Many thanks.In the case of seasonality, this occurs during and the offset of the rainy season. At this time, fishermen are able to catch more fishes in the country water bodies making the availability high. On the part of the people, they want a new taste of fish and these set of fish are relatively cheaper than cultured fish.The smuggling issue is still there, but considering my area, the act has decreased. Many of the cold rooms have closed shops. Due to the constant power outages, the few available ones are left struggling.BABATUNDE OREYEMI,
BEEKEEPER & CATFISH FINGERLING PRODUCER,
9, BISI MORAFA STREET, GRA, IJEBU ODE, OGUN STATE.
234-08055203894
234-08102135278
234-09027436799 -whatsappOn May 12, 2018 04:26, "Alexandra Pounds" <alexandrapounds@gmail.com> wrote:It is great to read about your first-hand experience - thanks for sharing. Do you find that the seasonality is connected to local customs or certain times of year when people want to eat more fish? Or is the seasonality of market price due to increased production of fish during certain times of year?High taxes placed on imported fish is resulting in unprofitable cold rooms, and potentially an increase in illegal trade? (illegal imports don't pay taxes). While taxes are meant to protect local trade, taxes that are too high increase the illegal trade, which ends up hurting local trade... Is this is case in Nigeria?C'est genial lire de votre experience - merci de partager. Trouvez-vous que le saisonnalité est connecté à des coutumes locals, ou temps d'année quand des personnes veulent manger plus de poisson? Ou, le saisonnalité de le prix de marché est à cause de l'augmentation de production de poisson pendant certains temps d'année?Des taxes qui sont mis en place sur poisson importé résultent des salles froides peu profitable, et pourrait résulter un augmentation du commerce illicit? (Des importations illicit ne paye pas des taxes). Alors que des taxes devraient proteger de commerce local, des taxes que sont trop hautes pourrait augmenter du commerce illicit, quel finalement endommager du commerce illicit... C'est ça le cas au Nigeria?AlexandraOn Sat, May 12, 2018 at 2:01 AM, Babatunde Oreyemi <oreyemibabs@gmail.com> wrote:I ll suggest you carry out further research on this article.What is keeping the price of fish down in Nigeria is not about imported fish. The high tarrif placed on imported fish is making many cold rooms the receiver of this imported fish go under.Am a fish farmer here and I can say two things are making the price go down and they are1. Season of the year2. As the cost of production becomes high, people won't have the purchasing means to buy.
Nigeria aquaculture is yet to saturate the market.BABATUNDE OREYEMI,
BEEKEEPER & CATFISH FINGERLING PRODUCER,
9, BISI MORAFA STREET, GRA, IJEBU ODE, OGUN STATE.
234-08055203894
234-08102135278
234-09027436799 -whatsappOn May 11, 2018 18:56, "Alexandra Pounds via Sarnissa-african-aquaculture" <sarnissa-african-aquaculture@lists.stir.ac.uk > wrote:This article suggests that while there is a potential for new tilapia and catfish farms in Nigeria, it also suggests that illegal imports are keeping market prices down.Are illegal imports of tilapia and catfish in Nigeria are preventing Nigerian aquaculture farms from being financially competitive? Should the government prevent this? If so, how?Cette article suggére que il y a un potentiel pour d'aquaculture de tilapia et poisson-chat au Nigeria. Il suggére aussi que l'importation illicit de tilapia et poisson-chat préviennent l'augmentation du prix du marché.Des poissons importé, préviennent-ils des enterprises d'aquaculture au Nigeria d'etre competitif financièrement? Le gouvernement, devraient-ils prevenir ça? Si oui, comme?https://independent.ng/tilapia
-farming-expert-guarantees-40- return-on-investment/ -----
Alexandra Pounds
MSc Sustainable Aquaculture, University of Stirling
BSc Earth Systems, Stanford University
(+1) 650.336.4554
(+44) 757.283.9224