Rwanda: Rice mills struggle to buy farmers' produce amid 'cheap imports'

Published 2024년 7월 17일

Tridge summary

Rice mills in Rwanda are struggling due to an influx of cheaper Tanzanian rice, leading to unsold local rice stocks and difficulties in purchasing from farmers at government-set prices. This has severely impacted farmers' ability to invest in future crops. The Ministry of Trade and Industry is working with mills and farmers to address these issues by encouraging direct collection, establishing contracts, exploring new markets, and improving local rice quality. They are also considering alternative buyers like the school feeding program to support local industries.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Rice mills have thousands of tonnes of unsold rice stocks, and they are struggling to buy produce from farmers as a result of what they call an influx of relatively cheap imported rice on the local market, The New Times has learnt. The issue was reported less than a month after the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MINICOM) announced new prices at which rice should be bought from farmers for the harvest for agriculture season B of 2024. The prices announced on June 21, are based on rice quality and variety, with Rwf500 a kilogramme for short-grain rice, Rwf505 for medium-grain rice, and Rwf515 a kilogramme of long-grain rice. For Basmati rice, it was priced at Rwf775 a kilogramme. ALSO READ: Mixed reactions as govt slashes rice farm gate prices Speaking to The New Times, Apollinaire Gahiza, Chairperson of a rice farmers' union in the Rwamagana, Kayonza, and Ngoma districts, said that while the fixed rice prices at which factories have to buy the produce from farmers were high in the ...
Source: All Africa

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