The Business Times

Outbreak of swine fever may bury China's small pig farmers

Published Mon, Feb 4, 2019 · 09:50 PM
Share this article.

Changtu County, China

FOR farmers Zhang Shiping and Bai Fuqin in northeast China, there is little to celebrate this Lunar New Year.

Since African swine fever struck a farm in nearby Shenyang city last August, the couple has racked up about 300,000 yuan (S$60,176) in debt, 10 times what they make in a good year raising pigs.

The incurable disease has since travelled thousands of kilometres, striking mainly small farms in the world's biggest pork-producing country and triggering unprecedented upheaval in China's US$1 trillion hog sector.

Though Mr Zhang's farm was not infected, measures to halt its spread have effectively killed his family's livelihood.

Beijing banned the transport of live pigs from infected provinces in September, part of its "protracted war" on a disease that typically takes years to eradicate.

The restrictions crippled trade, particularly in northeast Liaoning province, which produces about a third more pigs than it consumes and relies heavily on exporting.

Prices in the province dropped below 4 yuan per kilogramme this month - the lowest price in a decade - just weeks away from the Lunar New Year holiday, normally a time of peak pork demand.

Mr Zhang and Ms Bai got rid of about 30 pigs this month, losing about 800 yuan on each, after feeding them months after they should have been slaughtered while waiting for prices to pick up.

They still have almost 50 left, now so overweight and fatty that no processors want them.

"We can barely survive," Ms Bai said during an interview at her modest farmhouse in Changtu county, a two-and-a-half-hour drive north of Shenyang, capital of Liaoning.

Ms Bai and three other farmers in Changtu said they would not continue raising pigs, even though they have few other options in the region, one of China's slowest growing.

Tens of thousands like them are expected to abandon pig farming after months of weak prices and restrictions on moving pigs to market. That will reduce production in the country by one-fifth this year, according to some estimates, and boost prices and demand for cheaper imports.

"I have experienced all kinds of ups and downs in the pig industry. But nothing has been as hard and bitter as this year," said Sun Hongbo, another Changtu farmer.

He will quit pig farming for good, he added, seeking manual work after the holiday.

Small farmers producing fewer than 500 pigs for slaughter each year account for about 40 per cent of China's output, or around 280 million pigs a year, according to 2016 figures from consultants at Rabobank.

But the African swine fever epidemic looks set to accelerate change in an industry already shifting towards more industrialised farms, particularly in the north.

"Even if you want to raise pigs, the government won't give you loans because you lost money. Feed sellers won't lend you feed either. How can you raise pigs then?" Mr Sun said.

Policy measures put in place to tackle African swine fever strongly favour larger farms considered better able to prevent the spread of disease with higher hygiene standards. A Dec 27 government document that loosened the rules on transporting pigs out of infected counties only applied to incorporated farms.

Another rule has outlawed the use of kitchen waste for pig feed, significantly boosting costs for many farmers who can't buy commercial feed at reasonable cost.

"The government won't encourage small farmers to raise pigs, that's the direction," said Wang Chuduan, professor at China Agriculture University.

It's a sharp reversal from the years following the 2007 Blue Ear epidemic, which cut production by an estimated 10 per cent.

After that, Beijing gave generous subsidies to all farmers to replenish their herds, said Prof Wang.

Corporate farmers like Muyuan Foods Co Ltd and Wens Foodstuff Group Co Ltd are suffering too, reporting a sharp plunge in profits last year. But with large, efficient farms and access to loans, they are able to ride out the tough times.

"The pig cycle has never really brought me down, but then the policy did," said Zhang Haitao, another farmer struggling to get rid of his overweight pigs. REUTERS

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Energy & Commodities

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here