#maize – Vprint Infotech https://www.vprintinfotech.com Magazine Thu, 05 Mar 2026 08:53:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.vprintinfotech.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/logo-feb-150x150.jpg #maize – Vprint Infotech https://www.vprintinfotech.com 32 32 India-US Interim Trade to help Poultry Industry Getting Feed at a Remunerative Price – Ricky Thaper https://www.vprintinfotech.com/india-us-interim-trade-to-help-poultry-industry-getting-feed-at-a-remunerative-price-ricky-thaper/ Thu, 05 Mar 2026 08:41:44 +0000 https://www.vprintinfotech.com/?p=7546 India-US Interim Trade to help Poultry Industry Getting Feed at a Remunerative Price – Ricky Thaper

Importance of Livestock and Poultry Sector in India

India’s livestock sector plays a crucial role in the country’s agricultural and economic landscape, supporting the livelihoods of millions by providing employment, income and nutritional security. Poultry and livestock sector provides essential inputs for sustainable farming practices, ensuring the country’s food security. India’s poultry industry is currently valued at $ 30 billion which engages over six million people (both directly as well indirectly) and the poultry industry has grown rapidly over the past decade. Indian poultry industry is now one of the most efficient producers of broiler meat and eggs globally, due to well established integrated companies, contract farming and a strong domestic market.

Rising Growth and Feed Demand Imbalance
The livestock sector – dairy, poultry, fisheries and allied sector is witnessing a much faster growth than the agriculture crops (Soybeans & Maize), there is apprehension that domestic feed production may not be able to ensure steady supplies while exposing the sector to price volatility. The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) in its vision document 2047 for the Indian poultry sector has also mentioned that the sector is growing at a healthy rate of 8% annually and could see further acceleration. Availability of good quality feed ingredients and their prices are major challenges for manufacturing of good quality compound feeds.

Role of India–US Interim Trade Agreement
Under the recently announced India-US interim-trade, the decision to eliminate or cut duties on a range of items from the US including dried distillers’ grains (DDGs) and red sorghum, is likely to ensure steady supplies of animal feed in coming years. Commerce minister Piyush Goyal had stated that India will provide quota-based duty concessions on DDGs to the US under the deal. Feed demand is projected to grow faster than domestic supply, making large scale imports necessary by the early 2030s. Domestic production of energy sources like maize and protein sources like soymeal often fall short of growing demand of the poultry, dairy and fisheries sector.

Feed Cost Pressure and Need for Imports
Domestic feed supply is increasingly constrained by limited arable land and productivity gaps. The feed costs constitute 60% to 65% of the cost of the production of the animal husbandry sector any volatility in the feed prices lead to rise in cost of production and subsequent rise in prices. Thus, feed imports, especially of reduced or zero duty imports of soybeans / soybean meal and maize, can help bridge the demand-supply gap. Imports from established origins such as US soy can provide consistent, high-quality protein during periods of domestic tightness. When used judiciously, imported soy can help smooth feed costs, improve formulation consistency, and enable feed manufacturers to meet the quality benchmarks demanded by large integrators and processors.

Growing Demand for Protein and Feed
With increase in income and urbanisation as demand for dairy and poultry products increases, according the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) in its report titled ‘The Growing Demand for Animal Products and Feed in India’ has stated that at the current growth in the productivity of maize and soybean, would not be able to meet rising demand of feed. Feed demand is projected to grow faster than domestic supply, making large scale imports necessary by the early 2030s. “By ensuring a timely and cost-effective supply of these essential feed ingredients, the government is directly addressing the challenge of feed inflation. This will not only stabilise production costs for farmers but also ensure that high-quality protein remains affordable,”

Industry Concerns Over Feed Availability
Several National and State level Poultry Associations in a recent communication to Shri Rajiv Ranjan Singh, Union Minister of Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries, Government of India, has raised concern about availability and rising price of soybean meal in the country which pose risk to poultry production. The sector fears a crisis, which can severely affect livestock production and consumer prices. With nearly seven months until the next harvest of domestic soybean products, sustaining poultry production at viable cost will be difficult, directly impacting egg and chicken prices and overall inflation. Even maize prices have witnessed volatility as demand for the grain is rising not only because of rise in animal feed demand but also its being used for making ethanol and other industrial use.

