This month, officials identified the first case of ASF in Jintana's
province of Nakhon Pathom, after years of saying it was not in
Thailand, unleashing a political firestorm as pork prices hit an
all-time high near which they may stay for months.
"There's no way they didn't know. Pigs died all over the country ...
Why the cover-up?" Jintana, 75, asked about the deaths in previous
years. "What can they do now? There's nothing left."
In parliament, an opposition lawmaker accused the government of a
years-long cover-up, though a deputy agriculture minister denied
this, saying authorities had successfully kept out the disease in
previous years.
But small farmers, whose losses have driven 54% of them out of
business in the past year, are sceptical, particularly as the viral
disease, for which there is no vaccine, has killed hundreds of
millions of pigs in Europe and Asia since 2018.
"I had to let the sick ones die and sell off the healthy ones," said
Jintana. "My business was all gone."
Earlier warning would have saved their livelihoods, say the small
farmers, and perhaps averted the pork shortage that drove retail
prices in Bangkok to 215 baht ($6.47) per kg on Jan. 11, the highest
daily average in a database stretching back to 2001.
The high prices led to a ban on exports of live animals until April,
and consumer prices could stay high as production could take months
to recover, putting further strain on rural communities already
reeling from the hog losses.
Since the confirmation, Thailand has uncovered African swine fever
in 22 areas of 13 provinces and culled more than 400 pigs, all on
small farms, said Bunyagith Pinprasong, the director of the Bureau
of Disease Control and Veterinary Services.
Between 2019 and 2021, livestock authorities culled nearly 300,000
pigs deemed at high risk of African swine fever, though it was never
detected in any samples from dead pigs, Bunyagith told Reuters.
Most pig deaths earlier were because of porcine reproductive and
respiratory syndrome (PRRS), he said.
"We implemented strict and effective measures to prevent ASF, which
is why it wasn't found before," he said. "We will control and curb
its spread until a vaccine is developed."
LOWER PRODUCTION
By the time Thailand confirmed the first ASF outbreak this month,
nearly 100,000 smallholders, or those rearing up to 50 pigs, had
disappeared, leaving just 79,000, government figures on the
livestock industry show.
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Small farmers' herds were halved to 1 million
pigs, accounting for the bulk of the loss in the
national herd, which stands at 10.85 million,
down 17% from last year's 13.1 million, the data
shows.
Smallholders and small farms, or those with
herds of between 51 and 500 animals, normally
contibute about 30% of Thailand's pork
production of about 19 million to 20 million
pigs, about 18 million of which are consumed
domestically and the rest exported.
"The current decrease in pigs is due to previous
disease outbreaks, not because of African swine
fever," said Bunyagith, adding that PRRS and
classical swine fever were the most common
diseases in Thai pigs, with vaccines available
for both.
"But whether PRRS or ASF, there will be losses
for smallholders without a good farm management
system."
While small farms struggle, shares of Thailand's
biggest food producer, Charoen Pokphand Foods
Pcl, jumped in January to their highest in
nearly seven months, and shares of peer
Thaifoods Group Pcl hit their highest since
April.
Further shrinking of small farms' market share
threatens longer-term implications for food
prices, said Kevalin Wangpichayasuk of Kasikorn
Research Center.
"Smallholders' gradual disappearance means fewer
players and lower competition, which will have
an impact on price," Kevalin told Reuters.
Bunyagith said rearing new animals to bridge the
gap would take up to 10 months, so the
government plans to offer smallholders loans and
new piglets to help rebuild.
But farmers said they had lost faith in the
government and doubted pig farming could still
yield a livelihood, at least until a vaccine is
found.
Jamnian Iangjiam, 62, said she gave up pig
farming after two attempts to restart with new
piglets saw them get sick too.
"I'm in debt because I spent my last savings on
raising new pigs, and now I have nothing," said
Jamnian, her pig pens empty since May. "I'm
done."
($1=33.22 baht)
(Reporting by Patpicha Tanakasempipat; Editing
by Kay Johnson, Gavin Maguire and Clarence
Fernandez)
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