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Twenty-five final-year students at the University of Abuja have won food security grants worth N3.2 million, a prize the organisers say will turn campus research into practical answers for Nigeria’s farms and food supply. The awards went to students in the Faculty of Agriculture and were announced this week in Abuja.

Who won the food security grants
The money came through the Nigeria Food Security Scholars Programme, an initiative of the Nigerian Food Security Project. The project shared a total of N3,211,500 among the 25 students, each receiving support to carry out a defined research project before they graduate.
Executive Director of the Nigerian Food Security Project, Ajibola Oladiipo, said the scheme is built to make sure research from higher institutions feeds directly into solving real problems. He urged the students to design projects that point to workable, scalable solutions rather than reports that sit on shelves.
What the research will tackle
The grants target research in food security, agricultural supply chains, climate resilience, post-harvest loss reduction and sustainable food systems. Organisers said projects that prove commercially viable could be funded further and scaled beyond the laboratory.
Post-harvest losses sit at the centre of the push. Large volumes of grain, fruit and vegetables spoil every year between the farm and the market because of poor storage, weak transport links and limited processing. Cutting those losses would put more food on Nigerian tables without a single extra hectare being planted.
Why the food security grants matter
The awards land at a hard moment for Nigerian households. Food inflation has stayed high, stretching family budgets and pushing staple prices up across markets. The Federal Government has separately estimated that the country loses trillions of naira each year to post-harvest waste, a gap that better handling and storage could close.
By tying small grants to young researchers, the programme hopes to grow a pipeline of home-grown ideas that fit Nigerian conditions. Students working on local crops, local climates and local supply chains are more likely to produce solutions farmers can actually use.
What happens next
The students will now carry out their funded projects under supervision, with the strongest ideas earmarked for further support. Organisers said they want the best work to move from the classroom into farms, cold rooms and processing units where it can ease pressure on food prices.
Organisers say tying funding to undergraduate and final-year projects also changes how students think about their work. Instead of treating research as a box to tick before graduation, the grants reward ideas that could be tested on real farms, in storage facilities or along supply chains. That shift, the programme argues, is how universities start producing solutions rather than just papers.
The initiative leans on partnerships between academics, agriculture experts and the wider food industry, so promising projects have a path beyond campus. Mentors guide the students through their research, and the most practical results can be matched with funding to grow them. For a sector that employs millions of Nigerians, even small gains in storage, processing or distribution can ripple out to lower prices and steadier supply.
For a country chasing food self-sufficiency, the bet is simple: invest early in young researchers, reward practical thinking, and let the results spread. The N3.2 million shared in Abuja is modest, but the organisers framed it as a down payment on a bigger goal of feeding Nigeria more cheaply and reliably.