Why East Africa is facing an animal feed ‘famine’
East Africa
faces a growing deficit of animal feed owning to increased production of
livestock products and urbanisation
Growing
populations and incomes continue to drive livestock demand, which could grow as
high as 50 percent in certain cities, particularly in Tanzania’s capital Dar es
Salaam and Ethiopia’s Addis Ababa. However, this has led to a shortage of
animal feed in the region.
Ethiopia and Kenya
have aggressively sought to grow their livestock farming in rural areas to
avoid the effects of urbanisation, which is eating into available land. Local
producers have also engaged international agencies and advisers on how to
enhance poor animal feeds through protein and other nutritional additives.
Small-scale projects are showing the potential of such efforts, but the
Tanzania Animal Feed Manufacturers Association (TAFMA) says greater success
requires greater knowledge. According to TAFMA, most farmers currently struggle
to understand their feed inputs and associated costs, making it tricky to find
the balance between lowering costs and maintaining
quality.
“Mineral and vitamin
inputs can confuse even the most astute farmer”, says Hector, a Tanzanian
farmer, “especially those operating in a low technology setting”. Very few of
Hector’s Tanzanian counterparts employ technology in their processing. As a
result, biotechnology in feed production wrestles with a reluctant industry.
Information and communication technology upgrades – whether computers or mobile
phones – could tremendously help the industry overall. Such upgrades could
better facilitate the industry’s ability to record data, summarise information,
and transfer knowledge.
What is likely to
happen is a trend similar to other regions of Africa. Eventually livestock
farmers will eventually develop in-house animal feed processing capabilities,
but in the short-term, the likelihood of seeing this trend overtake the region
is low. Thus animal feed producers have the potential to more than double their
profits in the next few years with greater volume production and lower prices.
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