Business Day (Nigeria)

Insufficie­nt rice trails decadelong trillion naira interventi­ons

...production to drop 40% this year

- By Josephine Okojie

NIGERIA has scant gains to show for a N1.08 trillion splurge on interventi­ons over the last ten years targeted at boosting rice production.

Millers in Africa’s most populous nation are still unable to get enough paddies locally to keep their mills running.

Nigeria had at different times during the tenure of the immediate past president Muhammadu Buhari claimed that the country was self-sufficient in the production of the grain due to the rice revolution under the Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) – a key signature project of the country’s interventi­on for rice in nine years.

But four months after Buhari left office, millers were already scrambling for paddy amid a worsening shortage that rocked the rice milling industry as the country shut its land borders with Niger.

This proves that the country’s rice milling industry had always imported a portion of its paddies for processing local parboiled rice from neighbouri­ng countries.

An industry source also confirmed that some millers were mopping up paddy across the country’s borders to keep their mills running.

“We don’t produce enough paddies. Our main rice season is in October and after that period it is difficult to get enough rice paddy,” the source said.

“There is so much hype about what we produce for political reasons. What we currently produce is not enough to meet millers’ demand,” the source said.

A situation farmers say will increase this year as they project output for the grain in 2024 to drop by 40 percent owing to the continuous price surge of key inputs, worsening insecurity and lack of government support for the production of the crop.

Muhammed Augie, former state chairman of Rice Farmers

Associatio­n of Nigeria, Kebbi state chapter projected rice production in the country to drop 40 percent in 2024.

“Lots of rice farmers in Kebbi did not cultivate rice due to the surge in the prices of inputs and lack of government support,” Augie said.

On why the country is still battling for rice sufficienc­y after a decade of interventi­ons, he said the ABP made lots of impact in the first three years as investment­s and attention from both the public and private sectors to the industry increased tremendous­ly, thus leading to production increases.

He however noted that when the interventi­on became politicise­d, the real farmers were no longer engaged and the few real farmers engaged were not getting the right quality of inputs.

He also stated that insecurity and climate change also impacted the country’s rice sufficienc­y drive as flooding and droughts ravaged farmlands at every farming cycle during the interventi­ons.

Currently, there is no recent official data, but the latest data from UN Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on (FAO) put Nigeria’s paddy production at 8.5 million metric tons in 2022.

The most recent reliable figures for production comes from the USDA, which has projected Nigeria’s rice production to decrease by seven percent this year to 7.7 million tons from 4.8 million tons it predicted last year.

The USDA attributed the decline in production to insecurity, decreased government support and less planting areas owing to a surge in input prices.

Rice production in Africa’s most populous country has increased significan­tly during the decade interventi­ons and mills have expanded from 10 in 2015 when the country kick-started its rice revolution to over 100 in 2023, according to data from the Rice Processors Associatio­n of Nigeria (RIPAN).

 ?? ?? Jim Ovia (m), founder and chairman, Zenith Bank plc, flanked by Ebenezer Onyeagwu (r), group managing director/chief executive; and Adaora Umeoji (l), deputy managing director, during a court-ordered extraordin­ary general meeting held virtually from the Zenith Heights, Zenith Bank plc, Victoria Island, Lagos, on Friday.
Jim Ovia (m), founder and chairman, Zenith Bank plc, flanked by Ebenezer Onyeagwu (r), group managing director/chief executive; and Adaora Umeoji (l), deputy managing director, during a court-ordered extraordin­ary general meeting held virtually from the Zenith Heights, Zenith Bank plc, Victoria Island, Lagos, on Friday.

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