The poultry sector continues to grow and industrialize in many parts of the world. An increasing population, greater purchasing power and urbanization have been strong drivers of growth.
Advances in breeding have given rise to birds that meet specialized purposes and are increasingly productive, but that need expert management. The development and transfer of feed, slaughter and processing technologies have increased safety and efficiency, but favour large-scale units rather than small-scale producers. These developments have led the poultry industry and the associated feed industry to scale up rapidly, to concentrate themselves close to input sources or final markets, and to integrate vertically. One element of the structural change has been a move towards contract farming in the rearing phase of broiler production, allowing farmers with medium-sized flocks to gain access to advanced technology with a relatively low initial investment.
A clear division is developing between industrialized production systems of large and medium size feeding into integrated value chains, and extensive production systems supporting livelihoods and supplying local or niche markets. The primary role of the former is to supply cheap and safe food to populations distant from the source of supply, while the latter acts as a livelihood safety net, often as part of a diverse portfolio of income sources.
Traditional small-scale, rural, family-based poultry systems continue to play a crucial role in sustaining livelihoods in developing countries, supplying poultry products in rural areas, and providing important support to women farmers. Small-scale poultry production will continue to offer opportunities for income generation and quality animal-source foods so long as there is rural poverty.
Did you know?
In 2020, chickens accounted for some 94 percent of the world’s poultry population, followed by ducks (3 percent), and turkeys (1 percent).
Chickens contribute 90 percent of world poultry meat production, followed by turkeys with 5 percent, ducks with 4 percent and geese and guinea fowl with 2 percent. The rest comes from other poultry species.
Chickens provide 93 percent of world egg production. At regional level, non-chicken poultry species lay 10 percent of eggs in Asia, 1 percent in the Americas (3 percent in Latin America), 0.6 percent in Oceania and 0.5 percent in Europe. Egg production from poultry other than chickens is almost non-existent in Africa.