The Federal Executive Council has approved
some measures to reduce food prices.
The Council took the decision based on the
interim report submitted by the food task force it set up last week on how best
to address the rising cost of food items across the country.
Agriculture Minister Audu Ogbeh briefed State
House correspondents at the end of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting.
According to him, the committee identified that
the hike in cost of food is not caused by shortage but high cost of transportation.
He noted that food items were moved across
Nigeria by heavy trucks, which run on diesel. The price of diesel has gone up.
The government has decided to start using railway
wagons to transport food items.
Ogbeh said: “We had a committee set up last
week to look at the issue of hike in food prices and we submitted an interim
report today. Our work is almost rounded off.
“We identified the causes of food price
increases. The good thing is that there is no real shortage of food. There is
food but the prices are a bit too high and Nigerians are groaning under the
pain.
“One of the things we found out is that the
cost of transportation is becoming extremely high, especially because most of
our transportation is by road and diesel prices have gone up and trucks are
finding it difficult to move from place to place at old prices.
“So we considered the following
alternatives: using railway wagons along the current railway network. As we did
before when we moved cattle from North West to Lagos, we brought down the cost
and avoided the multiple taxation on transporters by local governments which
delay movement.
“We have decided to work with the state
governments and the police to reduce delays. We are going to adapt what they
have in Ivory Coast. Trucks carrying foods are given labels. In fact, in Ivory
Coast, they cannot be stopped for more than 10 minutes anywhere.
“Even if something serious has happened,
the security agencies will follow them to their destinations and come back to
investigate whatever has happened.
“Finally, we shall be looking into our reserves,
if in the next few days, the situation persists, to see what we can bring out
to lower the prices because another bumper harvest will be coming up again at
the end of March.
“There is really no starvation in the land.
The other factor is what you know already. There is a lot of pressure on
Nigerian food from West, North and Central Africa. Our food production is very
robust and we are doing pretty well.”
The Council also approved measures to boost
all-year round local production of tomatoes.
The government will reduce tariffs for
importation of greenhouse equipment for production of tomatoes.
To discourage importation of tomato paste,
the Council also approved increase of tariffs on imported tomato paste.
Trade and Investment Minister Okechukwu
Enelamah said: “Council approved a set of measures to boost production and
attract investment into the Nigerian tomato sub-sector. This is a sector that
has lots of farmers, in a state like Kano alone there are 75,000 farmers and so
it is important to encourage them.
“And so we approved a set of measures to
encourage them both in local production as well as to attract more investment
into tomato farming, processing all the way, the value chain to how tomato gets
to our tables.
“These measures will include things we are doing
to make sure we plant tomato round the year, things like green house equipment,
making sure that they can come in without any barriers or duties. They also
include the use of both tariff and non tariff measures to address the issues
Nigerians are most concerned about, which is the issue of dumping, issues
around quality and the standards of what we consume.
“We also approved a set of measures that will
boost local production in terms of financing seeds and all the other things.”
“Let me say that the most important thing
about this set of policies is that in our approach we are going to be working
with the stakeholders to actually implement the polices. So, we are going to
set up an inter-ministerial committee that will work with the private sector
and with different stakeholders to make sure that the implementation of the
policy itself is not only done transparently but also robustly to ensure that
we achieve the desired objective which is to make sure that we become
self-sufficient in tomato within the next one or two years,” he said.
He added: “The issue of tariff to discourage
import, dumping was very central to the approval of the memo. Most definitely,
we are not coming down. We are going to go up. We will be announcing what the
new tariffs are but clearly there is a new set of tariff that will discourage
dumping. You can take that to the bank. To boost local production we are
interested in all the input factors that will boost production.
“On financing, the Central Bank has been
working with the tomato farmers already. I am confident that the measure taken
will boost production. The minister of Science and Technology is working with
us in terms of both the production methods and equipment
“In terms of the things that will boost year
round production of tomato, notably the green house equipment, the duties on
those will be zero so that the equipment will come in. Before now the duty on
green house equipment is 20%. So, we are removing that to make it possible for
people to grow tomato all-year round.
“We are going to restrict import of finished
tomato products that can be produced locally, so all the products that people
bring in, in terms of paste and powder and all those things will be restricted
because they can be manufactured locally.
These things will be rolled out right away; these
are policies for this year. We are going to use tariffs and levies as well to
discourage imports of tomato paste and those levies will be used to develop the
local industry just like we have done in the sugar and cement industry.
“We are also going to restrict the importation of
finished products from other ECOWAS countries where products are dumped then
transported across our borders, making sure those risky products don’t go
through our land borders, if you want to import them you have to go through the
sea.
“We are going to make sure that in terms of
incentives which goes back to production, the Nigerian Investment Promotion
Commission will make sure that the production of tomato gets its pioneer status
We are also working on financing from the CBN. In terms of financing of
production, we are also working with the ministry of Agriculture on seedling
quality and so on.”
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