News

Poor budgetary allocation bane of aquaculture sector –CAFAN boss

The Catfish Farmers Association of Nigeria (CAFAN) has attributed poor budgetary outlay on the part of local fish farmers as the major challenge of the sector.

The association’s chairman, Mr Sunday Onoja, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria on Wednesday in Lagos.

The chairman said that inadequate budget outlay had led to the collapse of many fish farms apart from the rising cost of fish feed and unscrupulous activities of the middle that frustrated fish farmers across Africa.

“In a recent webinar discussion, it has occurred to us that fish farmers are being frustrated in most African countries due to middlemen exploitation.

“We have also come to realise that the middlemen are not just the problem we face in the sector but inadequate budget planning of most fish farmers.

“Most farmers stock more juvenile than they can feed to maturity and before then they run at a loss.

“When they can no longer feed their stocks due to rising fish feed costs, they are forced to sell at a loss.

“Fish cultivation is a cycle that you must complete and in that completion, you must not cut corners to get the desired outcome.

“When the farmer makes a loss due to cutting the cultivation process, next time when he wants to restock, the capital will not be enough,” the CAFAN chairman told NAN.

Onoja said fish farmers need to understand the dynamics of pricing their produce in line with operational costs.

He said that they must factor in all the necessary expenditures before tagging a price to their produce in order to break even.

“It is not necessarily the issue of rising feed costs that is increasing the cost of operations for local farmers but inadequate planning on their part.

“If the cost of feed goes up, ultimately the price of fish will go up, farmers need to understand the dynamics of this calculation to break even.

“If the farmer does not follow the schedule of expenditure alongside the cost of feed, he will have problems.

“It is not the cost of operation that is the problem but inadequate planning. No farmer should say he is frustrated with fish farming, it is him not planning well.

“To feed a kilogramme of fish, the farmer spends nothing less than N900, the cost of power to run the farm in six months costs N50,000.

“The cost of maintenance of the farm also cost a lot aside from buying the stock and the feed. The farmer must factor all of these into the cost of operations before selling.

“This way poultry farmers can break even and still remain relevant in the industry. Poultry farmers need enough financial management and planning to get it right,” Onoja said. (NAN)

Felix Oloyede

Felix Oloyede is a Mass Communication graduate with 19 years experience in journalism. He has worked with TheWeek Magazine; Mirror Newspapers; West Africa BusinessNews and BusinessHallmark Newspaper. Oloyede has covered different news beats ranging from crime; arts; politics; commerce and industries to finance and economy. He is an alumnus of Bloomberg Media Initiative Africa. He has also attended different trainings on Media Communication at the Lagos Business School. He is an alumnus of Bloomberg Media Initiative Africa. He has also attended different trainings on Media Communication at the Lagos Business School.

Recent Posts

US authorities slam Air Peace boss, Onyema, with fresh fraud charges

The Chief Executive Officer of Air Peace, Allen Onyema, has been hit with new charges…

2 years ago

Report: NUPRC has not approved $1.3bn Shell Renaissance deal

  Contrary to reports in a section of the media that the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum…

2 years ago

There’s a plan to derail Tinubu’s petroleum industry revolution

Tajudeen Suleiman It was a pleasant shock for me to read the National Bureau of…

2 years ago

NNPCL’s acquisition of OVH: Reps member, Miriam Onuoha, slams Atiku, says oil and gas sector should not be politicised

  A member of the House of Representatives, representing Isiala Mbano / Onuimo / Okigwe…

2 years ago

Fidelity Bank affirms commitment to data protection, strong corporate governance

  Leading financial institution in Nigeria, Fidelity Bank Plc, has assured its customers of unwavering…

2 years ago

NGX rates Fidelity Bank highest on corporate governance

  Fidelity Bank Plc complies with the highest corporate governance standards as the leading commercial…

2 years ago

This website uses cookies.