From bratwurst to jamon: EU pork sector crown shifts to Spain
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[October 06, 2021] By
Emma Pinedo, Michael Hogan and Nigel Hunt
MADRID/HAMBURG (Reuters) - When he was a
child in Avila province, Albert Pascual's father bought 100 pigs, but
the company he now leads has more than 9,000 - part of a major expansion
that has put Spain on track to take over as the European Union's top
pork producer this year.
"My father sold pigs at a time, in the 1990s, when this sector
practically did not exist. Now we (Spain) are a world power, we have
grown a lot and our company has grown in parallel to the development and
growth of this sector," Pascual said.
Germany has long topped the table of EU pork producers, but an outbreak
of African Swine Fever (ASF) in September 2020 among wild boars meant it
lost access to the lucrative Chinese market.
That has accelerated a shift in EU production towards ASF-free Spain
that was already underway, helped by its less onerous regulations in
areas such as planning and use of manure.
China is by far the largest export market for EU pig products,
accounting for about 56% of sales so far in 2021, according to European
Commission data.
The country's appetite for imported pork has soared following its own
ASF outbreak which has ravaged its vast hog herd, the world's largest.
"The fact that in recent years it (China) has been affected by African
swine fever has caused demand to skyrocket," said Ramon Soler Ciurana,
export manager of Faccsa-Prolongo, a pork producer in Malaga in the
south of Spain which is expanding its pork packaging and freezing
facilities.
EU shipments of pig products to China totalled 3.34 million tonnes last
year, up more than 60% from 2.31 million in 2019 and almost triple the
1.28 million in 2018.
Exports have remained high this year and totalled 1.86 million from
January to July, down just 0.1% from a strong 2020, EU data shows.
"It is taken for granted in the industry that China, no matter how hard
it runs or tries to find alternatives, will not be able to get back to
normality within four years," Soler said.
GERMAN WOES
Germany's export woes, however, have only accelerated a trend that has
been developing for years.
Spain's pigmeat production totalled 2.60 million tonnes during the first
six months of 2021, up 4.1% from the same period last year, according to
European Commission data, and is track for an eighth consecutive annual
rise.
In contrast, Germany's pigmeat production fell by 1.3% to 2.52 million
tonnes and is heading for an fifth consecutive annual fall.
German market consultancy AMI says there were 24.6 million pigs on
German farms in May 2021, down 3.5% from 25.5 million in May 2020,
continuing a downward trend from 28.1 million in 2014.
The impact of ASF has been particularly severe in east Germany near the
border with Poland where the disease has been found in wild boars and
more recently domestic pigs. Measures such as a ban on breeding piglets
have been imposed and some slaughterhouses have been reluctant to buy
pigs from the region.
TOUGH RULES
Tougher animal welfare and environmental rules in Germany have
contributed to the decline in pig farming along with falling domestic
demand for the meat, linked partly to more health-conscious eating with
avoidance of red meat and moves among young people to vegetarianism.
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Hams and slices of ham are seen in a bar in Madrid, Spain, October
3, 2019. REUTERS/Jon Nazca
Germany has strict planning rules which has made it difficult for the industry
to adapt to animal welfare legislation related to issues such as the use of sow
stalls.
"Even if German farmers want to invest in new pig stalls, they often cannot get
planning approval from local authorities," said Andre Vielstaedte, a
spokesperson for Toennies, Germany's largest slaughterhouse and meatpacking
group.
In part of Germany, restrictions have also been imposed on the use of manure,
linked to concerns about high ammonia concentration in the air.
Spanish pig farmers, in contrast, benefit from strong demand for slurry, a
natural fertiliser made from manure and water, as soils in much of the country
have become depleted and lack sufficient organic matter.
INVESTMENT IN SPAIN
Toennies is among those investing in Spain.
The company, based in Rheda-Wiedenbrück in the west of Germany, is building a
meat packing and slaughterhouse plant in Calamocha in Spain, costing about 75
million euros ($87 million).
Operations will start in 2023 and the plant will slaughter 2.4 million animals a
year, with up to 1,000 jobs created.
"The pork market in Spain is looking attractive and the political framework is
positive," said Toennies’ Vielstaedte.
"Our new Spanish plant will be aimed exclusively at exports to markets including
pork ribs to North America, bellies to Japan and other products such as pigs’
feet and ears to China and elsewhere in Asia."
Vielstaedte said Germany remained the company's "core market," but ASF was just
one factor making it less attractive for pig farming and the international
marketing of pork.
"We have a one sided regulatory burden ... as animal welfare and protecting the
environment create extra costs and need new investment, but which are often not
faced by farmers in other countries," he said.
CHALLENGES AHEAD
China has continued to report outbreaks of ASF this year, including in three of
the top five pork producing areas, Henan, Sichuan and Shandong, with imports set
to remain high in 2022.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service forecast
earlier this year China's pork production would fall 14% in 2022, reflecting a
smaller hog herd and low profits for domestic producers.
It projected imports would total 5.1 million tonnes in 2022, just shy of 2020's
record 5.28 million.
Prior to its own ASF outbreak, however, China was only importing 1.5-2.0 million
tonnes of pork a year and industry sources expect imports to eventually slow as
its herd is rebuilt.
"This is one of the great challenges we face," Soler said.
"Obviously the Chinese market will return to normal sooner or later and we will
return to pre-crisis figures. The objective of maintaining the level of
production will depend on our capacity to open new markets."
($1 = 0.8622 euros)
(Editing by Veronica Brown and Mark Potter)
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