Future Demand Projections (2047 Vision)
India’s population is around 1.4 billion and is projected to be approximately 1.53 billion by 2047. This increase in population directly correlates with the higher demand for food including eggs and chicken. Per capita poultry meat and eggs are expected to be 15 kg and 200 eggs annually by 2047. Around 38 million tonne (MT) of broiler feed and 34 MT of layer feed will be required in 2047. At 30% penetration rate, cattle feed requirement will be around 90 MT in 2047. Fish and shrimp feed required will be around 7 MT in 2047.

Way Forward: Ensuring Sustainable Feed Supply
Ensuring sustainable feed supplies in coming years would be a key challenge for the sector. By ensuring cost-effective supply of animal feed ingredients, the government can directly address the challenge of feed inflation. This will not only stabilize production costs for poultry, dairy and aqua farmers but shall also ensure that high-quality protein remains affordable for the consumers. The interim deal with the US provides a window of opportunity for allowing feed ingredients imports which is expected to boost the sustainable growth of the India’s poultry sector in the coming years.

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Feed Cost Volatility & Raw Material Availability in the Indian Poultry Sector https://www.vprintinfotech.com/feed-cost-volatility-raw-material-availability-in-the-indian-poultry-sector/ Tue, 16 Dec 2025 03:51:09 +0000 https://www.vprintinfotech.com/?p=7355 Feed Cost Volatility & Raw Material Availability in the Indian Poultry Sector
Prof. (Dr.) P.K. Shukla and Dr. Amitav Bhattacharyya
Department of Poultry Science, College of Veterinary Science and Animal Husbandry, Mathura (U.P.)
– President, Indian Poultry Science Association.
– Chairman, Scientific Panel 13 of FSSAI on Meat and Meat Products including poultry.
– Vice President, World Veterinary Poultry Association(I)

Abstract
Feed constitutes the largest single cost component in commercial poultry production, typically accounting for 60–75% of total production cost. In India, volatility in feed costs and irregular availability of key raw materials (maize, soybean/soybean meal, rapeseed meal, fishmeal, and others) have created recurring pressures on producer margins, market stability and food security. This article examines the drivers of feed cost volatility in the Indian poultry sector, assesses patterns of raw material availability, and evaluates short- and medium-term strategies used by industry and policymakers to manage risk. We synthesise recent market evidence (2023–2025), identify structural vulnerabilities—such as dependence on a narrow set of feed ingredients, fragmented procurement, and policy mismatches—and review practical mitigation strategies including alternative feed ingredients, feed formulation optimisation, vertical integration, risk-sharing contracts, and public policy interventions (market intelligence, buffer stocks, and targeted support). The article concludes with recommendations for research priorities and policy measures to improve resilience of the poultry value chain to feed cost and supply shocks. Key messages include: (1) diversification of feed ingredient base and adoption of precision feed formulation can materially reduce vulnerability; (2) industry–government coordination on trade and stock policy is essential to stabilise domestic supplies without harming producers or farmers; and (3) investment in local value chains (oilseed processing, maize storage, and by-product utilisation) plus real-time price information systems are high-impact, actionable steps.

Keywords
Feed cost, volatility, raw material availability, poultry, maize, soybean meal, rapeseed meal, India, risk management

1. Introduction
Poultry production in India is a rapidly expanding sector that plays a major role in animal-sourced protein supply and rural livelihoods. Feed cost remains the dominant expense for broiler and layer operations; fluctuations in feed ingredient prices directly translate into margin volatility for producers and price variability for consumers. The Indian feed matrix is dominated by maize (energy) and oilseed meals—primarily soybean meal—as the primary sources of energy and protein respectively. Rapid changes in global commodity markets, domestic crop yields driven by weather variability, policy changes (tariffs, minimum support prices), and trade disruptions have amplified feed input volatility in recent years. Reports and market analyses from 2023–2025 document episodic spikes and falls in ingredient prices, with corresponding effects on broiler and egg producers and regional market dislocations.


