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Hygenic hatchery, skilled workforce key to poultry sector’s growth: Experts


Published : 21 Jun 2025 08:49 PM

Speakers at a high-level workshop have stressed the need to improve hatchery quality and workforce skills to ensure the sustainable growth of Bangladesh’s poultry sector. 

A key challenge identified is the excessive fluctuation in chick (Day-Old Chicks- DOC) production, which is causing instability in supply and pricing, ultimately threatening small-scale hatcheries and market balance.

Fluctuations in chicken prices significantly impact the production of Day-Old Chicks (DOCs). 

When market prices are high, hatcheries often respond with overproduction, which eventually drives down prices and affects profitability for both hatcheries and farmers. Conversely, when chicken prices fall, DOC production declines sharply, leading to shortages of poultry and eggs. 

This cyclical imbalance contributes to market volatility and poses serious sustainability challenges for hatchery operators.

These concerns were raised during the closing ceremony of a three-day training workshop titled ‘Hatchery Management’, held from June 16 to 18 at a hotel at Gulshan in the capital. 

The event was part of the PoultryTechBangladesh project and was jointly organized by Larive International, LightCastle Partners, Axon Limited, and Royal Pas Reform, with support from the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

The objective of the workshop was to provide practical recommendations and technical guidance to hatchery owners, staff, and other stakeholders on building and operating modern, high-quality hatcheries aligned with global standards.

In addition to production fluctuations, the training highlighted several pressing challenges in the sector.

Hatching inefficiencies, inadequate storage and transportation, poor hatchery management, lack of modern incubation technology, environmental impact and disease outbreaks, limited access to advanced technology, shortage of skilled manpower, marketing and distribution challenges

Speakers emphasized that these issues can be addressed through improved production planning and farm management tailored to market demand.

Osman Haruni, Senior Policy Advisor at the Embassy of the Netherlands in Bangladesh; Mostafa Kamal, Secretary of the Bangladesh Poultry Industries Central Council (BPICC); and Zahidul Islam, Managing Director of Axon Limited, were among the distinguished speakers at the event

The keynote presentation on the PoultryTech Bangladesh project was delivered by Naziba Ali, Business Analyst at LightCastle Partners.

Participants highlighted that hatchery quality relies heavily on the use of advanced equipment, accurate hatching and incubation techniques, a conducive production environment, and a well-trained workforce. 

The workshop also stressed the importance of strengthening collaboration between Dutch technology providers and Bangladeshi companies to build a modern, tech-driven poultry sector.