Swine fever outbreak in Germany's top pork state poses lasting threat
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[July 05, 2022]
By Michael Hogan
HAMBURG (Reuters) - The spread of African
Swine Fever to Germany's most important pig rearing region has dealt a
serious blow to the sector with major markets such as China likely to
maintain import bans for years to come, analysts said on Monday.
The outbreak on a farm in Emsland, Lower Saxony is the first in the
north-west region where much of Germany's pig sector is concentrated.
ASF, which is harmless to humans but often fatal to pigs, was first
found in eastern Germany in September 2020, believed to have been spread
from Poland by wild boars. This prompted China to ban imports of German
pork, halting a trade that had brought in around 1 billion euros ($1.04
billion) a year.
Some other major importers, including South Korea and Japan, followed
suit, and rival EU producer Spain was among those able to pick up fresh
business to Asia following the bans.
"This is very frightening news and if there were hopes that ASF had been
confined to east Germany, and that the disease was under control, these
have now been completely thrown out of the window," said Justin Sherrard,
global strategist animal protein at Rabobank.
Lower Saxony is Germany's largest single pig production area with about
6.4 million pigs and piglets, Germany's national statistics office says.
"With ASF cases continuing to occur in Germany no end to China's import
ban on German pork can be expected," said Tim Koch, meat analyst at
German market consultancy AMI. "Any hopes that China could lift the ban
in the near future are over."
Germany was for many years the European Union's top pork producer but
was overtaken by Spain last year after it lost access to China, the
world's largest importer of pigmeat.
NETHERLANDS, FRANCE AT RISK
China's own pig herd, the world's largest, has also suffered heavy
losses due to ASF but is beginning to recover.
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The town sign of Gross Drewitz is seen with a note reading "African
swine fever in wild pigs, key area", Gross Drewitz, Spree-Neisse,
Germany September 12, 2020. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/File Photo
"China anyway has a reduced import
need for pork from Europe and it could be years before the Chinese
market could be reopened to German pigmeat exports," Koch said.
The growing number of wild boar in Germany, which
can wander over long distances, means a spread of the disease had
been expected despite government efforts to confine it to east
Germany. Around 4,000 ASF cases in wild boar have occurred in
Germany, mainly in the eastern states of Brandenburg and Saxony.
The outbreak also heightens concerns about the potential spread to
neighbouring countries.
"If ASF can make a 500 kilometre jump from east Germany to north
Germany the concern is that it could move to the big pork industries
in the Netherlands and France," Sherrard said.
Without any immediate prospect of regaining access to major export
markets such as China, Germany's pig faming sector is expected to
shrink further.
"Germany's pork sector would love access to China and other markets
lost since ASF entered the country," Sherrard said. "But I think
there is a realisation in Germany that ASF will remain in the
country for the long term and that Germany's pork sector must adjust
to a smaller customer base."
(Reporting by Michael Hogan, editing by David Evans and Barbara
Lewis)
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