Poultry industry may shut down by January, as 5m jobs under threat

  Prices of maize, soybeans jump 100% in nine months

The Poultry industry is set to shut down production by January next year, unless urgent steps are taken to save the situation. This is in connection with the astronomical rise in prices of maize and soybeans the main components of feed used for poultry production.

President of the Poultry Association of Nigeria, Ezekiel Ibrahim, during a press conference tagged: Crisis and the Survival of the Nigeria Poultry Industry: A Critical Moment, said the industry faced dire situation unless the government acts fast. He said the industry could be forced to shut in January 2021 if nothing urgent is done.

According to him, the major reasons given for the scarcity and high cost of soybeans and maize in the country are insecurity, climate change and hoarding. He added that findings showed that soybeans were being exported in seeds and meals, which has contributed to the present crisis.

He maintained that small and medium-sized poultry farms, which are major players in the industry, are shutting down, thereby threatening over five million jobs created by the industry.

He said: Smallholder farmers are falling apart due to the high cost of feed mill, as they now have to pass the high cost to the end-product, which many Nigerians cannot afford. After Christmas, most of the farmers may not be able to keep up, as they may have to sell off their chicks.

Following the sharp increase, the cost of feed has increased, from N3000 in March to between N4600 and N5300. The cost of poultry industry feed, which contributes 75 per cent to production costs, has risen by over 75 per cent within nine months.

Industry experts blamed the development on increase in exportation of maize and soybeans, mop-up of maize grains for COVID-19 palliatives, the protracted lockdown, #EndSARS protests and lack of incentives to the industry.

To salvage the situation, the association called on the government to immediately halt soya bean and soya meal exports, as well guarantee local food security.

According to it, there is a need to allow immediate importation of soya beans and maize into the country as a stop-gap in mitigating supply shocks and called on the government to take pro-active steps to reverse the current trend.

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