Imagine spending months planting, weeding, and nurturing a crop, only to watch a significant portion of it spoil, get eaten by pests, or sell for far less than it is worth because there was nowhere to store it. This is the reality for millions of Nigerian farmers.
Nigeria is one of Africa’s largest agricultural producers, yet a significant amount of that food never makes it to consumers. Post-harvest losses, food lost after harvest due to poor storage, transportation, or handling, remain one of the most overlooked challenges in Nigerian agriculture.
In 2025 alone, Nigeria is estimated to have lost between ₦3.5 trillion and ₦5 trillion in agricultural value due to post-harvest losses. This is food that was successfully grown and harvested, but ultimately wasted because the systems needed to protect it were not there.
What Are Post-Harvest Losses?
Post-harvest losses occur at different stages after harvest. Produce can be damaged during transportation because of poor roads and inadequate packaging. Grains stored in poor conditions may attract pests, rodents, or moisture, while perishable crops like tomatoes, fruits, and vegetables can spoil before reaching the market.
A farmer’s profit is not just what they grow. It is what they can preserve and sell at the right time for the right price.
Why Smallholder Farmers are Most Affected
Smallholder farmers are especially vulnerable because many lack access to proper storage facilities and reliable market systems. During peak season, when supply is high and prices are low, farmers are often forced to sell immediately to avoid spoilage. Without storage, they cannot wait for better market prices.
Poor road infrastructure also worsens the problem. Produce may spend hours or days in transit, arriving at markets damaged or unsellable. In many cases, farmers also lack access to training on proper drying, storage, and post-harvest handling practices.
The Real Cost
It is easy to think of post-harvest losses as a food waste problem. But for the smallholder farmer, it is first and foremost an income problem.
Every spoiled bag of grain or damaged basket of vegetables represents a loss of income, reduced savings, and fewer resources to invest in the next farming season. Over time, these losses compound. They make it harder for the farmers to repay loans, save, and to build the financial cushion that would allow them to farm more ambitiously.
What Can Be Done
Access to better storage is one of the highest-impact interventions. Improved grain storage bags, communal storage facilities, and even basic changes in how produce is dried and kept can significantly reduce losses at the farm level. When farmers are trained on proper post-harvest handling, the right time to harvest, the right way to dry, the right way to store, the difference in outcomes can be remarkable.
Market access is equally important. When farmers are connected to reliable buyers and have a sense of when and where to sell, they are less likely to be forced into distressed sales that undervalue their harvest. Aggregation, pooling produce from multiple farmers, can also give smallholders the scale they need to access better markets and better prices.
At Babban Gona, we understand that a farmer’s profitability does not end at harvest. It depends on everything that happens after, and that is why we work to ensure our farmers are supported not just in growing well, but in protecting what they grow.
The Bigger Picture
Nigeria cannot solve its food security challenges while losing trillions of naira worth of produce every year to preventable post-harvest losses. Reducing those losses is not just good for farmers; it means more food reaching more people, less pressure on prices, and a stronger agricultural economy overall.
The harvest is not the finish line. For a smallholder farmer, it is the beginning of the most critical part of the season, the part where everything they worked for is either protected or lost. Getting that part right matters enormously.