This paper systematically analyses drivers of feed cost volatility and raw material availability in India’s poultry sector, evaluates consequences across the value chain, and presents mitigation strategies with policy recommendations.

2. Scale and composition of poultry feed demand in India
The Indian poultry feed market is large and growing; recent industry estimates place the market value in 1.11 billion USD in 2024, with poultry feed comprising the lion’s share of the animal feed market. Poultry feed typically represents 60–75% of the cost of broiler production (varying by system and region), and maize and soybean meal together form the largest portion of feed formulations. Market reports project continued growth driven by rising protein demand, urbanisation and improved cold-chain and retail infrastructure and the Market size is expected to touch 2.02 billion USD by 2033.

3. Key feed raw materials: roles and supply characteristics

3.1 Maize (corn)
Maize is the principal energy source in poultry rations. Domestic maize production in India is concentrated in certain states (Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, and others) and is highly seasonal. Maize price at mandis shows substantial spatial variability and seasonality; mandi price dashboards indicate continuing price swings across districts and markets. Maize accounts for a large share of the feed mix and therefore small percentage price changes in maize can significantly change total feed cost.
3.2 Soybean and soybean meal
Soybean is the main oilseed in India; soybean meal derived from oil extraction is the major protein source in poultry feed. Soybean/ soymeal price movements are influenced by domestic sowing area, yields, global soybean markets (U.S., Brazil, Argentina), and policy levers such as import/export duties and MSPs. Price indices show notable volatility over 2023–2025, impacting meal costs for feed mills.

3.3 Rapeseed/rape meal and other oilseed meals
Rapeseed meal and other oilseed by-products can substitute partially for soybean meal, depending on amino acid profile and anti-nutritional factors. Global demand shifts (for example, China’s import changes) can affect availability and price of rapeseed meal. Recent trade flows have seen China increase purchases of Indian rapeseed meal, affecting local supply-demand dynamics.

3.4 Fishmeal, meat-bone meal, and other protein concentrates
Fishmeal is used in some high-performance rations but is expensive and subject to marine resource constraints and import dynamics. Alternative protein sources (pulses, by-products, microbial proteins) remain in experimental or pilot phases for large-scale adoption in India.

3.5 By-products and alternative ingredients (DDGS, bakery waste, millet, pulses)
By-products (distillers dried grains with solubles—DDGS), local pulses, oilseed cakes, and agricultural residues can be used in formulations. Their utilisation depends on consistent supply, nutritive value, cost, and processing infrastructure.

4. Drivers of feed cost volatility


Feed cost volatility arises from an interplay of supply-side and demand-side factors. Major drivers include:
4.1 Weather, crop yields and climate risks
Weather shocks (droughts, unseasonal rains, floods) directly affect maize and soybean harvests. India’s monsoon variability and localised extreme events have produced year-on-year yield swings that ripple into feed markets.
4.2 Global commodity markets and trade linkages
Soybean and maize are global commodities; shifts in harvests in Brazil, the US and Argentina, along with currency movements and shipping costs, influence Indian domestic prices—especially when domestic supply is insufficient and imports or exports respond. For soymeal, global price trends were an important factor in 2024–2025 price fluctuations.
4.3 Policy and trade measures (MSP, import/export duties, subsidies)
Government measures such as minimum support prices (MSP) for oilseeds, import duty changes, and export controls can abruptly change domestic availability and prices. For example, MSP changes and state procurement interventions for soybeans and maize have been signalled as drivers of local price movements. Industry commentary has pointed to expected MSP-related maize/soybean price increases and consequent feed-cost pressure.
4.4 Biofuel and competing demand
Increasing demand for biofuels (producing ethanol from maize or oilseed-derived biodiesel) and food processing (edible oil demand) can redirect feed-grade grains toward other uses, tightening availability for feed.
4.5 Supply-chain and storage losses
India’s post-harvest handling, limited cold-storage/controlled-environment large-scale feed reserves in some regions, and fragmented procurement by smallholder farmers contribute to localized shortages and price spikes during lean months.
4.6 Disease outbreaks and market sentiment
Avian influenza outbreaks periodically depress demand for poultry meat and disrupt distribution channels, complicating producers’ ability to manage feed purchases and inventories. Downward price shocks in broiler market can lead to abrupt feed demand reductions (and vice versa), creating cyclical volatility.

