Yes whey! U.S. touts dairy product to Chinese hog farmers fighting swine
fever
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[October 03, 2019] By
Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - When Beijing announced
it was exempting 16 U.S. goods from retaliatory tariffs, Chinese firms
hurried to call Proliant Dairy Ingredients in the heart of American farm
country.
Among the products included in China's first batch of exemptions last
month was whey permeate for animal feed, a dairy byproduct sold by
Iowa-based Proliant.
While seen as a goodwill gesture ahead of talks to end the U.S.-China
trade war, the exemption from a 25% retaliatory tariff imposed last year
is also a means for China to get supplies it needs. Whey permeate
provides nutrients that can help baby pigs grow up faster and healthier
as the world's largest pork consumer fights African swine fever, a fatal
hog disease.
China also exempted U.S. fish meal from a 25% tariff, another ingredient
in piglet diets.
The exemptions have increased demand for American products, but sales
and prices remain depressed because African swine fever has decimated
China's hog herds.
"We got many calls the day of the announcement," said Gabriel Sevilla,
Proliant's vice president of sales and marketing. "But the total amount
being negotiated represents a very small percentage of the market."
It is an amount U.S. feed suppliers hope to increase.
U.S. dairy companies and industry representatives plan to host two
seminars in China this month to pitch permeate as a way to rebuild
herds.
They will present industry-funded research to convince Chinese livestock
producers to double the amount of the ingredient they use to improve
piglets' growth and health. China has traditionally fed piglets half as
much permeate during their lives as U.S. and European hog producers,
according to U.S. suppliers.
"If we've lost half of the pigs in China but we can get them to double
the amount of permeate that they're using, we can potentially keep the
same volume demand as we had before," Sevilla said.
U.S. EXPORTS, PRICES DECLINE
Tom Vilsack, chief executive of the U.S. Dairy Export Council, also
touted permeate and whey to Chinese officials as tools to recover from
the outbreak when he visited China shortly before the exemptions were
announced.
"I repeatedly pointed to win-win dairy solutions for the U.S. and
China," said Vilsack, a former U.S. agriculture secretary who spoke with
officials at China's ministries of commerce and finance.
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A student feeds pigs at a farm next to a primary school in Xuanwei,
Yunnan province, China, December 22, 2018. REUTERS/Darley Shen/
Permeate is made by concentrating whey, a byproduct of cheese, into an
ingredient that is high in lactose. It is fed to baby pigs before they
begin to consume corn and soy, which are harder to digest.
As much as 85% of U.S. permeate is used to feed the world's piglets,
contributing to $5.6 billion in total U.S. dairy exports, according to
suppliers. But exports of U.S. permeate to China have declined to less
than 10% of production from about 30% before the trade war, suppliers
said.
The decline has hurt profits for high-protein whey production, according
to U.S. food company Land O'Lakes [LNDLK.UL], which sells cheese but
does not directly export permeate.
"We do expect an increase in demand for permeate with suspension of the
tariff, although we expect it to be tempered by the ongoing impacts of
ASF," Land O'Lakes said, referring to African swine fever.
Prices for U.S. permeate have halved to about 10 cents a pound because
of the disease and trade war, said Richard Bradfield, a vice president
for Missouri-based animal-feed company International Ingredient
Corporation.
Demand should increase by the second half of 2020 as Chinese farmers
rebuild their herds, said Qingping Liu, the company's Asia director. For
now, though, buyers are expecting lower prices due to the exemptions,
Liu said.
"While North China demand picked up some, South China demand is very
weak with only 20% of pigs left," Liu said.
The deaths of millions of hogs is also limiting sales of U.S. fish meal,
according to Virginia-based producer Omega Protein, a unit of Canada's
Cooke Inc.
"While there may be increased interest now that China has exempted fish
meal and oil, other factors still remain such as African swine fever and
high port stocks that we considered challenges to increasing sales to
the Chinese," spokesman Ben Landry said.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago; Additional reporting by P.J.
Huffstutter in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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