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Nigeria imports over 3,000,000 tonnes of rice yearly, says GEMS4

By Ejiro Queen Mene
04 December 2017   |   3:35 am
Growth and Employment in States (GEMS4), a UKAid DFID-funded market development project in Nigeria, has disclosed the huge vacuum in import substitution for rice in the country, placing the deficit at over 3,000,000 tonnes annually.

Growth and Employment in States (GEMS4), a UKAid DFID-funded market development project in Nigeria, has disclosed the huge vacuum in import substitution for rice in the country, placing the deficit at over 3,000,000 tonnes annually.

The report which is the first of its kind by any development partner on the status of rice production in Nigeria also highlighted the underlying systemic constraints to rice production in Nigeria.

Speaking at an investment roundtable in Lagos, the Project Director of GEMS4, Mr. David Joiner, said the project’s mandate is to improve linkages and bankability in the rice sector. GEMS4 collaborates with agricultural businesses, investors and the Nigerian government to share insights and opportunities from Nigeria’s rice industry, as well as facilitate connections that can help reverse the ugly trend.

The Senior Project Manager at Dalberg Global Development Advisors, Jesse Baver, explained that before now relevant data on the problems of rice production in Nigeria and the actual potentials and investment opportunities were not available, necessitating the need for the study.

He said his organization was excited to share insights from report of the study on rice production, describing it as a fast-developing market.

“This event has given us the opportunity to present a rich amount of data and strategic insight on the Nigeria Rice market based on GEMS4 and Dalberg’s research,” he said.

Speaking on behalf of DFID, Andrew Gartside, The Economic Growth – Private Sector Development Advisor, explained that this sort of event was new in the international development space but was in line with the organization’s new approach to facilitate private sector investment for development.

The forum which brought together private sector financial institutions and government organizations such as Bank of Industry, Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission, Kanivest, InvestJigawa, and NIRSAL, provided a platform for players in the rice value chain to present their business models and pitch investment plans to potential investors.

Some of the Agriculture-focused companies that attended the investment forum include; Babban Gona, Afrifoods, Brent Group, Verdant Agritech, Thrive Agric, FalGate, and Sayaz rice.

GEMS4, a £16.8 million project managed by Coffey International Development, offers initiatives on providing solutions to address systemic constraints in the wholesale and retail market system. The project has the mandate to facilitate market system changes to address identified constraints, in order to encourage economic growth; resulting in the creation of 10,000 new jobs and increased incomes for 500,000 Nigerians.

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