5. Recent evidence (2023–2025): patterns and episodes
Recent studies and market reports highlight episodic volatility. Industry analyses and rating-agency reports documented significant corrections in broiler prices in early 2025 due to demand shocks from disease events, and analysts reported large swings in feed ingredient costs during FY2024–25. Price series for soybean meal and maize show variability across months, with soybean meal monthly indices demonstrating notable up-and-down swings in 2023–2025. Industry associations warned of feed-cost increases of 7–8% in specific years owing to MSP hikes and lower oilseed crops, and regional news reported local maize price increases that narrowed poultry margins.

6. Impact on poultry producers and value chain

6.1 Producer margins and market stability
Given feed’s dominant share in production cost, price increases in maize or soybean meal quickly compress producer margins. Smaller and mid-size producers—operating with narrow working capital—are particularly vulnerable and may be forced to reduce stocking density, delay restocking or exit, causing supply-side shocks.
6.2 Consumer prices and food security
Large feed cost shocks can translate into higher retail prices for meat and eggs, impacting affordability and consumption patterns, especially for low-income consumers.
6.3 Contract farming and backward linkages
Feed volatility influences contracting: integrators that can secure raw materials through backward integration or long-term contracts are better cushioned. Small independent farmers, by contrast, face higher input-price risk.
6.4 Investment and sectoral growth
Unpredictable input costs deter long-term investment in production capacity and in value-chain improvements (cold chain, processing), affecting sectoral growth trajectories.

7. Industry and technical mitigation strategies

To manage feed cost volatility and raw material shortages, poultry producers and feed mills deploy a combination of technical, commercial and managerial strategies:
7.1 Feed formulation optimisation and least-cost formulations
Modern feed mills use least-cost linear programming and precision formulation to rebalance rations when ingredient prices shift—substituting cheaper yet nutritionally acceptable ingredients while maintaining performance. Adoption of real-time formulation tools and laboratory quality checks improves response speed.
7.2 Ingredient substitution and use of alternatives
Use of alternative protein/energy sources (rapeseed meal, sunflower meal, local pulses, DDGS, millet by-products, and processed oilseed cakes) can reduce dependence on soybean meal. However, substitution must account for amino acid balance, digestibility, and anti-nutritional factors. Industry publications and trade articles list practical alternatives but caution about scale and consistency of supply.
7.3 By-product valorisation and localised sourcing
Using agro-industrial by-products (bakery waste, oil-extraction cakes from local mills, brewery wastes, and vegetable-processing residues) can lower costs if processed to ensure feed hygiene and nutritive stability.
7.4 Vertical integration and contract farming
Integrators invest upstream in feed mills, oilseed crushing units, maize procurement and storage. Contract farming for maize and oilseeds can secure supplies but requires well-designed contracts, extension services, and price-sharing mechanisms.
7.5 Hedging, forward buying and inventory management
Larger companies hedge exposure through forward purchase contracts, forward pricing arrangements, and by maintaining strategic inventories at critical times. Smaller producers lack these instruments; cooperatives or producer groups can pool purchases.
7.6 Feed efficiency and management
Improving feed conversion ratio (FCR) via genetics, health management, and precision feeding reduces feed required per unit of product and partially offsets price pressure.

