Indian Express

Express India

Screen

Loksatta

Express Cricket

Kashmir Live

Biz Publications
 
| Make this your homepage | RSS

West Bengal bird flu outbreak: egg price crestfallen in Kerala

Commodity Bureau

Posted: 2008-02-05 00:18:27+05:30 IST
Updated: Feb 05, 2008 at 0035 hrs IST

Egg demand is not visibly shaken in Kerala following bird flu break-out in West Bengal, but the price is. From Rs 2.20 per piece, the egg price has done a humpty-dumpy crash to just Rs 1.50 per piece.

It's sunny side up for the egg-eaters, who are many in urban areas, says M K Alavuddin, poultry products retailer at Chalai market in Thiruvananthapuram. Although there may be the occasional health freaks keeping off the poultry diet for a while, bird flu tidings from West Bengal has not significantly affected the sales.

"Price fall is a sheer market response to an egg glut," insists CJ George, president of Kerala Egg Dealers Association. Due to the export market, he would rather not directly link the price fall to bird flu scare, pointing out that this kind of reasoning could damage egg business.

Neither Kerala nor Tamil Nadu has reported bird flu so far. Veterinary vigil has been stepped up in Kerala borders, over the fowl stocks brought to the state. Recent egg production surplus in Tamil Nadu, targetting the booming egg export market, had spilled over to the neighbouring states causing price fall, explained dealers. About 40 lakh eggs were exported from Namakkal in Tamil Nadu. Birdflu scare had forced the stocks earmarked for exports to be diverted to domestic production.

Out of the 25 million eggs per day produced in Namakkal, nearly eight million per day are sent to feed the egg-deficit Kerala market. Due to high per capita consumption in Kerala, with inadequate local production, egg price in retail had been ruling in at a whopping Rs 2.20-Rs 2.50 price band (per egg) last year. While egg dealers are hoping that the price fall will create a huge egg appetite, confectionary-makers are a mock-regretful mood over the delay in the market glut.

"If this had happened two months back, it would have saved us the input prices of Christmas cakes," rues Markos Kuriakose, a bakery-owner in the Kerala capital.

Ads by Google
Discuss this story on expressindia forums

Post Comments

Comments: (Limit 3,000 characters)
Name
Message
Email ID
Subject
TERMS OF USE:
The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
I agree to the terms of use.

Comments
Shaadi Matrimonials
Get Marriage Proposals by Email EVERYDAY!
20% Cash back on hotels
- Yatra.com
Send Gifts
Flowers and Gifts