LAKE Rice goes under as border policy flops production MoU
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LAKE Rice, a brand of locally cultivated and processed rice by Lagos and Kebbi states, has gone under, Though Lagos residents have got used to the subsidised brand since 2013, they will probably not have access to the rice ad infinitum. If and when it comes back through the Lagos rice mills, it won’t be LAKE rice, and residents might have to pay unsubsidised prices.
The contract appears to have come to a close and its production dead based on two factors adduced for the stoppage. One has been affirmed by officials of the Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture, while the other factor revolves around the compelling forces of demand and supply following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s rice import policy and the Federal Government’s decision on land borders, which have been closed since August 2019.
Lagos integrated rice mill
The Lagos State integrated rice mill at Imota is near completion, according the state officials, hence, the Memorandum of Understanding binding LAKE Rice production has become redundant. Officials of the ministry in Lagos said it is more economical to concentrate resources and efforts on completion of the rice mill, than continuing the partnership.
The mill, it is projected, would employ over 250,000 direct and indirect job opportunities through paddy out-grower schemes, transportation of raw materials and finished products, marketing and other ancillary industries.
READ: How To Invest In Agricultural Mechanisation
He said he was ready to conduct The Guardian round the rice mill premises to showcase the level of completion. A former Commissioner for Agriculture, Mr Gbolahan Lawal, in an interview with The Guardian in late January this year, had said: “The construction period is supposed to be 18 and 24 months, and as of today, the completion rate is at 50 per cent and I want to assure Lagosians and all well-meaning Nigerians that we are working seriously to ensure that the mill will be commissioned between September and October 2020.” The integrated 32-tonne-capacity mill, started in 2018 and having about 16 silos of 4,000-tonne capacity each and warehouses, would need no fewer than 50,000 to 51,000 hectares of land to supply rice paddies. Competition for Kebbi paddies The untold factor responsible for scarcity or complete absence of LAKE Rice is the stronger demand for locally produced paddies by indigenous and foreign rice mills.READ: Rice processing mills inaugurated in Anambra
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