Agric-focused lender, Unity Bank Plc has partnered
Nigerian rice farmers under the aegis of Rice Farmers Association of Nigeria,
RIFAN to unveil a mega rice pyramid on the occasion of the National Rice
Festival held in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja on Tuesday.
The event, which coincided with the flag-off of the
dry season farming, was used to showcase the gains made by rice farmers in
driving self-sufficiency in rice production through the Central Bank of
Nigeria’s Anchor Borrowers Programme, ABP.
Speaking to newsmen at the event, the Managing
Director/Chief Executive Officer of Unity Bank, Mrs. Tomi Somefun, while going
down memory lane on the support of the rice farmers by the Bank since the
inception of the Anchor Borrowers Programme, ABP commended the rice farmers for
their unwavering belief and collaboration in the implementation of the intervention programme, adding that as
the preferred financial institution for the ABP transactions, the Bank will
continue to support the farmers and ensure that more smallholder farmers get
the requisite financial support to boost rice production.
She said: “Our strategic partnership with RIFAN
started in 2018 when we financed about 273,000 smallholder farmers. This was
the largest single-ticket transaction in that year. This financing cut across
33 states of the Federation including the FCT.
“In 2019, the Bank increased the tally by financing
another 146,810 smallholder farmers for the wet and dry season farming. This
funding cut across 35 States of the Federation including the Federal Capital
Territory (FCT).
“Additional funding was granted to finance
additional 221,450 smallholder farmers of the Association across the 32 states
of the Federation including FCT for the wet season and additional 300,000
hectares was financed in sixteen states for the 2020 dry season cropping
season.
“As of March 2021, the Bank has financed no fewer
than 190,000 smallholder rice farmers across 35 states including the FCT,
Abuja.”
Speaking further, she said: “The rice pyramids we
see here today is an example of the resilience of the farmers and should be
replicated in all states with a focus on the crop they have a competitive advantage.
“As we gear the programme towards deepening its
penetration to reach more farmers, we encourage all beneficiaries of the
Intervention Programme to always utilize the inputs judiciously in order to key
into Federal Government’s goal of attaining food sufficiency, diversification
of the economy from oil, job creation for the teeming youth and poverty
reduction.
“We remain optimistic that RIFAN under the able
leadership of the National President Aminu Goronyo will continue to engage its
members on their roles and responsibilities under the ABP.”
Through the strategic initiative of the ABP,
Nigeria has made incredible gains in rice production over the past six years
raising production to significant levels.
Official reports show that from an average yield of
1.8 metric tonnes per hectare in the pre-ABP era, the initiative has increased
the country’s average yield per hectare for rice paddy and maize to about five
metric tonnes per hectare.
Similarly, the average capacity utilisation per
annum of domestic integrated rice mills has jumped to 90 per cent, from the 30
per cent that was the case in the era preceding the advent of the ABP.
Additionally, there has been a significant
reduction in the country’s rice import bill, from a monstrous $1.05 billion
prior to November 2015, to the current figure of $18.50 million, annually. The
programme has also created an estimated 12.3 million direct and indirect jobs
across the different value chains and food belts of the country.