The halt in the use of the drug, ractopamine, reflects a change in
strategy for Tyson, company watchers say. The company previously
sought to profit by filling holes in U.S. supplies that were left
when industry rivals like Smithfield Foods and JBS USA sent American
pork to China.
Now, Tyson, Smithfield and JBS - the top three U.S. pork processors
- are vying for business in China, the world's biggest pork
consumer, where an outbreak of African swine fever has devastated
the hog herd, pushed pork prices to record highs and sent imports
rocketing. Though not harmful to humans, the disease is deadly to
pigs, with no vaccine available.
But while the demand from China could be high, U.S. companies still
have to cope with a significant handicap, compared to suppliers
based elsewhere: Beijing has imposed tariffs on imports of U.S. pork
due to the long-running trade war between the world's two biggest
economies.
"Of course it's all to pave the way to get ready to start shipping
very large amounts of pork to China," said Dennis Smith, a commodity
broker for Archer Financial Services in Chicago.
Tyson, the biggest U.S. meat producer, is "the last shoe to drop,"
said Smith, who said he learned of the policy change from a farmer.
The company already generates almost $1 billion in pork export sales
annually.
China's pork imports climbed 76% in September from a year earlier
with African swine fever having decimated its domestic hog herd,
according to Chinese government data.
The disease surfaced more than a year ago in China - the first time
it had been detected in Asia - and has since spread to more than 50
countries, according to the World Organization of Animal Health,
including those accounting for 75% of global pork production.
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Chinese authorities blocked the use of ractopamine in livestock in
2002 over health concerns. The European Union also prohibits the
drug, although the United States and other countries say it can be
safely used to add lean muscle to pigs.
"We believe the move to prohibit ractopamine use will allow Tyson
Fresh Meats and the farmers who supply us to compete more
effectively for export opportunities in even more countries," Steve
Stouffer, president of Tyson Fresh Meats, said in a statement.
Tyson previously offered a small amount of ractopamine-free pork to
export customers by working with farmers who raise hogs without the
feed additive. Those programs "no longer adequately meet growing
global demand," Tyson said.
JBS USA, owned by Brazil's JBS SA, said this month it would remove
ractopamine from its hog supply chain.
Smithfield, owned by China's WH Group, raises pigs on company-owned
and contract farms without the drug, but still processes pigs from
other farmers who use ractopamine.
Elanco Animal Health manufactures a ractopamine feed ingredient
under the brand name 'Paylean'. The company did not respond to a
request for comment this month about JBS eliminating the drug.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Additional reporting by Julie Ingwersen
in Chicago; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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