Pigs fly in as China replenishes world's biggest hog
herd
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[April 02, 2020] By
Dominique Patton
BEIJING (Reuters) - Six planes carrying
more than 4,000 high-quality French breeding pigs have arrived in China
so far this year, the first of an expected dozens of plane-loads as the
world's top pork producer rebuilds its decimated hog herd.
China is ramping up imports as it rushes to restock after an outbreak of
African swine fever swept through the country from late 2018, killing
tens of millions of pigs and reducing its sow herd by as much as 60%.
Soaring pork prices and a government drive to rebuild have prompted
farmers who had halted buying to resume orders, with some doubling
contracts that had been signed prior to the disease. Each charter is
worth up to 1.5 million euros ($1.6 million).
"It's like after World War Two. They lost half the herd and need to
repopulate fast to get it back," said Marie Pushparajalingam, global
strategist for French swine genetics company Axiom.
China imports breeding pigs to take advantage of traits like increased
productivity and better meat quality that global genetics firms select
for during breeding. A top breeding sow can have a litter of as many as
16 piglets.
Axiom sent two 777 charters to China in January, followed by two 747s
last month, totalling about 3,400 pigs. It has signed deals for a
further six plane-loads later in the year, said Pushparajalingam, and is
expecting additional business.
Another 500 boars bred by Dutch firm Topigs Norsvin arrived from France
in southwestern Guizhou last week, said China's Dekang Group, which will
use the pigs in a nucleus breeding farm to produce 20 million pigs for
slaughter.
China typically slaughters about 700 million pigs a year to produce more
than 50 million tonnes of pork -- about half of global consumption. But
the disease outbreak cut pork output by 21% in 2019, sending prices
soaring, and production is set to fall again this year.
Fattened hogs in China currently cost about 35 yuan ($4.93) a kilogram,
or three times the price in France.
Under pressure to meet government targets for pork production, some
provinces began offering import subsidies of about 2,000 yuan per pig to
farmers last month.
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Pigs are seen in a pig farm in Bouille-Menard, France, April 28,
2017. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
Producers face a severe shortage of sows and are even holding back females
normally destined for slaughter to use in breeding farms. Those pigs will
produce much smaller litters than a sow bred to be a productive mother.
Imports from France alone this year look set to top the 11,000 pigs China
imported from all countries in 2017, a year after pork prices hit a record.
In all, China may need more than 150 plane loads of pure bred pigs to replenish
its herd, according to one genetics company estimate.
GENETICS COMPANIES BENEFIT
The surge in demand is a boon for global genetics firms.
China's customs has said it will allow more countries to ship live pigs, and is
also working to resume exports from the United States, which has not been able
to export to China during recent trade tensions.
Still, cumbersome quarantine procedures for importing pigs and obstacles related
to the coronavirus outbreak will limit overall numbers.
Before shipment, pigs must undergo a month of health checks and spend another 30
days in quarantine under observation by an official Chinese vet. On arrival, the
pigs spend a further 45 days in a quarantine centre to ensure they are disease
free.
The coronavirus epidemic has further complicated shipments, said Laurent
Poussart, manager of Francexporc, a pig freight specialist.
A sharp reduction in cargo planes flying between Europe and China is driving up
costs, and China does not permit foreign airline crew to disembark.
Poussart's latest cargo to China arrived just a day before the Chinese airline
he was using cancelled all further flights to and from Europe.
(Reporting by Dominique Patton; editing by Richard Pullin)
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