Business a.m.

How to boost poultry farming

- Kenneth Afor

AN EXPERT IN POULTRY FARMING has said that massive investment in the production of livestock feeds will reduce the high cost of production of chicken in the country which has made many to prefer imported frozen chicken because of its affordabil­ity...

AN EXPERT IN POULTRY FARMING has said that massive investment in the production of livestock feeds will reduce the high cost of production of chicken in the country which has made many to prefer imported frozen chicken because of its affordabil­ity.

Damilare Jimi-Olatunji, chief executive officer and director at Animalia Farm Services, in an interview with Business a.m., added that with investment­s from the government and from foreign investors in the sector it will curb the influx of the importatio­n of the product into the country.

Over the years, Nigerians have been feeding largely on imported frozen chicken from neighbouri­ng countries and that has retarded the growth of the country’s poultry business.

The country’s annual domestic demand for poultry consumptio­n is put at 1.5 million metric tonnes, but currently, poultry farmers in the country produce about 300,000 metric tonnes while 1.2 million metric tonnes are smuggled into Nigeria via the land borders.

In August, the president ordered a partial closure of Seme border, one of the popular borders known for smuggling to reduce the influx of some agricultur­al products into the country. Such smuggled products include rice, tomatoes, frozen foods and other foods that can be locally produced. The border closure was to protect the local farmers.

Olatunji, however, identified some of the challenges facing poultry farmers which hinfer them from meeting the national chicken demand. They include insufficie­nt production of livestock feeds such as maize, soya, sorghum, and other inputs which make the local chickens expensive relative to the smuggled ones.

“The importatio­n of chicken thrives because it’s cheaper. Only a few buy the expensive ones when they have a cheaper alternativ­e. Our locally produced chicken will definitely overtake the imported ones if our coat of production is cheaper and that can only be achieved with a large scale production of crops especially those consumed by livestock e.g. Maize, Soya, sorghum, and others. Once this is relatively cheap it will single-handedly reduce the cost of production since feed takes up 70% of production cost.

“To achieve this feat, we need a huge investment in that sector from local and foreign investors. Once this is fully achieved there will be no need for the importatio­n of maize or other feed ingredient­s and our chicken will be quite affordable for our people. You can imagine if a bag of feed is currently sold at 3500, reduce to N1500 and a kilo of locally raised fresh chicken goes for N700 per kilo as against N900 - N1000 per kilo of the imported ones,” said Olatunji.

Moreover, the high cost of livestock feeds is not the only a challenge facing the poultry business in the country . Biosecurit­y in taming the outbreak of diseases is a huge threat to the lives of the birds which needs urgent attention from the authoritie­s.

He, however, called on the government to support financing and conduct more researches to know the best way to combat poultry animal-related diseases such as bird flu.

“Biosecurit­y in the control of bird flu and other disease incidences on the farm has no substitute. Also having a sales point far from the farm environmen­t goes a long way in keeping people out as much as possible and at the same time the diseases they brought along, this can only be achieved with the government’s support through financing, orientatio­n, research, technology advancemen­ts, local production of farm equipment and so on.”

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