Karnataka Poultry Farmers’ and Breeders’ Association (KPFBA) has now urged agriculture and farmers’ welfare minister Narendra Singh Tomar, to immediately allow the import of maize, specifically for the small and medium poultry farmers.
The move comes in the wake of the immense shortfall in production of maize and also due to the skewed import of maize, many small and medium poultry farmers in Karnataka and other states are in distress, thus affecting production of poultry.
In a letter addressed to the minister, Akhilesh Babu, president, KPFBA, has pressed the government to import maize of feed grade to resolve the problems of the small and medium farmers.
About 17 small and medium broiler poultry farmers had applied for import of 61,050 metric tonne (MT), while one major player alone had applied for 50,000 MT to the MMTC (Metals and Minerals Trading Corporation), which Babu said was not a fair proportion. He added that the government should come to the immediate rescue of the small and medium poultry farmers.
The KPFBA president pointed out that the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) had allowed import of 50,000 MT each to both MMTC and NAFED (National Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Federation), but these imports may not reach the small and medium farmers.
These two organisations have floated global tenders separately to source non-genetically modified organism (GMO) maize to be used by poultry farmers. The KPFBA has suggested that there should be common allotment in consultation with each other, thus giving equal opportunity to all applicants.
In Karnataka, all the small and medium poultry farmers had applied in April 2019 for import of non-GMO maize under the TRQ (tariff rate quota) scheme through the KPFBA paying the prescribed fee of Rs 18.5 per tonne to MMTC.
A few big players have also applied for the import of maize in large volumes. KPFBA feared that the big players may get all the maize, leaving nothing for the small and medium poultry farmers.
Meanwhile, KPFBA has got to know from its sources that the MMTC has not received the expected response from global suppliers for the tender floated, thus adding to the stress levels of farmers who have stopped placing chicks due to non-availability of maize. The small and medium farmers, for whom poultry is a livelihood, are in severe distress.
It may be mentioned here that the Government of India had allowed the import of nearly five lakh MT of maize under the TRQ scheme between December 2018 and April 2019, which mitigated the problem to some extent. While thanking the government for the same, KPFBA has sought its immediate intervention.