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The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has made good its word,
as it has released 50,000 metric tonnes of Maize into the Nigerian market. The
Bank's February 2021 release of Maize in fulfilment of its pledge to reduce the
price of the commodity, was done through the Anchor Borrowers' Programme (ABP)
to major poultry feed producers and poultry producers in the country.
The CBN facilitated release of the 50,000 metric tonnes of
Maize in the second week of February, has made an impact as the Maize Market
has recorded a reduction in price from N200,000.00 per metric tonnes to
about N180,000.00 per metric tonnes. It is still anticipated that the
current will further reduce.
Major beneficiaries of the February release include:
Premier Flour Mills, Crown - Olam, Grand Cereals,
Animal Care, Amobyn and Hybrid Feeds. Others include Zartech, Wacot, Sayeed
Farms, Pandagri Novum and Premium Farms as well as the South West, South-South,
North West and North Central chapters of the Poultry Association of Nigeria
(PAN).
The benefiting companies represent the major players in the
poultry value chain in the country.
The release of the 50,000 metric tonnes of Maize forestall
the pressure and reduce the activities of intermediaries (middlemen) in the
Nigerian Maize market.
It will be recalled that the Central Bank of Nigeria had in
January this year, announced to release 300,000 metric tonnes of Maize into the
Nigerian Maize Market.
This is to bridge the shortfall in production
and augment local production of the commodity.
The current shortfall in the quantity of maize available in
the market, that CBN is working on mitigating, is attributed to activities of
banditry, drought in some parts of the country last year, activities of
hoarders and middlemen as well as insecurity around the major maize producing
belt of Niger, Kaduna, Katsina, Zamfara and part of Kano states.
As part of the Bank's financing framework, the CBN
facilitates the funding of maize farmers and processors through the Anchor
Borrowers' Programme (ABP) Commodity Association, Private/Prime Anchors, State
Governments, Maize Aggregation Scheme (MAS), and the Commercial Agricultural
Credit Scheme (CACS).
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