Canada beats U.S. in pork
sales to China - feet, elbows and all
Send a link to a friend
[June 05, 2017]
By Rod Nickel, Michael Hirtzer and Dominique Patton
WINNIPEG/CHICAGO/BEIJING
(Reuters) - Canada has overtaken the United States as the top North
American supplier of pork to China as farmers and meat packers in both
nations battle for lucrative shares of the biggest global market.
Canada's pork sales to China, after a sharp rise last year, exceeded
those of the United States in the first quarter of 2017. That's only
happened a handful of times in two decades, according to U.S. and
Canadian government data.
Rising affluence is driving China's voracious appetite for pork,
including parts of the pig - feet, elbows, innards - which command
little value in most countries. At the same time, tightened
environmental standards in China have forced farm closures and boosted
demand for cheaper imports.
That's a bonanza for Canadian farmers, who have almost completely
removed the growth drug ractopamine from their pigs' diet - largely
because it is banned in China, which consumes half the world's pork.
U.S. exports to China, by contrast, are limited because only about half
of the nation's herd has been weaned off the drug, according to U.S. hog
producers, meat packers and animal feed dealers.
But major U.S.-based firms are now moving to produce more ractopamine-free
hogs - including the three biggest pork producers, Smithfield Foods [SFII.UL];
Seaboard Foods, a division of Seaboard Corp <SEB.A>; and Triumph Foods,
a hog farmer cooperative.
The ascension of Canada's pork exports underscores the power of the
gargantuan Chinese market to influence agricultural practices and
profits in supplier countries worldwide.
As recently as 2013, annual U.S. pork sales to China, some 333,000
tonnes, more than doubled Canada's shipments of 161,000 tonnes.
That's the same year Canada's hog industry started to remove ractopamine,
best known as Eli Lilly & Co <LLY.N> product Paylean.
In the first quarter of this year, Canada shipped nearly 93,000 tonnes
of pork to China, on pace to hit 372,000 tonnes annually. That eclipsed
the 87,500 tonnes that the United States shipped, according to data from
both governments.
For a graphic on United States and Canada pork sales to China, see:
http://tmsnrt.rs/2r80PeW
The European Union, which has long banned ractopamine, is China's top
foreign pork supplier, sending 393,365 tonnes there in the first
quarter.
Chinese authorities banned the use of ractopamine in livestock in 2002.
They say meat raised with the drug can cause nausea and diarrhea in
people and be life-threatening to sufferers of heart disease.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, however, did not see the same
dangers when it approved ractopamine in 1999, concluding that it would
"not have a significant impact on the human environment."
The FDA's stance has drawn some criticism, including a 2014 lawsuit by
environmental groups alleging the agency has not fully examined the
drug's impact. The suit was later dismissed on technical grounds but is
being appealed.
Hog farmer and rancher groups defend ractopamine use, saying it allows
them to grow livestock more efficiently, with less feed, said Dave
Warner, spokesman for National Pork Producers Council. Canadian health
authorities also allow consumption of pork from hogs raised with the
drug.
SELLING ELBOWS ONLINE
The China market is so lucrative that Canada's HyLife started selling
pork online directly to Chinese consumers last year.
The small Manitoba processor hawks pig feet and elbows on e-commerce
site JD.com Inc. a competitor of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.
"They're big online buyers," said Claude Vielfaure, HyLife's chief
operating officer. "You try to move your pork all kinds of ways."
Rising Chinese pork demand has driven up prices for by-products
including pigs' feet, kidneys and livers.
Pigs feet sell for more than C$2.50 ($1.85) per kilogram - about double
their value two years ago, said Richard Davies, executive vice-president
of sales and marketing at Olymel, one of Canada's biggest pork packers.
Selling by-products can squeeze another $10 per pig from a carcass that
otherwise earns packers about $180, said Ray Price, president of
Alberta-based processor Sunterra Meats.
[to top of second column] |
Canadian pork shoulders are being prepped on a butcher's counter at
North Hill Meats in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on May 10, 2017.
Picture taken on May 10, 2017. REUTERS/Hyungwon Kang
China
is the biggest byproduct market, followed by Taiwan and Philippines.
Stewed pigs feet with white beans is a famous dish from Sichuan province, one of
China’s culinary capitals, while blood sausage, made from intestines and cooked
with pickled vegetables, is a traditional winter dish in the northeast.
Chinese consumers enjoy the strong flavor of offal - internal organs and
entrails. In Beijing, stir-fried pig’s liver with vegetables is common on dinner
tables and known for its nutritional value.
In
all, China consumed 55 million tonnes of pork last year. Although that is the
lowest total in four years, imports are rising fast because millions of China’s
small-scale farmers have left the pork business in recent years because of
falling prices and rising environmental standards.
The government forced thousands of farms to close because of severe water
pollution.
China became Quebec-based Olymel's biggest export market last year, vaulting
over the United States and Japan. It plans to open a sales office there as early
as next year.
"Just a tweak in that market can change the game for anyone in the world,"
Davies said.
GETTING PIGS OFF DRUGS
U.S. pork producers have moved more slowly than their Canadian competitors to
raise ractopamine-free pigs, primarily because the United States is the world's
third-biggest domestic market for pork.
Tyson
Foods Inc and Hormel Foods Corp continue to process hogs that were fed
ractopamine in part because they do not raise their own pigs.
Hormel's hog supply "comes from more than 500 family farms," a Hormel spokesman
said, many of which use the growth drug.
U.S. firms can also send pork from ractopamine-fed hogs to Mexico and Japan, the
top U.S. pork export markets.
But many U.S.-based suppliers are nonetheless scrambling to take advantage of
Chinese demand for ractopamine-free pork.
Smithfield - the world's biggest pork producer and a subsidiary of Hong
Kong-listed WH Group <0288.HK> - has raised most of its hogs without the drug
for more than two years, a spokeswoman said. As the top exporter of pork to
China, Smithfield firm shipped 300,000 tonnes there from the United States and
Europe last year.
The second- and third-biggest U.S. pork producers - Seaboard and Triumph - are
jointly opening a pork processing plant next month in Sioux City, Iowa, where
nearly all hogs slaughtered will be ractopamine-free, according to local hog
producers and animal feed mills.
Building dedicated ractopamine-free pork plants allows processors to limit risk
of China rejecting shipments that contain trace amounts of the drug.
Seaboard declined to comment about ractopamine. Triumph did not respond to
requests for comment.
The Cooperative Farmers Elevator in Ocheydan, Iowa, is constructing a new feed
mill that by 2018 will produce only ractopamine-free animal feed.
"It was requested from some of the customers we deal with," said Steve Peterson,
the cooperative's vice-president of feed. "The one that is pushing the hardest
is Seaboard."
U.S. hog producer Prestage Farms also is planning a new Iowa slaughterhouse for
as many as 10,000 ractopamine-free hogs annually by 2018, president Ron Prestage
told Reuters.
With the U.S. hogs in record supply, foreign demand is essential to profits,
Prestage said.
"When we have plentiful hogs, as we do today, packers prefer not to have
ractopamine," Prestage said. "They want to be able to export as much product as
they can."
For graphic on China pork imports soar after farm crackdown, click: http://tmsnrt.rs/2s8dtMv
(Editing by Brian Thevenot)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |