The latest edition of the BPEX weekly includes: Finding Latest Feed Info, Open Farm Sunday, ALDI Expands British Pork Range, Children Lack Basic Cooking Skills, Breaking News, Tip of the Week: Heat Stress Options, Regional NPA meeting – Wiltshire, Mini Muck!, Better Communication = Better Remuneration!, Ammonia Emissions, New Salt Targets, Future of QSM, China Pig Breeding Investment, Help for Italian Pig Industry, French Call for Help, Export Bulletin and International Prices
Finding Latest Feed Info
The USDA has
released its first estimations of supply and demand for the 2009/10 season with
wheat production seen at 657Mt, down 4% (25Mt) from 08/09. Global maize
production is forecast to fall by 2.7Mt to 785.1Mt in the 09/10 season, with
global ending stocks estimated to fall by 11.4Mt, to 128.2Mt; the lowest ending
stocks seen since 2004/05. This may lead to a tightening in world feed grain
markets as demand is forecast to outstrip supply in the 09/10 marketing
year.
Marketing News
Open Farm Sunday
With only a couple
of weeks to go for farms participating in the Open Farm Sunday event on June 7,
BPEX has a selection of promotional material available for use with
children. These include: pig tails posters & quiz sheets; a snackathon
dietary game; pork carcase cut posters large & small; a set of technical
cards which detail on farm best practice and a variety of recipe leaflets. If
you would like to make use of these please email (sooner rather than later) info@ahdbms.org.uk with your address
details.
ALDI Expands British Pork Range
Three
new product lines are being offered in Aldi from w/c 25th May 09 along with
another 2 lines in the pipe line. The products all carry the Quality
Standard mark and include; 500g pack of Rind on Boneless Belly Strips, a pack of
2 Pork Medallions (300g) and a pack of 2 Pork Chops (340g). Aldi along
with FA Gill, the producers, jointly developed the products to offer customers
increased choice value for money. Wolverhampton based F A Gill are one of
the last privately owned abattoirs slaughtering quality standard pigs. For
more information contact richardb@fagill.co.uk
Children Lack Basic Cooking
Skills
Three quarters of British children do not know how to boil an
egg, research suggested today. Almost half of the youngsters in the
UK (45%) never or rarely help with making the evening meal, even though around a
third of parents (34%) want them to take part. The poll for
supermarket chain Morrisons said 37% of children preferred watching television
or surfing the internet to cooking, while two in five said they were too
stressed about homework or too tired to help. It also revealed that a
third of parents had learned to cook from their own mothers and fathers, and 80%
viewed culinary ability as an important skill. Author Annabel Karmel said:
"Today's parents just don't have the time or the patience to get the children
involved in the kitchen. A third (27%) of parents admit it's easier to let their
children watch television than to enlist their help with the evening meal.
Cooking is a great way for children to learn about maths, measuring, and
understanding time, so it's worth the effort.
What's more it's a great
way to get fussy eaters to try new foods."A spokesman for the Department for
Children, Schools and Families said: "We know that many adults don't pass on
cooking skills to young people, which risks children growing up uninterested in
cooking or living healthily.
"Practical cooking lessons are compulsory in
primary schools and we're making them compulsory in all secondary schools from
2011 for the first time ever. 1,000 children and 1,000 parents were
polled online by March 2009. For more info click here.
Breaking News
The Pigs Are Worth it
Campaign has won a major international award. Watch this space for details next
week.
Knowledge Transfer
Tip of the Week: Heat Stress
Options
Providing sows with choices of how to cool down over the
summer months gives a large group of dry sows a better chance of avoiding heat
stress. One unit recently visited by a KT manager provides backless dry sow
huts, shades, and wallows in all dry sow paddocks.
The sows seem to find
one of these areas preferential and you will see groups in wallows, in backless
huts and under the shades on straw pads. The unit provides wallows near the
troughs which is not ideal but when they only had wallows the large group would
limit the access to the troughs, which is a problem for submissive sows who
couldn’t access the drinking water.
Regional NPA meeting – Wiltshire
How
English pig producers beat wasting disease. Don’t miss the South West meeting on
16th June near Wiltshire, starting at 4 pm followed with a buffet supper. It
will be about "the Marketplace" and "PCV2" vaccine results, plus NPA affairs.
For more information contact Zoe Davies. Venue: Marsh Farm Hotel, Wootton
Bassett, Swindon SN4 8ER.
Mini Muck!
Bob Marsden the catchment
sensitive Farming Officer (CSFO) for the Peak District Dales has successfully
secured grant aid from the East Midlands Development Agency (EMDA) towards a
slurry tanker with shallow injector, for use on the family farm. Part of the
grant application is to demonstrate the innovative technology on the farm. Mini
Muck is a joint event with DairyCO and is part of the demonstration programme.
If you are a farmer interested in applying for grant aid for a shallow injection
you should attend this event.
To book your free place and dinner at this
event you can either email emlmas@naturalengland.org.uk or
call 0115 9005350 giving your name, address and CPH number. It is on Wednesday
10th June 09, 10:30am - 3:30 at Thorpe Farm, Hathersage, Hope Valley,
Derbyshire, S32 1BQ
Better Communication="Better"
Remuneration!
