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    Home » Rice Farmers Demand Six-Month Import Ban To Avert Sector Collapse
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    Rice Farmers Demand Six-Month Import Ban To Avert Sector Collapse

    SefakorBy SefakorMay 19, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Ghana’s rice sector is sliding into a deepening crisis. Producers warn that the huge glut of unsold paddy is not only threatening livelihoods but also eroding investor confidence and discouraging youth participation in the industry.

    The farmers are calling for an urgent six-month ban on imports after an estimated one million metric tonnes of locally produced paddy rice, valued at about GH¢5 billion, remains unsold.

    The Association of Ghana Rice Producers and Processors says the situation has reached a tipping point, with weak market demand and the continued influx of cheaper, often smuggled, foreign rice crowding out local supply.

    Speaking at a recent World Bank Civil Society Organisation engagement on food security, executive member, Dr. Terence Adda-Balinia described the situation as dire, stressing that without immediate policy intervention, the domestic rice industry risks collapse.

    According to the association, the proposed temporary import ban would allow the market to absorb existing stocks while giving local producers a fighting chance to recover.

    Beyond the immediate crisis, industry players warn of longer-term consequences that could reshape the sector. The persistent inability to sell locally produced rice has created uncertainty that is increasingly deterring private investors, who are wary of committing capital to a market with weak protections and unpredictable returns.

    Even more concerning is the growing disappointment among young people engaged in rice production. Once seen as a promising avenue for agribusiness and job creation, the sector is now losing its appeal as many youth farmers struggle to break even. With mounting post-harvest losses, low farmgate prices, and limited access to reliable markets, young producers are beginning to question the viability of staying in the industry.

    Ghana consumes nearly two million metric tonnes of rice annually, yet imports still account for 60 to 70 percent of that demand. This dominance, driven by consumer preferences and urbanisation, continues to undermine local production despite years of investment.

    The effects of the crisis are already rippling through the value chain. Several rice mills have shut down operations due to lack of buyers, while smallholder farmers bear the brunt of financial losses. “Over one million farmers are overwhelmed in huge losses,” Dr. Adda-Balinia noted.

    To address structural challenges, the association is also advocating for the introduction of guaranteed minimum farmgate prices and a dedicated low-interest financing window for millers, particularly during harvest seasons when liquidity constraints are most severe.

    Producers insist that without assured market access and stronger regulatory enforcement, investments in rice production will continue to yield diminishing returns. As confidence declines, both investors and the next generation of farmers may turn away, leaving Ghana’s goal of rice self-sufficiency increasingly out of reach.

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