximate markets. They became participants in structured value chains linked to cross-border commerce. The narrative evolved, from volume to value, from isolation to integration, and from promise to performance.
The Oyo State International Agribusiness Summit stood as the most visible expression of this orientation. Yet it functioned less as a showcase and more as a confirmation. International participants encountered systems already in motion, not aspirational projections.
Policy alignment, infrastructure development and institutional coordination had been advanced long before the summit convened, reinforcing confidence in the state’s seriousness.
Crucially, this global ambition remained anchored in local impact. International engagement was consistently framed as a means to community advancement. Farmers, processors and rural populations remained central to the strategy.
By linking global markets to employment creation, income stability and dignity of labour, Akande positioned diplomacy as a practical tool for inclusive development.
The effects of this navigation became increasingly evident. Farmers were integrated into structured value chains supported by international investment.
Agro-industrial zones connected more effectively to national infrastructure. Regulatory frameworks reflected a sophisticated understanding of global trade realities. Oyo State demonstrated not only the ability to attract partnerships, but the institutional maturity required to sustain them.
What ultimately emerged was not a single event or policy, but a method. Akande’s work illustrated how subnational leadership can engage confidently with global systems while remaining rooted in local realities. Agriculture, in his hands, became both an economic engine and a diplomatic signal, announcing Oyo State as a serious player in international agribusiness.
Through this deliberate navigation, Oyo cultivated more than crops. It cultivated credibility, strategic partnerships and long-term relevance.
In doing so, Dr Debo Akande established a template for how thoughtful leadership, anchored in local capacity yet oriented towards global opportunity, can reposition a region within the evolving map of international agribusiness.