China
says pig herd shrinks by 32% in July amid swine fever
outbreak
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[August 16, 2019]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's pig herd shrank
by 32.2% in July from the same month a year ago, its agriculture
ministry said on Thursday, as African swine fever continues to spread
through the country.
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The ministry also said the number of sows declined by 31.9% in July,
a year after the nation reported its first outbreak of the disease,
which is fatal to pigs but does not harm people.
Swine fever has hit the world's top pork-producing nation hard,
roiling its vast agribusiness sector and reshaping the global meat
trade.
The declines in both pig and sow numbers last month are
significantly steeper than in June data, when the pig herd shrank by
25.8% and sow numbers fell 26.7%.
(GRAPHIC - China says pig herd shrinks by 32% in July amid swine
fever outbreak:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com
/gfx/ce/7/5955/5938/ChinaSow
PigHerdChange.png)
Industry estimates suggest the herd may have contracted much more,
however, with some putting the decline at 50%.
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"The pig herd hasn't reached its lowest level yet. It will fall
further in the second half of the year," Zhang Liwei, a senior
analyst at the official China National Grains and Oils Information
Center, told a conference on Friday.
He said the decline would further impact soymeal demand, which is
already under pressure.
The growing shortfall in pigs has pushed China's live hog prices
above the 2016 record, with the national average at 23.49 yuan
($3.34) per kg this week. Analysts also expect pork prices to
surpass record levels in coming months.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton; Additional reporting by Hallie Gu in
Harbin; Editing by Richard Pullin, Joseph Radford and Tom Hogue)
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