Egg Glut: How Nigeria ended up with 20 million unsold crates of eggs
During a press conference last month, the Chairman of the Poultry Association of Nigeria (PAN), South-West Zone, Rev. Oluleye Gideon, blamed the recent naira redesign policy of the Central Bank of Nigeria for the problem.
He explained the cash shortage that was occasioned by the implementation of the policy meant that lots of eggs could not be sold. He, therefore, urged the government to mop up 20 million unsold crates of eggs.
Rev Gideon also urged FG’s developmental agencies to save the subsector of the economy from total collapse, as it contributes about 6% to GDP. He said:
“They should help in mopping up about 15 to 20 million crates of eggs and chicken unsold in the economy right now to ameliorate the losses of the farmers.
Mr Godwin Egbebe said farmers were running at a loss due to the glut and appealed for government intervention at all levels, adding:
“Due to the current egg glut, major poultry farms have now dropped their prices and are encountering total loss.
States’ intervention
The Plateau Governor, Simon Lalong, said that the measure was designed to alleviate the plight of farmers caused by the recent egg glut in the state. NAN quoted him to have said:
“He said that the mop-up was the state’s first intervention in addressing the challenges facing poultry farmers in the state.
Major beneficiaries of the mop-up were charities, and the Chairperson, of the Association of Orphanages and Home Operators in Nigeria in Plateau, Mrs Kyenpiya Nyabam said “2,000 orphans in the state would benefit from the eggs.”
Economic confusion
“This is a distribution challenge. If the associations were not proactive because they should know that since covid farmers made a lot of losses, then they should have set up a marketing mechanism that should empower the farmers because there are estates that need help and it can be sent to the end consumer’s doorsteps.
On the overproduction of eggs
“There are particular times that affect the industry generally in terms of the whole country. But the egg glut happens every year, and that’s what the association does not talk about because they aren’t planning properly.
“ So the middlemen who buy, dump it in the market, the ones that have big eggs find it difficult to sell.
“ I say this because, during COVID, there was an egg glut because people could not move it from farm to market.
“In the backlog, there are bad eggs, a family member recently complained that she bought eggs at retail prices and they were all bad, she needed a place to buy where she was sure was coming from the poultry, so the thing again is, monitoring and evaluation.
“The cost of feed has gone up, through government policy they removed maize from the CBN list
“The price of maize moved from N45,000 per ton to N145,000 per ton, including locally made maize, but FG did not know, because of poor policy advisers,
He urged that FG must understand the real value chain and that most of the “special advisers” don’t and have never done commercial agriculture.