WorldPoultry: Indian poultry industry in crisis

24-01-2013
Poultry production in the India’s most prominent producing state, Andhra Pradesh is finding itself in the middle of an unprecedented crisis.
Indian poultry industry in crisis

According to local publication The Hindu, the industry is facing an ‘exorbitant’ rise in prices of feed and absence of commensurate increase in prices of birds and eggs.

Decline in the demand for birds coupled with a hike in prices of essential ingredients like maize and soybean has forced farmers to sell the birds at a loss of close to Rs. 10 per kg. In addition, reports on occurrence of bird flu in some parts of the country, affected sales significantly, thus crippling the industry.

Andhra Pradesh accounts for production of 3.5 crore live birds every month, which is one-third of the country’s production, apart from six crore eggs a day. In revenue terms, poultry’s contribution to the State’s annual GDP is estimated at Rs. 20,000 crore with employment to close to 20 lakh people.

The industry was first hit by a hike in the minimum support price of maize and for soybean. This was followed by the export of soya cake in large quantities to Iran, owing to the country’s bilateral relations, at prices almost 150% higher than the domestic market.

The situation in the egg market, where the State leads, is no better. “The National Egg Coordination Committee has declared price of Rs. 3.35 an egg, but this does not guarantee returns to farmers as the cost of production and overheads is higher than the offer price,” Hyderabad Layer Farmers Association president K. Mohan Reddy said.
Industry players are not hopeful of the situation improving during the current year too. They wanted banks to announce one-year moratorium on repayment of the principal and interest on the loans they had obtained besides rescheduling the loans.

The AP Poultry Federation held meetings with Union Finance Minister P. Chidambaram, RBI Governor Duvvuri Subba Rao and Food and Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar seeking their intervention in recovery of the sector and enhancing working capital limits as there was serious erosion in the amount employed. They also wanted the government to regulate exports and essential ingredients and freeze them at a certain limit.

 

 
 

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