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We’ve lost N30bn worth eggs to cash scarcity, say poultry farmers

Crates of eggs

The Poultry Farmers Association of Nigeria (PAN) said its members lost more than N30 billion worth of over 15 million crates of eggs due to the effect of naira scarcity in the country.

The National President of PAN, Sunday Onallo-Akpa, in a statement on Friday, said: “The poultry farmers in the country have lost over 15 million crates of eggs being unsold and are damaged. The average loss to the poultry industry as at this press release is in excess of over N30 billion”

Onallo-Akpa described the poultry industry as one of the most consolidated subsectors, contributing about 25% of the agricultural gross domestic product and employing over 25 million Nigerians direct and indirect.

He said the poultry industry has been a major employer of labour and a great source of financial empowerment and livelihood for many families, especially women and youths.

“The industry is completely private sector driven, worth over N3 trillion,” he said, adding that it has been able to contribute to the local domestication of investments in the country.”

The near absence of naira notes for Nigerians to make daily transactions has made businesses in the poultry industry more difficult.

Onallo-Akpa however warned that the poultry industry is on the verge of total collapse and extermination because of the negative and devastating consequences of the new currency policy.

“The near absence of naira notes for Nigerians to make daily transactions has made businesses in the poultry industry more difficult.

“Eggs being daily produced by poultry farmers since the first week of February 2023 till date have never been off taken by 20% because of the near absence and lack of naira notes to buy basic food items and other necessary proteins like eggs and chickens,” said the PAN leader.

He therefore called for urgent intervention by the federal government to save the industry from imminent collapse, by mopping up the eggs through the association for distribution to the most vulnerable old populations as part of the Social Investment Support to Nigerians.

“Encourage the Armed Forces in various peacekeeping operations, the Nigerian Prisons, the Internally Displaced Persons and primary schools (School Feeding Programme) to be immediate offtakers of the eggs,” he urged.

He also appealed to the Presidency to direct the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), the Directorate of Peacekeeping Operations of the Nigeria Armed Forces, the Social Investment Programme of the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, to work with PAN on how immediate reliefs can be extended to poultry farmers across Nigeria to prevent the industry from collapse.

The PAN President also appealed to the government to make available direct grants and financial support to the industry through the association in special packages to be worked out by the government and the association. (NAN)

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