A split site unit visited by a KT manager historically
had poor communication between sites. Pigs were transferred from the weaner
accommodation regardless of condition, health or size meaning that the pigs were
difficult to sort on arrival at the grower site.
But…following
discussions, the managers now talk about the condition of pigs and the space
availability prior to transfer, meaning that grower accommodation is prepared in
advance of pigs arriving. Pigs are grouped by size prior to transport and
animals not performing to target are kept at the weaner site until they are of
an appropriate size to be moved to the grower accommodation. As a result of
these changes more uniform groups of pigs are moving through the system, staff
know the number, size and condition of pigs at each site, grower accommodation
can be prepared in advance of pigs arriving and overall finished pigs are more
uniform, leading to improved financial returns.
To read more examples of
simple ways to improve performance and financial returns take a look at some of
the farm case
studies available on the BPEX website.
Ammonia Emissions
The EA have written
to all those farmers who are required to reduce ammonia emissions from their
production sites as part of their EPR (IPPC) Permit conditions informing them
about survey work by Natural England. The protected Habitats implicated are have
been, or are being surveyed for evidence of ammonia damage. On some sites, no
evidence of damage has been found, consequently some permit conditions will be
removed. The EA and NE will be contacting farmers individually with an
update.
National News:
New Salt Targets
The FSA revised and
new salt targets for 2010 and 2012 have been published and are available by clicking
here.
Some key points are:
-
The revised 2010 target for bacon has been set at
3.00g salt average (3.25 maximum had been proposed). The target for 2012 is
2.88g average.
· The revised 2010 target for ham and other cured
meats has been set at 2.00g salt average (2.13 maximum had been proposed). The
target for 2012 is 1.63g.
-
Cured tongue is now specifically excluded from the
ham/other cured meats category.
-
A 2012 target of 1.8g average has been set for
‘Cheddar and other hard pressed cheeses’. A target maximum has not been
set.
-
The target for canned tuna remains at 1.0g average
and a maximum has not been set.
Future of QSM
The English pig
industry will remain in control of its marketing message when the Quality
Standard Mark is replaced by the Red Tractor, promises BPEX Mick Sloyan,
director of BPEX.
Quoting Deep Throat’s advice to reporter Bob Woodward
during the Watergate investigation, he said, “Follow the money.” Although BPEX
would be contributing its share of £500,000 for core funding of the Red Tractor,
the rest of the pig marketing spend would remain entirely under the control of
BPEX.
“It will not be passed over to Assured Food Standards. We will
remain in control of our own marketing and our own messaging,” he promised at
this week’s meeting of NPA Producer Group.
Furthermore the Quality
Standard Mark would continue to be marketed as robustly as ever until at least
next April, he said.
Explaining the background to why the Quality
Standard Mark is being replaced by the Red Tractor next year, Mick said consumer
research had shown there needed to be a reduction in the number of marks being
used.
Retailers had listened to what shoppers were saying and were pushing
"quite heavily" for some rationalisation. (Source: NPA Website)
International News
China Pig Breeding Investment
China
has earmarked 3 billion yuan (€322 million) this year to support the large-scale
breeding of pigs and cows in a bid to stabilise agricultural development and
help raise farmers' incomes, the State Council has announced.
Zhang
Xiaoshan, director of the rural development research institute of the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, said the central government's announcement of the
fresh investment will help stabilise pork prices, amid fears of the A(H1N1)
flu.
Earlier this month, pork prices in three of the biggest markets in
south China's Guangzhou dropped significantly.
Statistics
released by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) last
week showed pork prices in major Chinese cities averaged 10.13 yuan (€1.1) per
kg at the end of April, down 10.4% from the same period last year.
Help for Italian Pig Industry
The
Italian Ministry of Agriculture has proposed significant government assistance
for the country's pig breeders, with the aim of a "strategic revamp" of the
ailing sector.
The ministry may be planning a mix of subsidised credit and
government purchases with support from banks and agricultural
organisations.
Brussels has already reviewed the proposal and the Italian
Ministry of Agriculture is hoping to launch the plan by July 2009.
Italy
has devised a plan to automate all regional slaughter structures that process
more than 7 million animals each year.
Pig production in 2008 increased
by 0.5% to 12 882 000 head, according to the Italian Pig Breeders Association
(ANAS).
Imports of live swine in 2009 decreased by 40% (32 000 tonnes)
from 2007 levels. Italy's pig sector produces 9.3m animals annually, worth €2.3
billion.
Italy has not enacted any new trade regulations for swine, pork,
or pork products as a result of the H1N1 outbreak.
Despite assurances
that pigmeat is not a source of the virus, consumption has declined by an
estimated 8-10% and prices have fallen 5% to less than €1/kg.
French Call for Help
At next week's
meeting of the European agricultural council, France will call for the
reintroduction of pigmeat export subsidies. Having seen a reduction in its
national pig herd and in annual pigmeat production it is now seeing a fall in
exports too — down 16 percent in January-February. Projected fall in the French
pig herd this year is 1.6 percent, but this figure is
optimistic.
France's call for export subsidies will likely be supported
by Italy, where producers have significant debts after four years of losses and
are now struggling to get loans extended as banks become more cautious about
lending.
Export Bulletin
For the latest Export
Bulletin, click
here.
International Prices
For the latest
international prices, click here.