Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria’s rice revolution fades as corruption reigns

- By Josephine Okojie

THE failure of some farmers who benefitted from the Anchor Borrowers Programme (ABP) to repay the loans extended to them by the Central Bank of Nigeria and the fraud allegation­s in the scheme that led to its suspension are stalling the country’s quest for self-sufficienc­y.

While there is a dearth of reliable data on just how much progress Nigeria has made in its ‘rice revolution’, paddy production increased from about four million in 2015 when the scheme started to seven million metric tons in 2022, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

The number of rice mills both integrated and cottage increased 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).

The average crop yield per hectare of rice rose from 1.5 metric tons per hectare to an average of 2 metric tons of the same acreage, according to data from the UN Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on.

These successes recorded across the country’s rice value chain were mainly driven by the ABP – an interventi­on programme that provided farmers with key inputs in the form of loans.

However, this momentum ushered by the ABP initiative across the rice value chain is fast fading away since the apex bank suspended the programme for fraud allegation­s and farmers’ refusal to repay loans extended to them.

“The ABP was a laudable programme when it started but the anomalies in the scheme cannot be overlooked,” a source in the rice value chain who doesn’t want his name on print said.

“It is very bad for rice farmers that ABP was suspended, but at least the corruption in the scheme and why it failed

will be addressed,” he said.

“Real farmers weren’t getting the loans anymore and CBN was no longer transparen­t with the funds. The agrodealer­s supplying inputs were supplying low-quality inputs,” he noted.

According to him, the momentum the interventi­on brought to subsector and investment has all been halted on apex bank suspension of the scheme.

“The momentum is not there again and nobody is investing in rice as existing millers are struggling to produce and lots of farmers did not cultivate rice this year,” he noted.

Ibrahim Kabiru, national president of the All Farmers Associatio­n of Nigeria said although the interventi­on was laudable when it was launched, it failed when the CBN decided to deal with the rice farmers group as the leaders did not disburse the loan to real farmers.

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