8. Policy and institutional options
Policy measures and institutional mechanisms can mitigate volatility and improve raw material availability:
8.1 Market intelligence, price transparency and early warning systems
Timely, disaggregated market data on mandi prices, stock levels, and international signals helps stakeholders make informed procurement decisions. Public–private platforms can disseminate such data.
8.2 Trade policy calibration and temporary measures
Careful use of tariffs, import concessions and export restrictions can be deployed temporarily to stabilise domestic availability, but must be calibrated to avoid perverse incentives for farmers and traders. For example, import duties on vegetable oil and oilseed-derived products were adjusted in 2025 to support local farmers; such policies have complex downstream effects for feed users.
8.3 Encouraging domestic oilseed and maize production
Longer-term measures include supporting oilseed and maize productivity—through R&D, improved seeds, extension, and post-harvest storage—to reduce dependency on imports and narrow seasonal supply gaps.
8.4 Strategic buffer stocks and credit support
Targeted buffer stocks (at state or cooperative level) for critical feed ingredients and credit facilities for feed procurement during lean months can stabilise supplies for small producers.
8.5 Quality and safety standards for alternative ingredients
Regulatory clarity on the use of non-conventional ingredients and by-products (including testing, permissible inclusion rates, and safety) would accelerate adoption of substitutes.

9. Case studies and illustrative examples
9.1 Regional maize price surge impacting Namakkal farmers (Tamil Nadu)
Regional media reported maize price increases (e.g., reports of maize price rising from Rs 2,400 to Rs 2,800 per quintal in certain contexts), which narrowed producer profits and illustrated how regional price swings can rapidly erode margins in poultry-dense areas.
9.2 Anticipated feed-cost increase due to MSP and oilseed dynamics
Industry associations warned in 2025 that government MSP changes and expected soybean crop responses could raise feed costs by 7–8% in a season, highlighting the sensitivity of poultry margins to policy-induced price movement.
9.3 Rapeseed meal trade and global demand shift
Trade news in 2025 showed China increasing purchases of Indian rapeseed meal following tariffs on Canadian supplies; this affected local availability and price dynamics of an alternative protein feed ingredient. This example shows how distant policies can have immediate consequences for domestic feed availability.

10. Strategic recommendations (short-, medium-, long-term)


Below are actionable recommendations organised by time horizon and stakeholder.
10.1 For producers and industry (short to medium term)
1. Adopt dynamic feed formulation tools (least-cost and nutrient-constraint optimisers) to respond rapidly to price changes.
2. Farm purchasing cooperatives among small/mid-size producers to aggregate demand and negotiate forward contracts.
3. Invest in feed efficiency via genetics, health management (biosecurity, vaccination), and precision feeding to reduce FCR.
4. Explore regional alternative ingredients (subject to safety and nutritional validation) to diversify supply.
10.2 For feed manufacturers and integrators (short to medium term)
1. Backward integrate into oilseed crushing and maize procurement where feasible.
2. Strengthen quality-control labs to validate alternative ingredients and mix consistency.
3. Use hedging and forward buying selectively; offer producer-friendly contract products for small farmers.
10.3 For policymakers (medium to long term)
1. Enhance market transparency: Build or support real-time price and stock platforms for feed raw materials.
2. Calibrate trade policy to avoid unintended domestic shortages—use time-limited import concessions when domestic shortages are acute.
3. Support oilseed and maize productivity: incentivise improved seed adoption, crop diversification and investment in storage.
4. Facilitate safe use of by-products: create standards and guidelines for utilisation of agro-industrial by-products in feed.
5. Promote research on alternative protein sources (microbial proteins, insect meal, and pulses) to reduce long-run dependence on a narrow ingredient base.

