According to GNAP, in-country facilities are inadequate to meet current demand. Local hatcheries can only produce 5% of 300,000 mt capacity, whilst the poultry feed milling capacity in the country is at 12%. There exists only one commercial poultry abattoir in Ghana slaughtering 9000 birds per day. The largest commercial chicken farm in Ghana has a capacity of 500,000 birds. Despite these various capacity challenges, there exist opportunities for investors looking into this sector.
Broiler production in Ghana is low: 15% local production; 85% supplemented by imports. The Ministry also intimated that the Ghanaian government has initiated the Rearing for Food & Jobs programme to supplement the national demand. This initiative was to increase broiler production and stop reliance on poultry importation. The programme looks to help support investors in the poultry value chain to produce over 162 million broilers and over 350 million guinea fowls within a space of 5 years to stem imports. However, serious bottlenecks exist in the realization of this dream with frequent maize and soya bean shortages in the country. These two crops are essential raw materials to produce poultry feed in-country and these shortages lead farmers to purchase at high prices making local broilers expensive. Currently, local production cannot compete with cheaper foreign imports.