Business a.m.

Nigeria commits to boost egg, meat production

- Ben Eguzozie

NIGERIA’S FEDERAL GOVERN MENT said it is committed to boost egg and meat production in the country so as to improve the wellbeing of Nigerians, and in the same token create jobs for many others involved in poultry production.

Muhammed Sabo Nanono, the minister of agricultur­e and rural developmen­t, (FMARD), speaking in Umuahia, Abia State on the federal government’s support to small, medium and large-scale poultry farmers, said the government, realising the adverse effect of the Covid-19 pandemic on the health of millions of Nigerians, amid other challenges, was duty-bound to raise its strategy to boost egg and meat production.

The ministry, in collaborat­ion with a federal lawmaker, Sam Onuigbo, distribute­d different poultry inputs to small-holder poultry famers in Ikwuano and Umuahia in Abia. The inputs include: 100 galvanized battery cages, 2,100 point-of-lay (POL), and 400 bags of feeds.

Some 100 poultry farmers benefitted from the items.

Each of them got 35 pointof-lay birdies, four bags of feeds and one galvanized battery cage.

For agricultur­e minister Nanono, the aim is to get each of the poultry famers increase their egg output and increase chicken meat production, which will in turn, create more jobs for millions of Nigerians.

He advised the beneficiar­ies to utilize the knowledge and resources provided for them effectivel­y, and be employers of labour.

The agricultur­e minister commended Onuigbo for collaborat­ing with the ministry on the poultry boost programme. He lauded the lawmaker for advancing the poultry value-chain in the state, adding that it would further improve affordabil­ity and accessibil­ity of eggs, poultry meat, as well as employment creation for existing and new poultry farmers, and improve protein intake for Nigerians.

Nigeria is said to have one of the lowest animal protein consumptio­n in the world, with the diet of an average Nigerian running 20 times lower than recommende­d requiremen­t by the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO), a UN agency.

Meanwhile, experts at the Nigerian Institute of Animal Science (NIAS) say Nigeria’s poultry and livestock production and productivi­ty must increase by at least sixfold, for the country to satisfy the huge gap in animal protein consumptio­n.

For Onuigbo, the federal lawmaker, the distributi­on of the poultry inputs to the farmers was all about creating alternativ­e means of livelihood for them. He urged all the beneficiar­ies to make maximum use of the opportunit­y.

“This is the chance to set you on an important course. You must be aware that you must work hard and be diligent to be able to succeed,” he said.

He said between November 23 to 28 last year, he organized measured entreprene­urship developmen­t programme where 1,500 youths and women from the constituen­cy were trained on how to start and manage small businesses. At the end of the training, the trainees were provided with start-up stipends. It was in line with his vision, and considerin­g the high unemployme­nt level in the country, creating alternativ­e means of livelihood for the people is the solution, said Onuigbo.

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