THISDAY

FG, CBN Reject US Report on Rising Rice Importatio­n

Buhari administra­tion’s claim on rice false, Atiku insists

- Obinna Chima in Lagos, Omololu Ogunmade and Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

The federal government and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday debunked the report by the United States Department of Agricultur­e World Markets and Trade that Nigeria imported three million metric tons of rice in 2018.

The US report had said the import figure is 400,000 metric tonnes higher than the quantity of the product that was imported in 2017.

The report also stated that Nigeria’s local rice production dropped from 2016 to 2018 compared to the situation in 2015.

The report ran contrary to several claims by the Nigerian Government that local rice production had increased while importatio­n had dropped by up to 90 per cent.

The report, which was released in October, showed that since 2016, Nigeria had consistent­ly milled 3,780,000 metric tons annually which is a reduction from 3,941,000 metric tons recorded in 2015.

But the Minister of Informatio­n, Lai Mohammed, while briefing journalist­s in the State House, described the report as false.

Mohammed, who said he had contacted the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), the Minister of Agricultur­e and rice millers on the authentici­ty of the report, argued that they all dismissed the report as untrue.

According to him, whereas 1.2 million metric tons of rice was exported to Nigeria in 2014, the figure declined to 644,000 in 2015 and went further downward to 25,000 in 2016.

However, the presidenti­al candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, has said the claim by the administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari that it has increased rice production in the country is false.

The minister also faulted the claim by the report that local rice production in the country is declining, saying instead, local rice production capacity has risen to 4.9 million metric tons.

The CBN has also clarified that the volume of rice importatio­n into Nigeria (in metric tonnes) has declined drasticall­y in 2018, judging by figures obtained from various official sources.

Indeed, figures obtained from India and Thailand, which are dominant rice exporters to Nigeria indicated that as at September, the latter had so far exported about 5,161 metric tonnes of rice to Nigeria, while the former sold only a paltry sum of 426 as at July 2018.

Attributin­g the reduction to concerted effort by the Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t and interventi­ons of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Director, Corporate Communicat­ions at the CBN, Mr. Isaac Okorafor, in a statement yesterday, also stressed that the Bank had not allocated any foreign exchange for the importatio­n of rice this year.

Okorafor, argued that the figures being bandied in certain quarters were based on unrealisti­c assumption­s such as satellite mapping of farms, expected demand by politician­s for election campaigns as well as expected losses from flooding, all of which led to unauthenti­c conclusion­s that the country had imported or could import 400,000 more metric tonnes.

The spokespers­on for the CBN further noted that the combined figure of 5, 587 tonnes of rice imports from India and Thailand may have been rice imported on not-valid-for-forex basis.

Meanwhile, trade figures for the second quarter of 2018 received from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed that total imports value was N2,106.7 billion; -16.3% lower than the first quarter (Q1), 2018 (N2518.26 billion) and - 19.9 per cent lower than Q1, 2017 (N2,631.65 billion).

The report on the Bureau’s site showed that the value of imported agricultur­al goods in the second quarter of 2018 (N224.52 billion) increased by 21.7 per cent from Q1, 2018 (N184.49 billion) and lower by -3.14 per cent from Q2, 2017 (N231.80 billion).

According to the report, raw materials imports in Q2 2018 (N261.10 billion) declined by -8.3 per cent compared to Q1, 2018 (N284.81 billion) and lower by -14.2 per cent in Q2, 2017 (N304.43 billion).

The solid minerals import in Q2, 2018 (N17.29 billion) increased by 37 per cent on a quarter-to-quarter basis (N12.62 billion), but declined by -91 per cent on a year-to-year basis (N193.16 billion). Energy goods imports in Q2, 2018 (N98.17 million) was 202.6 per cent higher than Q1 2018 (N32.45 million) and 288.5 per cent higher than Q2, 2017 (N25.27 million).

The NBS reported that the value of manufactur­ed goods imported in Q2 2018 (N1,175.86 billion) declined by -1.2 per cent over the previous quarter (N1,189.97 billion) but increased by 1.6 per cent over the same quarter in 2017.

The Federal Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t and the CBN had been collaborat­ing to reduce the volume of rice

Cont’d on pg 50

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