Na big move wey land for Issele-Uku, Delta State, as Nigerian entrepreneur Mr. Christian Ukah officially launch CVG FarmCity—one massive 200-acre agricultural project wey dey turn heads. This no be your regular backyard farming o, na full package agribusiness wey mix modern farming with serious investment opportunity.
According to gist wey follow the launch, the project go focus mainly on palm oil production, one of the most profitable agricultural ventures for Nigeria. But the twist be say, no be only farming dem dey sell—dem dey also offer land banking, meaning say investors fit buy land and still allow experts manage the farming side.
As expected, many Nigerians don begin show interest, because anything wey combine land ownership plus steady income go always attract attention. People dey already tag am “farm wey go pay you while you dey sleep.” But as usual, some still dey ask questions before dem jump enter.
Farm + Investment = Double Wahala or Double Profit?”
The idea behind CVG FarmCity na to make agriculture more attractive, especially for people wey no get time or skill to farm by themselves. You fit buy land, then the company go handle planting, harvesting, and selling—while you dey wait for your returns like shareholder.
For many Nigerians, this one sound like smart business move. Because instead of leaving money for bank wey dey give small-small interest, you fit invest for something wey dey grow (literally). But as dem talk, “no investment be beans,” so people still dey reason risk vs reward before dem commit.
Social media don already turn the matter to debate ground. Some dey shout “this na future of farming!”, while others dey ask, “hope no be another package wey go sweet for mouth but bitter for pocket?” Na normal Naija skepticism, but the buzz no dey slow down.
CVG FarmCity: Issele-Uku Don Turn Hot Spot for Agribusiness
With this kind project, Issele-Uku don enter spotlight as one emerging hub for agriculture and investment. People wey sabi real estate don already dey eye the area, because once development start, land value no dey remain the same.
Experts dey talk say projects like this fit help boost local economy, create jobs, and increase food production. But the real test go be how well the management deliver on their promises. Because Nigerians don see many “fine plans” before wey no reach execution stage.
For now, the energy high, the interest strong, and the expectations even stronger. Whether CVG FarmCity go become success story or another “we go see how e go be,” na time go tell. But one thing sure—Naija no dey ever ignore opportunity wey smell like money
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