Hike in agric inputs, transportation, others culminate Rice farmers constraints

The high cost of agricultural inputs, transportation, amongst others has been listed as major constraints limiting the development of rice production in Nigeria.

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This development has consequently impacted the price of the produce after harvest, making it difficult for some household to afford it.

According to a Rice Farmer in Gombe, Alhaji Musa Arab said the high cost of fertiliser and other inputs was frustrating him as a rice farmer

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“As a rice farmer, I am foreseeing a food crisis. We are ready to farm but there are no inputs, especially fertiliser and pesticides. We have planted rice but nowhere to get fertiliser to apply because of cost.

“We can’t cultivate rice without fertiliser. Like now I need at least 30 bags of fertiliser to apply in my rice farm which is over N500, 000 because a bag is going for nearly N20, 000.

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“So where will I get the money and how much will I spend on the farm and how much am I getting?

READ ALSO: Tackling the Soaring Price of Local Rice Amid COVID-19

“The cost of farming now is very high. In fact this is the highest in my several years of farming and there is no way it is not going to affect the price of rice,’’ he said.

He added that the state government had not given the right assistance to rice farmers to help encourage them to produce more to avert the impending food crisis in the state.

“We are hearing on radio that the state government has launched the sales of subsidised fertilisers but I can tell you that the real farmers have not benefitted.

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“Farming should not be politicised because if there is a food crisis, we all would be affected,’’ Arab said.

Another Rice Farmer, Sanusi Tela from Garin Bako Awak Community in Kaltungo Local Government Area said that it had become difficult for rice farmers to continue their vocation.

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“Two years ago, I lost over 148 bags of paddy rice because of the disease. I am yet to recover from that loss and usually what we get from this year’s harvest is ploughed back into farming.

READ ALSO: COVID-19: Nigeria’s households groan over soaring food prices

“Now I don’t have enough to invest and no assistance whatsoever. Nobody comes to us to check on us as farmers.

“The high cost of fertiliser and other inputs has made farming extremely difficult for us.

“ I could only cultivate a small piece of land because of the high cost of inputs,’’ he said.

He added that he was not sure of getting good returns if he were to invest more.

Malam Jauro Aliyu, another rice farmer from same community, said he had to jettison rice cultivation for sesame which needed little or no fertiliser as a result of high cost of inputs for rice farming.

Other farmers who spoke with NAN raised similar concerns while stressing that there might be a shortage of paddy rice in the state for processing after harvest.

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