11. Research gaps and future directions
Key research areas that could strengthen resilience include:
– Nutritional evaluation and scaling pathways for novel proteins (insect meal, single-cell proteins) under Indian conditions.
– Socio-economic studies of contracting models that allow input price risk-sharing between integrators and farmers.
– Systems-level modelling of supply shocks and policy responses to evaluate trade-offs between farmer incomes, consumer prices and food security.
– Life-cycle assessments of alternative feed ingredients to ensure environmental sustainability with cost-effectiveness.

12. Conclusion
Feed cost volatility and raw material availability are structural challenges for the Indian poultry sector with both immediate and long-term implications. The dominance of maize and soybean meal in the ration, combined with weather sensitivity, global market linkages, and policy dynamics, creates recurring vulnerability.
However, a combination of industry practices (formulation optimisation, alternative ingredients, vertical integration), collective action (cooperatives, contract purchasing), and well-calibrated policy measures (market information, targeted trade measures, productivity support) can materially reduce exposure and enhance resilience. Concerted action across stakeholders—feed mills, producers, input suppliers, researchers and policymakers—will be necessary to stabilise costs, protect producer margins, and ensure reliable, affordable availability of poultry products for consumers.

References are available on request.

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Need to Address Volatility in the Livestock Feed Prices through Improving Supplies of Raw Material and Import Liberalization – Ricky Thaper (www.rickythaper.com) https://www.vprintinfotech.com/need-to-address-volatility-in-the-livestock-feed-prices-through-improving-supplies-of-raw-material-and-import-liberalization-ricky-thaper-www-rickythaper-com/ Tue, 05 Nov 2024 11:42:53 +0000 https://www.vprintinfotech.com/?p=6675


In the last five years, the agriculture sector has grown at an average growth rate of 4.18 percent per year. According to the Economic Survey (2023-24) presented to parliament, the allied sectors of Indian agriculture are steadily emerging as robust growth centres and promising sources for improving farm incomes. From 2014-15 to 2022-23, the Livestock sector grew at an impressive Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 7.38 per cent. The contribution of Livestock to the total Gross Value Added (GVA) in agriculture and allied sectors also increased. In 2022- 23, the Livestock sector contributed 4.66 per cent of the total GVA, significantly boosting the per capita availability of milk, eggs and meat, according to the economic survey.

The Livestock sector is an important sub-sector of agriculture which plays a significant role in generating gainful employment in the rural sector, particularly among the landless, small and marginal farmers. Poultry production in India valued at $ 30 billion has taken a huge-leap in the last four decades, emerging from conventional farming practices to commercial production systems with state-of-the-art technological interventions. Currently the sector is estimated to employ more than 6 million people either directly or indirectly. The small and medium size farm (5000 birds onwards) mostly engaged in contract farming systems under larger integrators or companies.

A report titled ‘Vision 2047’ Indian Poultry sector by Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) has stated that the growth in the poultry sector in the country has been attributed to the commercial poultry industry which accounts for 85% of production while the rest of 15% of the output comes from the traditional backyard poultry.
India has transformed their poultry farming industry through major investments in breeding, hatching, rearing, and processing of chicken. India, as the third-largest producer of eggs (129.60 billion) and the fifth-largest producer of poultry meat (aprox. 6 million tonnes) globally. As per the FAOSTAT 2, the USA has 17% share in global poultry meat production followed by China (12%), Brazil (11.7%), Russia (3.8%) and India (3.5).

According to a latest Reserve Bank of India (RBI) working paper on ‘Livestock and Poultry Inflation in India’, within livestock, poultry meat production (from broiler industry) has grown steadily with the emergence of vertically integrated poultry producers. However, the annual per capita consumption of poultry meat aprox. 6.5 kg in India, is low by global standards. Broilers bird placement in India is about 5-5.5 billion annually while the layer placement is estimated at around 300 million.

