• Friday, March 29, 2024
businessday logo

BusinessDay

How Agric Ministry’s tardiness costs Nigeria N576m

Federal Ministry of Agriculture

The delay of the Department of Fisheries, Federal Ministry of Agriculture, to summit the Self Reporting Tool (SRT) before the due date to the US-Food Safety Inspection Service (FSIS) is responsible for the loss of about N576million revenue the country would have earned in 2018 if there were no ban enforced on Nigerian fish export.

The ban which has since been enforced in March 2018 by the US is as a result of the Agric Ministry’s failure to submit the SRT document before the stipulated deadline.

According to the United States Department for Agriculture (USDA), the SRT is a prerequisite for trade and it is the process of determining whether a country’s food safety inspection system meets the standards applied domestically in the US.

Nigeria is yet to fully provide these answers after submitting the SRT document for the second time, the US Food Safety says.

“Nigeria has failed to fully address information requested in the Self Reporting Tool (SRT) and FSIS’ review of its May 2018 submission showed that equivalence requirements had still not been met,” said Veronika Pfaeffle, public affairs specialist, FSIS – USDA in a statement.

“FSIS will continue to work with Nigeria if they want to continue to pursue the process to be deemed equivalent. Until that time, Nigeria will not be eligible to export these products to the US,” Pfaeffle said.

Nigeria exports about 100 metric tonnes of catfish yearly to the US, Canada and Europe out of its 316,727MT annual aquaculture production, the Nigeria Catfish Association says.

Catfish exported to the United States is sold for $16 per kg. 1,000KG is equivalent to a ton; therefore, 1,000KG multiplied by 100tons gives 100,000KG.

To get the value in monetary terms, multiply $16 by 100,000KG, this is equal to $1.6 million (N576m).

The N576 million revenue losses is being recorded at a time the Federal Government is mouthing support for agriculture and says it is serious about making the sector the largest foreign exchange earner.

“The development has affected catfish production and the country has been losing a lot of revenue since the ban was enforced,” Oloye Rotimi Olibale, president, Catfish and Allied Fish Farmers Association of Nigeria (CAFFAN) said from his Ibadan farm in a telephone response to BusinessDay questions.

“Lots of fish farmers took loans from deposit money banks to invest in processing in order to take up opportunities in export but now with the ban since a year ago, most of them have been unable to meet their loan obligations,” Oildale said.

He stated that the ban is killing the fish industry in the country and is a big threat to the Federal Government diversification drive through the sector.

He blamed the government for not taking prompt action to address the issue and ensuring that the ban is lifted within the shortest possible time.

The development has made catfish farmers to start counting their losses as their profit margins are fast declining on account of the cancellation of future contracts to supply the African diaspora in the US, Canada and Europe.

“It has been difficult for us catfish farmers since the ban. Most farmers have now shifted to other businesses because export is where the market is for catfish production,” Richard Agetu co-founder Richsi Nigeria Limited, makers of Ejazuki smoked fish, told BusinessDay.

“Our profit margins have shrunk tremendously because we generate it from mainly from our export sales. A fish we sell for about N1,000 here is being sold for between $14 and $18 in the US,”Agetu said.

He stated that some farmers have now resorted to smuggling the smoked catfish into the US, Canada and Europe.

Speaking on behalf of the Ministry of Agriculture, Bisi Adepegba, former director of the Federal Department of Fisheries, who has been hired as a consultant by the ministry to address the issue, said the US government is yet to contact the country on the outcome of the second SRT document sent.

“We never knew the US had upgraded its SRT document and when we sent in the initial one, it was rejected because it lacked some information and that was when the ban was enforced,” Adepegba said.

“We have made a new submission to provide the additional information but up till now we have not gotten any feedback from them. Without the feedback, we would not know the next step to take,” she said.

 

Josephine Okojie