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Will Nigeria’s rice output rise from recent lows?
Guardian Nigeria
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9 months ago
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00:00
Our data from the United States Department of Agriculture shows
00:03
Niger's rice production is down 7% in the 2024-25 season to 5.23 million metric tons due to high
00:11
production costs. Now this marks one of the lowest the country has recorded since the year 2020.
00:17
Kolam Asha, the Chief Executive Officer of Babangana, joins me now for more developments
00:22
in the grains market, incentives as well needed to drive food production and counter rising
00:28
inflation. Mr. Asha, thanks a lot for joining us on the show today. Now this is a worrisome trend
00:32
we are seeing here manifest. Away from this recent decline, we had seen some improved trajectory
00:40
in the volume of paddy rice, for example. Take the highlights of the Buhari administration and
00:46
even prior to then, but now we are recording a dip. For you, what is this big elephant in the
00:52
room, the high production costs? How should Nigeria be targeting this and do you think at
00:57
any moment near term, we might rise from these new lows? Well I think, so let's begin by
01:05
kind of diagnosing the root cause. So fundamentally I think there are a few major shifts that happened
01:12
in the 2024-2025 season. The first was a dramatic increase in cost of production driven by the
01:19
large amount of inflation that I think we've all seen. And rice in particular is already
01:27
one of the, it's a high input requirement crop, so it already costs farmers a lot to grow.
01:33
So as inflation went up, those costs went up significantly. And then since there was limited
01:40
access to financing, so farmers could actually now get loans to buy the inputs, I think what
01:48
you saw was farmers actually shifted to lower input intensity crops that didn't require quite
01:55
as much capital to invest in. And that shift is what you saw. Now in addition to that, I think we
02:02
saw in the previous administration some protection of the market with limiting imports, which I think
02:10
what you typically find in most economies is that nascent industries are provided some sort of
02:15
protection while at the same time helping them increase their productivity so they don't just
02:20
get that protection forever. But I think that removal of that protection also I think had a
02:27
negative effect as well. An element exacerbating this pressure when we take a look at climate
02:32
changed the competition we have from cheaper foreign varieties as well. Now insecurity,
02:37
that's also a big one. But one of the biggest blows farmers at this moment have also had is
02:42
the suspension of the anchor borrowers program, which is also targeted at supporting rice farmers.
02:48
So at this moment, there's literally no incentive. Demand from millers has also declined. Do you
02:53
think we can move away from the doldrum we are in right now? Well, I think, you know, from what I,
03:00
you know, follow in the industry, my understanding is that the government is looking at ways to
03:06
implement effective financing mechanisms by partnering with different development finance
03:13
institutions and other partners to stimulate lending into the sector. I think at the end of
03:17
the day, that's going to be key. And so with that stimulation of lending, now farmers will have the
03:24
purchasing power to buy the quantity and quality of inputs they need to get productivity up. And
03:30
what that will actually do is you'll see farmers now shifting into these, these crops like rice,
03:36
like maize, like other crops that tend to provide farmers a good return on investment,
03:42
but are required pretty significant upfront investment. And looking at Nigeria also targeting
03:48
this year about 750,000 hectares of land for maize rice farming. These are definitely staples. And,
03:54
you know, we've also had this robust conversation over time as to what the picture looks like
04:00
targeting all year round farming. For you, is this visible for this year? Do you think we can
04:05
achieve that? And when we have the likes of houses like FX also predicting price stabilization for
04:11
grains like rice, maize, soybeans, do you also share the optimism here? Well, I think there's a
04:18
lot of variables around the prices of things. And so I'm a little bit concerned around being able to
04:26
put a stake in the ground around price stabilization. But I think that at the,
04:31
at the end of the day, there's, if that we're going to see the impact we need, you've got
04:37
about three months to ensure that you're able to get the adequate financing out to farmers.
04:43
I think oftentimes, and it's not just this administration, I think
04:48
quite frequently administrations tend to focus on targeting hectares of production.
04:55
The reality is, you know, there are significant number of farmers today that are growing these
05:00
crops. How can you create the right structures to enable those farmers to increase, those existing
05:09
farmers to increase their productivity? I think that is the, that's going to where, that's going
05:13
to be where you'll see the biggest, the biggest impact in the shortest period. Well, Mr. Masha,
05:19
we'll have to leave the conversation here for now. Thank you so much for your time on the show today.
05:22
That was Kola Masha, the Chief Executive Officer of Bunguners speaking.
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