India ranks fourth globally in terms of livestock feed (poultry, dairy, aqua) production at 52.83 million tonne (MT) in 2023, which is an increase of more than 13% compared to 46.58 MT in 2022. India’s soybean production is estimated around 12.2 MT against Brazil (169 MT) and USA (120 MT) in 2023. However, according to feedback received from various poultry associations, broiler feed demand was 16 MT in 2022-23 and projected to increase to 18.6 MT in 2025-26. Layer feed demand is currently projected at 11.9 MMT which is likely to increase to 15.9 MMT by 2025-26. Cattle feed demand is expected to rise from 16.03 M to 19.64 MT in the next couple of years. Aqua feed is likely to rise from 2.43 MT to 3.1 MT. Overall feed demand is set to rise to 57.24 MT by 2025-26. Soymeal consumption for broiler, layer, cattle and aqua feeds is projected to increase from 6.6 MT to 7.33 MT.

Recently, there has been increasing reports of adulteration in soybean meal, which could adversely impact the growth of the poultry sector. The adulteration reduces the nutritional value of the poultry feed and may result in severe health implications of birds, yield and can cause mortality of birds which can hit farmers’ income through loss in output. At present there are no strict measures initiated for dealing with the issue.

Creation of a Bureau of Indian Standard certification for soybean meal would result in the poultry farmers getting access to quality and nutritionally enriched feed which would be vital for maintaining the health of poultry and ensuring optimal productivity in the rising poultry sector.
With rising demand for feed, the output has to increase in comparison to increase in demand. To sustain the growth in the livestock sector, Import Liberalization for corn and soybean /soybean meal is must. Soybean meal is a key protein source for poultry feed and directly impacts the health, growth, and yield of birds. According to SOPA reports, soybean production in the 2023-24 oil year (October-September) is estimated at 11.87 million tonne (MT) while carry forward stock was 2.4 MT and imports were 0.6 MT. Out of these, 1.3 MT has been retained for seed purpose while total stock available for crushing is 13.58 MT.

In the case of soybean meal output, 9.46 MT was produced in 2023-24 oil year and there was carry forward stock of 0.11 MT and imports were 0.25 MT. Out of the total availability of soybean meal, 2.1 MT were exported while around 0.8 MT was used as domestic consumption for food purpose in 2023-24 oil year. Around 6.6 MT of soymeal used for feed last oil year.

The government recently substantially hiked import duties on both refined and crude edible oil – palm, soybean and sunflower. This move is expected to boost market prices of soybean. The government has just approved the national mission on edible oils-oilseeds with an outlay of Rs. 10,103 crore aimed at boosting edible oil production from the current level of 12.7 million tonne (MT) to 20.2 MT by 2031. Area under oilseeds will be increased to 33 million hectare from the current level of 29 million hectare. The mission aims to increase oilseed production from 39 MT (2022-23) to 69.7 MT by 2030-31. The edible oil mission will focus on enhancing the production of key oilseeds– rapeseed, mustard, groundnut, soybean and sunflower. In addition, the program aimed at increasing collection and extraction efficiency from secondary oilseeds like cottonseed and rice bran.

Despite such considerable growth in the livestock and poultry sector, the feed prices have remained volatile. Stating that there has been increasing diversion of maize towards industrial use and ethanol production, the CII’s report had stated that the current growth level of maize and soybean production in the country will be insufficient to meet the demand of the poultry industry. The CII has urged the government to allow imports of Genetically Modified (GM) maize and soybean because of ‘unprecedented increase’ in prices while adding that interest of the domestic producers should be protected too.

In August, 2021, the government had relaxed import rules to allow the first shipment of 1.2 MT (million tonne) of Genetically Modified soybean meal to support the domestic poultry industry after a record spike in prices. The composition of animal feed is 65% is energy source mostly from maize, bajra and broken rice while rest is protein source mostly from soybean meal and groundnut extraction. There is an urgent need to formulae strategy for meeting the demand supply gap for corn and soybean meal in livestock feed – poultry, dairy and aqua for sustaining growth in the sector. Several south Asian countries including Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka have allowed imports of GM Soybean / Soybean Meal.

