Bangkok Post

Jurin puts brakes on pig exports

Ministry tackles pork price surge

- PHUSADEE ARUNMAS APINYA WIPATAYOTI­N

Commerce Minister Jurin Laksanawis­it has ordered the temporary suspension of swine exports to combat the skyrocketi­ng prices of pork in the domestic market.

The ban, effective today, was decided upon at a high-level meeting at the ministry which was also attended by top officials from the Livestock Department.

Mr Jurin said pigs and piglets will be temporaril­y banned from export until April 5 so there will be enough pork for domestic consumptio­n. Last year, 18 million pigs were supplied to the domestic market and one million were exported.

This year, domestic supply is expected to fall to 13 million swine. That leaves a shortfall of about five million for local consumptio­n compared to last year’s figure.

The meeting yesterday ordered farmers who raise more than 500 pigs, traders who export more than 500 pigs, and firms with a cold storage warehouse keeping more than five tonnes of pork to report their current stocks and prices to the Department of Internal Trade.

Labels of pork retail prices must be clearly displayed at all markets and vendors must not jack up prices.

The Commerce Ministry’s move came after the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Cooperativ­es raised concern about the pork price saga.

Deputy Agricultur­e and Cooperativ­es Minister Prapat Pothasutho­n said earlier he would discuss with the Ministry of Commerce whether to issue an order suspending shipments of live pigs.

“We hope it can be implemente­d right away to improve the situation. We have both a medium- and longterm plan to ensure food security in the country,” he said.

“We are also going to introduce a ‘livestock sandbox’ to promote imports and exports under a special control zone in line with government policy.”

The meeting concluded that the pork price surge has been caused by outbreaks of African Swine Fever (ASF) in neighbouri­ng countries that forced Thailand to take aggressive action to control the outbreak.

Mr Prapat added the Department of Livestock will promote pig-feeding to small-scale farmers in designated areas with the support of the Bank for Agricultur­e and Agricultur­al Cooperativ­es.

It will also ask larger pig farms to produce more piglets, he said.

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