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WELCOME TO THE FEDERAL INSTITITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH OSHODI

Welcome to FIIRO’s website, the official window of Nigeria’s foremost research institute to the outside world. An adventure into this website affords you the opportunity to acquaint yourself with our vision, mission, antecedents, activities and land mark achievements.

We have the broad mandate of accelerating industrialization in Nigeria and has over the years developed technologies that have promoted the ideals of entrepreneurship development.

We have locally sourced alternative raw materials for our industries, thereby conserving foreign exchange; through adequate food processing techniques we have improved the nutritional content of our food intake and we have locally fabricated machines, equipment and many more.

Impressed as they were with FIIRO’s unequal strides, corporate organizations, governments, NGOs, international organizations, donor agencies, and the academia have actively identified with our R&D pursuits. You can see a list of corporate beneficiaries from FIIRO's research work here.

Also at your disposal via this web are the schedules of our trainings, seminars and workshops. The website also showcases our publications and contributions in making R&D a worthwhile venture.
Please browse our website and use the search feature to link to publications available for download and other information you might need.

Thank you and WELCOME!!!

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SARD-SC holds Project Steering Committee meeting in IITA-Ibadan

SARD-SC COMMITTEE

The Project Steering Committee (PSC) of the Support for Agricultural Research for Development of Strategic Crops (SARD-SC) held their first meeting in IITA-Ibadan, Nigeria.

Acting Director General for IITA, Dr Kenton Dashiell welcomed members of the PSC on behalf of the Director General, Dr Nteranya Sanginga.

During the meeting, members discussed annual work plans, procurement plan and the overall management and implementation of the project. They expressed great satisfaction at the progress made so far in project implementation considering the short period the project has been fully operational. The annual work plan and budget for 2013 were reviewed and approved by the committee.

PSC members who attended the meeting included Dr Mahmoud Solh, Director General, ICARDA; Dr Gloria Elemo, Director General, Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi, Lagos; Dr Ramadjita Tabo, Deputy Executive Director, FARA; Dr Oliver Samson, Director, Partnerships and Capacity Building, Africa Rice Center; Dr Catherine Mungoma, Director of Crops Research Zambia; and Dr Chrys Akem, Project Coordinator, SARD SC.

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FIIRO and IITA explore stronger collaboration

Dr Adebayo Abass (second from left), representing IITA, visits with FIIRO Director General, Dr Gloria Elemo (second from right). Others in photo are Drs Agnes Asagbra (extreme left) and Bolanle Asiru (extreme right) of FIIRO

IITA and the Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi (FIIRO) in Nigeria are forging stronger ties and will work together on postharvest and cassava research, capacity building, and youth development. This was highlighted during a recent visit by IITA to FIIRO. FIIRO is one of the pioneering R4D centers for cassava in Nigeria. The institute has made significant contributions to the understanding of cassava fermentation and the development of mechanized technologies for processing gari and fufu flour, among other cassava products. Recently, collaboration between IITA and FIIRO has been strengthened, especially in the production of cassava bread and training of bread bakers. In addition, IITA and FIIRO have been collaborating on the development of many research proposals on cassava and postharvest technology in general. One of the proposals is the BiomassWeb project to be funded in the GlobE program of the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF). The project, led by the Center for Development Research (ZEF) of the University of Bonn, has many African partner institutions, including icipe and IITA. The overall goal of the project is to raise food security in Africa by harnessing productivity and efficiency

Reference: IITA Bulletin Issue No.2152, 24-28 December 2012

DISTINGUISHED GUEST SPEAKER’S LECTURE SERIES

L-R Prof Keith Tomlins, Prof Albert Ebuehi & Dr (Mrs) Gloria Elemo

FIIRO held the next in its Distinguished Guest Speakers Lecture series on Friday, October 5, 2012 at its head office in Lagos. The occasion had Prof. Keith Tomlins of Natural Resources Institute, UK as Guest Speaker while Prof. Albert Ebuehi of the Department of Biochemistry, University of Lagos, Akoka was the Chairman. The Lecture was titled: Consumer Acceptance of Foods containing Carotenoids.

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NUTRITION SOCIETY OF NIGERIA FELLOWSHIP AWARDS

Dr(Mrs) Gloria Elemo receiving plaque from Prof. Tola Atinmo

25/05/2013 08:28:16

WELCOME TO FIIRO

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‘We Have Made Impact on the Economy’
Friday, 24 February 2012

Interview of the DG, FIIRO, Dr (Mrs) G.N Elemo, BSJ, Feb 13th 2012

We Have made Impact on the Economy - DG FIIRO

The fact that you are doing research and development does not mean you will eventually get results. It takes year before you get tangible results. And to achieve that it would have taken much money which nobody in the private sector is ready for’ - Dr. Gloria Elemo, director-general, Federal Institute for Industrial Research, Oshodi, FIIRO.