About the Author


Mr. Ricky Thaper is Treasurer, Poultry Federation of India and in his career of more than 35 years in Poultry, has attended several specialized courses and programs on Poultry around the world. Mr. Thaper has attended prestigious international events including the International Poultry Exposition in Atlanta, USA, the International Exposition for Food Processors in San Francisco, USA, World’s Poultry Congress in Montreal, Canada, VIV Turkey in Istanbul, Turkey, SPACE Poultry and Livestock Exhibition in Rennes, France, VIV EUROPE in Utrecht, The Netherlands, ILDEX Vietnam in Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam and many more. Through the prestigious Cochran Fellowship Program, Mr. Thaper had attended poultry and aqua feed preparation short course at Texas A&M University, USA in 2000. Additionally, he completed courses on extrusion processes at the Food Protein Research and Development Centre, Texas Engineering Experiment Station, Texas A&M University, in 2005, and on soybean processing at the National Soybean Research Centre, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA in 2008.

Mr. Thaper actively connects and collaborates with global poultry communities, promoting industry advancements. His dedication to animal care and enthusiasm for the poultry sector has earned him multiple awards at national and international events in last three decades. Mr. Thaper is also Regional Advisory Council Member of the Soy Excellence Center-India. Mr. Thaper provides inputs to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Inflation Analysis Team on future price movements and food price outlook of poultry meat and feed at regular intervals. Mr. Thaper is on Editorial Board of several Journals and has contributed several write-ups on the poultry sector which have been published in several national and international journals. He has also delivered several lectures on various global platform.

 

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AIPBA Demands Duty-Free Import of Maize to Meet Poultry Sector’s Requirement https://www.vprintinfotech.com/aipba-demands-duty-free-import-of-maize-to-meet-poultry-sectors-requirement/ Sun, 11 Feb 2024 07:23:50 +0000 https://www.vprintinfotech.com/?p=5826 AIPBA Demands Duty-Free Import of Maize to Meet Poultry Sector’s Requirement



AIPBA Chairman Shri Bahadur Ali, in a representation to Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying, said ethanol makers’ growing thirst for maize has also pushed prices skyward, posing a major challenge for Indian poultry farmers. The All-India Poultry Breeders Association (AIPBA) demanded that the government permit duty-free import of maize to meet the requirement of the poultry industry amid rise in the grain consumption in ethanol production and insufficient domestic output.

With maize prices hovering around Rs 25-26 per kg across India, poultry farmers are grappling with unsustainable costs,” he said and cautioned that the burden is expected to intensify in the future, which may adversely impact the poultry industry. Against this backdrop, the association stated that there are two options before the government to address the rising demand for maize in both livestock feed and other industries. One option is importing maize, and the other is increasing domestic production.

“However, significant short-term increase in domestic output is deemed improbable. Therefore, importing maize from other countries emerges as the most viable solution to meet the immediate demand,” it stated in its representation. The current basic import duty on maize is 50 per cent. Citing concerns over the rising maize consumption in ethanol production, the association pointed out that India’s 34.60 million tonne annual maize production is insufficient to meet the requirements of the poultry industry as well as the nation’s food security.

As per estimates of the Indian Institute of Millets Research, the poultry and livestock industry consume more than 60 per cent of the country’s maize production, it said. In this context, the government’s ambitious plan to generate half of the ethanol from maize by 2025-26 “may have some serious implications for sectors like poultry and livestock.” The association said diverting such a significant chunk of current maize production could impact their access to essential feedstock, creating a severe demand-supply gap in the coming years. Also, maize production growth over the decade has been at 4.5 per cent, while the poultry industry has experienced a growth of 8-9 per cent. “This disparity highlights the anticipated maize shortage for the poultry industry, particularly in the wake of the government’s plan to promote maize for ethanol in a big way,” it observed. India is the sixth largest producer of maize in the world and its production in India is second only to wheat and rice.

 

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