Daily Trust Sunday

Panic as agro firms mop up soybeans in Kano markets

- From Ibrahim Musa Giginyu, Kano

Despite bumper harvest of soybeans during the 2023 rainy season farming in Kano and other soybean production states, the produce may still be scarce in the markets this year. Some soybeans users who are raising the concerns are attributin­g the situation to what they termed massive evaluation of Nigerian grown soybeans for export, which they said may spell doom to the country’s food security.

Findings by Daily Trust on Sunday revealed that several merchants have stormed agro commodity markets in the state, mopping up soybeans for foreign firms that export them.

A source at the Dawanau Internatio­nal Grain Market told our correspond­ent that soybeans has now become a hot commodity sort by many companies, adding that due to the mad rush for the commodity, its price has gone up despite all evidences that there has been a bumper harvest this year.

“Let me tell you, if you have bags of soybeans now you will be treated like a king. The commodity has become a hot cake now in this market and in other commodity markets across the country. This has resulted to a rise in the commodity price to an alarming level. It will surprise you to note that a 100kg of soybeans is now selling at N43,000, which is outrageous,” he said.

The source added that the rate at which trucks of soybeans leave the market on a daily basis was so alarming that one would

think that with time there won’t be a single gain of soybeans in the market.

It was also gathered that some indigenous oil millers have begun to complain that the existing competitio­n in the market is becoming unbearable as not all of them can compete with the exporters’ merchants. Some of the millers revealed that a tonne of soybeans is now selling at over N400,000.

A Kano-based soybeans miller, Idris Nazir, an engineer, said this year’s market

had opened with N330,000 price per tonne, but due to the high demand by the exporters, the price jacked up to N425,000 a tonne. He explained that the developmen­t had forced many of them to back off and are considerin­g other measures to survive the upsurge.

“This year’s soybeans market had opened on N330,000 per tonne, but as the demand by the exporters increases, the price went up to N425,000; and it is still going up. It is clear that not all oil millers can afford to continue in such a tight business environmen­t. It is so scarring because cooking oil and other related products would soon be inaccessib­le to many people,” he said.

However, the chairman of the Kano State All Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria (AFAN), Alhaji Abdulrashe­ed Magaji Rimin Gado, said the current developmen­t in soybeans production was attributed to the law of demand and supply. He said soybeans farmers recorded a bumper harvest this year and the demand had increased so much due to the activities of exporters.

He explained that since there was no law that prohibited the exportatio­n of the commodity, the associatio­n could not do anything but advise farmers and the authoritie­s concerned. He said the developmen­t was indeed a threat to Nigeria’s food security.

“The current economic situation in the country had forced farmers to part ways with their produce so early because they needed money. At the associatio­n level, what we advised the authoritie­s to do was to revisit the warehouse system to assist farmers store their produce.

“There is also a need for the government to enact a law that would ban the exportatio­n of certain crops, of which soybeans should be prioritise­d for the country to be able to have its home-grown food,” he suggested.

Gado also expressed the fear that the commodity would soon be scarce despite bumper harvest, and that the scarcity would also affect other products related to soybeans.

 ?? ?? Bags of soyabeans alraedy bought off in Kano
Bags of soyabeans alraedy bought off in Kano

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