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FIIRO develops special diets for school meal programme, non-communicable diseases
Thursday, 15 March 2012

AS part of efforts to tackle hunger, malnutrition and non-communicable diseases in the country, the Federal Institute of Industrial Research (FIIRO) Oshodi, Lagos, has developed special cereal-based diets fortified with micronutrients for the school meal programme and treatment of malnutrition, diabetes and heart diseases. Micronutrients are nutrients required by humans and other living things throughout life in small quantities to orchestrate a whole range of physiological functions, but which the organism itself cannot produce. For people, they include dietary trace minerals in amounts generally less than 100 milligrams/day - as opposed to macrominerals (fats, carbohydrates and protein), which are required in larger quantities. The microminerals or trace elements include at least iron, cobalt, chromium, copper, iodine, manganese, selenium, zinc and molybdenum. Micronutrients also include vitamins, which are organic compounds required as nutrients in tiny amounts by an organism. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), iodine, vitamin A and iron are most important in global public health terms, their lack represents a major threat to the health and development of populations the world over, particularly children and pregnant women in low-income countries. The institute said that it had not been able to further develop the pilots because of funds constraint, even she urged state governments and the private sector to come and partner with FIIRO so that more Nigerians would benefit from the novel discoveries. Director General of FIIRO, Dr. Gloria Nwakaegho Elemo, in an exclusive interview with The Guardian said: “We have developed a nutritious cake and drink which meet the recommended daily dietary allowance for children between the ages of five and 12 that are in primary school. This is supposed to handle the ongoing school meal programme in a hygienic form. The next step is to get the state governments to buy into it. We have a standard recipe for Nigeria so different people can now come in as entrepreneur using the standard recipe to produce this cake and drink for school children. “So we have developed this ready to eat therapeutic diet for the management of malnutrition. We have looked into developing readily therapeutic diets for non-communicable diseases like diabetes, coronary heart disease and hypertension. So we have developed drinks for the management of hyperglycaemia (high blood sugar), for diabetes mellitus with high fibre diet and cereals for the elderly to prevent digestive diseases.” Elemo, who is also a nutritionist, added: “The problem we are having is that they are at pilot stage and these things will need money. What we do is that when we develop, the next thing is to transfer out. Why we have not been so visible is because of funds. We are not having adequate funding so we try as much as possible to look for external funds. But one thing we know is that we do not expect other people to come and develop these for us, we must do it ourselves. “We are supposed to commercially produce these products. What we are supposed to do is to transfer what we have out there through nutrition model plan so that people can come and buy into it. We hope to get our technologies advertised.” On the composition of the special diets, the FIIRO boss said: “The cake and snacks for our school meal programme are made with cereals like sorghum and millet, and fortified with micronutrients in right proportion. But it is still at the pilot stage. We are ready, people can take it up and develop it further. Elemo said that FIIRO had mandate to develop food and agricultural products and had worked extensively into the area of agro products development into various products either as new products or the development of indigenous ones to make them more acceptable and nutritious. She said that they had also made advances into instant pounded yam flour production, cassava starch, production of fruit juices, palm wine bottling and preservation, cassava processing and edible mushroom production. She explained: “All the different sectors of agro products have actually been touched. We have worked extensively on roots and tubers, cereals, fruits and vegetables. We go into fabrication, design of equipment, bring out prototype equipment of the process line that have been developed to make it more acceptable technology and at affordable prices for local fabricators to buy into it. This definitely apart from solving the problem of food and nutrition security will also be solving the problem of wealth creation and job opportunity. “We have the broad mandate of accelerating industrialisation in Nigeria and has over the years developed technologies that have promoted the ideals of entrepreneurship development. We have locally sourced alternative raw materials for our industries, thereby conserving foreign exchange, through adequate food processing techniques we have improved the nutritional content of our food intake and we have locally fabricated machines, equipment and many more.” The nutritionist said that the problem facing the country was that of management of its agro-processes. Elemo said that the government was doing a lot in food production but there was a missing link between production and end consumer on the areas of processing and preservation and FIIRO has the mandate to go into that. By Chukwuma Muanya

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SARD-SC holds Project Steering Committee meeting in IITA-Ibadan
Wednesday, 10 April 2013

SARD-SC COMMITTEE

The Project Steering Committee (PSC) of the Support for Agricultural Research for Development of Strategic Crops (SARD-SC) held their first meeting in IITA-Ibadan, Nigeria.

Acting Director General for IITA, Dr Kenton Dashiell welcomed members of the PSC on behalf of the Director General, Dr Nteranya Sanginga.

During the meeting, members discussed annual work plans, procurement plan and the overall management and implementation of the project. They expressed great satisfaction at the progress made so far in project implementation considering the short period the project has been fully operational. The annual work plan and budget for 2013 were reviewed and approved by the committee.

PSC members who attended the meeting included Dr Mahmoud Solh, Director General, ICARDA; Dr Gloria Elemo, Director General, Federal Institute of Industrial Research, Oshodi, Lagos; Dr Ramadjita Tabo, Deputy Executive Director, FARA; Dr Oliver Samson, Director, Partnerships and Capacity Building, Africa Rice Center; Dr Catherine Mungoma, Director of Crops Research Zambia; and Dr Chrys Akem, Project Coordinator, SARD SC.

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