Farmers Fear EU Law Could Harm Pork Industry

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EU - Pig numbers in the European Union could fall by as much as 10 per cent and the price of pork could rise substantially when tougher animal welfare regulations come into force next year. EurActiv....

EU - Pig numbers in the European Union could fall by as much as 10 per cent and the price of pork could rise substantially when tougher animal welfare regulations come into force next year.

EurActiv.com reports that some farmers are likely to leave the industry, especially in Spain, a major producer where a credit squeeze will make it harder to comply with the new rules.

Alberto Herranz, director of the Ancoporc pork trader's association in Spain, said estimates of a 5 per cent-10 per cent drop in herd numbers were "very reasonable".

"Some farms won't be able to adapt because they cannot get the financing, or geographical conditions will leave them without room to expand and they won't be viable with a lower head-count," he said.

EU regulations stipulate that traditional stalls for pregnant sows must not be used from the start of next year. The stalls are already banned in Britain and Sweden.

Animal welfare groups argue the stalls, where the sows are kept for their 16½ week pregnancy, are so narrow that they cannot turn around or interact with other pigs and the only exercise they can take is to lie down and stand up.

From 1 January 2013, sows will have to be kept in groups rather than in individual stalls during most of their pregnancy.

A 10 per cent drop in pig numbers would threaten the EU's position as a pork exporter.

"There are expectations that the changes in 2013 will make the EU a net importer of pork," a spokesman for the German Farmers' Association said.

The EU exports pork to countries such as Russia, Hong Kong and China. Exports in 2011 were worth about €4.6 billion, according to European Commission figures. Germany and Spain are the EU's top two pork producers.

Stewart Houston, chairman of English pig farming group BPEX, said the new welfare regulations would lead to a fall of between 5 per cent and 10 per cent in the EU's pork production.

"There are only three countries that are 100 per cent compliant now, and that's Luxembourg, the United Kingdom and Sweden," Houston said. "What it means is that some [pig farmers] will change and some will exit the industry."

A recent report issued by BPEX estimated that a drop of the EU pig herd of 5 per cent would lead to a price increase for finished pigs of 10 per cent.

However, a 10 per cent decline in the herd would lead to serious shortages of pork across the EU and "substantial price increases," the report said.

Nevertheless, Houston believes the EU Commission should be rigorous in implementing the welfare standards.

"UK producers had the pain back in '99. So it's difficult to feel sympathetic for our colleagues in Europe who had over 12 years to comply," Houston said. "And indeed it wouldn't be fair on those in Europe who have made the change to allow those who haven't to continue in production."

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