US pig processing has held steady at 95% of normal capacity for about 6 weeks, but pig farmers are now calling on the federal government for financial help to deal with pandemic-related losses. These are the developments in North America this week.
On Monday, the US National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) once again highlighted the extensive damage caused to the US pig farming sector by Covid-19, and urged Congress to provide swift financial aid in order to save many farms at extreme risk of going under.
Pig losses pile up
US pig farmers have had to face many costs as packing plant capacity dropped in the spring, costs associated with euthanasia, disposal and donation of pigs. They have also had to contend with lower prices.
An estimated 2 million hogs are still backed up at this point on US farms according to a new analysis by Steve Meyer, an economist with Kerns & Associates. Meyer also noted that based on lean hog futures prices on March 1 and July 10 and actual hog prices in the interim, revenue from hog sales has been reduced by roughly $ 4.7 billion for US pig farmers.
The NPPC is warning that if additional packing plant disruptions occur in the weeks and/or months to come due to Covid-19 worker infections, “the number of hogs backed up on farms will swell precipitously.”
NPPC: More emergency relief required
To deal with losses already incurred and likely additional future losses, the NPPC is asking Congress to provide more emergency relief for hog farmers. Pig farmers did receive good news earlier in July when several US senators from Oklahoma, North Carolina and Iowa introduced the RELIEF for Producers Act of 2020, which provides some compensation for farmers who have been – and continue to be – forced to euthanise or donate animals that cannot be processed into the food supply as a result of Covid-19, among other provisions.
Slaughter plant capacity
In an interview with Pork Business, Meyer said this week that the US pork industry would have slaughtered about 1.1 million more pigs from June 1 to about mid-July than it would have without Covid-19. However, while slaughter capacity in US meat packing plants has rebounded significantly since the spring when it peaked at 40% idleness, Meyer said the industry “is still hovering around 5% idle capacity,” and adds that “we think that loss is more or less permanent.”
Meyer expects the backlog of pigs to expand to as much as 1.6 million by the end of August and to 2.5 million by the end of the year.