The Minister for Food and Agriculture, Eric Opoku, has unveiled a comprehensive package of reforms designed to attract private investment into Ghana’s rice value chain and accelerate the country’s drive toward rice self-sufficiency.
Speaking at the ECOWAS Rice Investment Roundtable in Accra, the Minister said government is implementing market-driven policies to create a more predictable and investor-friendly environment for producers, processors, aggregators, and financiers.
According to Mr. Opoku, recent initiatives such as the satellite mapping of 100,000 hectares of rice farmland and the introduction of a producer-importer quota policy form part of a broader strategy to strengthen domestic rice production and reduce import dependence.
“The critical challenge before us is not simply introducing new interventions, but building the policy architecture that makes investment viable and sustainable,” he said.
The Minister explained that the producer-importer quota policy is intended to strengthen market linkages rather than restrict imports. He revealed that government is developing a predictable producer pricing framework to provide certainty for investors and value chain actors.
The framework, he noted, will help investors assess input costs, determine expected margins, and make long-term investment decisions with greater confidence.
As part of efforts to strengthen financing within the sector, government is transitioning from broad-based subsidies to targeted credit arrangements backed by structured off-take agreements.
Under the initiative, the Ministry aims to have at least 25 percent of rice farmers operating under off-take agreements by 2028, creating stronger market systems while improving access to financing for farmers and agribusinesses.
Mr. Opoku also raised concerns about inefficiencies within Ghana’s rice processing industry, revealing that low milling conversion rates of between 50 and 55 percent result in annual losses estimated at between US$15 million and US$19 million.
To address the challenge, government plans to link production clusters with licensed millers through contract-based supply arrangements while supporting investments in modern processing infrastructure.
The Minister disclosed that discussions are underway with development finance institutions to establish a Rice Processing Modernization Facility that will combine grant funding and concessional financing to support the acquisition of modern milling equipment.
Additional interventions under consideration include time-bound capital grants and equipment leasing programmes to facilitate the replacement of obsolete machinery across the sector.
Mr. Opoku further identified rural infrastructure as a critical factor in attracting agricultural investment, stressing that production gains cannot be fully realised without efficient transportation networks.
He said government is prioritising the rehabilitation of feeder roads connecting production centres to markets under the Feed Ghana Programme to reduce post-harvest losses, improve market access, and increase farmer incomes.
The reforms form part of Ghana’s broader strategy to strengthen food security, boost local rice production, create jobs, and position agriculture as a major driver of economic growth.
The ECOWAS Rice Investment Roundtable is seeking to mobilise public, private, and blended financing to support national and regional rice investment plans and advance West Africa’s goal of achieving rice self-sufficiency by 2035.








