US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Business / Industries

Additives cloud prospects for US hog farmers

(Agencies) Updated: 2015-08-13 14:00

Hog farmers in the United States, the world's biggest exporter, are losing out on a big payday because of a feed ingredient that many have been giving pigs for the past 15 years.

As hog and pork prices surge in China, the top consumer, its record imports this year will be dominated by Europe, not the US, according to Rabobank, the Netherlands-based lender. Like dozens of countries, China bans the use of ractopamine that is fed to more than three-quarters of US hogs to help them gain muscle faster while eating less grain.

With shipments to China dropping and US pork output exceeding beef for the first time in half a century, farmers like Randy Spronk are weaning their herds off the drug. The problem is that switching is no guarantee of overseas buyers. Co-mingling of meat makes segregating ractopamine-free pork difficult, and only a handful of processing plants can sell to China, including some run by Smithfield Foods Inc.

There is also more competition from Europe, which has a surplus of cheaper supply.

"We need to access that market," said Spronk, who raises 150,000 hogs a year with his family in Edgerton, Minnesota. "This is an opportunity I don't want to miss."

So far, importers are going elsewhere. US pork exports to China were down 41 percent through the first six months of this year to 90,896 metric tons, the lowest since 2010, government data show.

Shipments are headed for a fourth straight annual decline, after plunging 34 percent in 2014. Total sales this year to all foreign buyers are expected to fall 5.3 percent at 1.086 million tons.

At the same time, production will reach a record 24.6 billion pounds (11.16 million tons) this year, exceeding beef output for the first time in 63 years, the US Department of Agriculture said last month. While wholesale-pork prices were up 8.2 percent this year to 90.17 cents a pound on Friday, they were the lowest for that date since 2009 and down 34 percent from an all-time high in July 2014.

It is easy to see why farmers covet Chinese buyers. Spronk estimates that selling his hog carcasses there can increase the value of each animal by $10 because Chinese consumers use parts such as ears and organs that few US consumers want. Using ractopamine, among a class of drugs known as beta agonists, can yield $2 more per head for the few animals that need it, but then the rest of the herd would be barred from the Chinese market, he said.

As much as 80 percent of the US hogs are raised using ractopamine, according to Brett Stuart, chief executive officer of research firm Global AgriTrends. The drug was a hit after the Food & Drug Administration approved the first commercial version from Eli Lilly & Co in 1999, and got even more popular with higher costs for corn feed during the past decade.

While users of the additive include the US, Mexico and Australia, and more than 100 countries accept pork raised with it, ractopamine is banned in China, Russia and the 28 nations of the European Union.

Elanco, the Eli Lilly unit that makes a ractopamine product called Paylean, said in a statement that the additive is safe and there are no known human-health issues associated with its use. Greenfield, Indiana-based Elanco is working with the industry and supporting US government efforts to promote more open markets, spokeswoman Christina Gaines said in an e-mail.

China has been restricting beta agonists since 2002 and singled out ractopamine in 2009, according to Elanco. The US has argued the actions were not based on any scientific evidence.

The government has said its ban on growth enhancers is designed to improve food safety, after instances of tainted products raised public concern. The country also is seeking to limit use of illegal pesticides and veterinary drugs.

While many US farmers say China's ban is not warranted, some question the benefit of ractopamine when feed costs have dropped and the biggest buyer does not want it.

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...