Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Traders say tomatoes scarcity will linger till September, as consumers lament high prices

Musa Yakubu, a tomatoes trader in the popular Ile-Epo Market in Alimosho, said the boom season of tomatoes had passed.
picsart_05-18-045545
Traders say tomatoes scarcity will linger until September

SOME tomato traders and consumers have lamented the recent scarcity and hike in the price of the produce in the country.

In separate interviews with People's Gazette, the traders predicted that the scarcity would likely last till late September or early October.

They attributed the scarcity and hike to the seasonal occurrence and said there was nothing they could do but sell according to the market value.

picsart_05-18-045557
A tomato seller 

Musa Yakubu, a tomatoes trader in the famous Ile-Epo Market in the Alimosho LGA, said the boom season of tomatoes had passed. He added that the harvest season of tomatoes was over, hence the recent hike in the price of the produce.

“The tomatoes specie available currently is the plum tomatoes from the south, popularly known for their high water content and tangy taste,” Mr Yakubu said.

Umar Yusuf, another tomato seller, said the scarcity of the produce was seasonal and led to the hike in the price of the produce.

“A medium basket of tomatoes goes between N24,000 and N30,000 depending on the fruit size, while a raffia basket sells for N42,000.

“A small basket of tomatoes presently sells at N16,000 as against N5,000 or N6,000 in March/April, and this is because the product is out of season,” Mr Yusuf said.

picsart_05-18-045609

Some consumers said they have no choice but to improvise in using tomatoes in their cooking due to the price hike.

Josephine Kallo, a resident of the Amuwo-Odofin area, says she buys what she can afford.

“The traders said that we are out of the season of tomatoes as the rains have begun destroying the crops. We have no choice but to buy what we can afford or improvise to make meals for our families,” Ms Kallo said.