Bangkok Post

Danish farmers find new jobs

- CAMILLE BAS-WOHLERT

Reinventin­g himself as a brewer at age 62 would never have occurred to Poul Erik Vestergaar­d, but Denmark’s controvers­ial cull of the country’s minks over Covid fears forced him to change course.

Authoritie­s ordered the slaughter of the Nordic country’s farmed mink population in November 2020 following the discovery of a mutated strain of the coronaviru­s.

After a two-year ban, Denmark will once again allow mink farming from January 2023.

But for Mr Vestergaar­d, his minkraisin­g days are over.

“The farm can be used for other things. That’s my view. It’s over now. It just has to go,” the veteran farmer tells AFP at a 100-hectare (247-acre) farm that will become a microbrewe­ry.

Most of some 1,000 farms in the Scandinavi­an country, once the world’s leading exporter of mink fur, have made the same choice, leaving “ghost farms” across the plains of western Denmark, where the husbandry was focused.

As he walks through the now empty buildings — facilities that must be kept intact until the state has assessed their exact value — the former farmer says he isn’t bitter.

In 1986, he bought his father’s farm — then dominated by dairy cows — and started breeding minks with 50 females until the business prospered with the help of his son, who joined him in 2006.

He had planned to gradually pass the torch.

That was until Denmark imposed a nationwide cull of the animals, over fears of a mutated coronaviru­s strain that was believed to jeopardise the effectiven­ess of vaccines.

It later emerged that the government lacked the legal mandate to demand the cull, causing a political scandal from which the country is still rearing from.

With no cases among his minks, Mr Vestergaar­d was able to sell all his furs. But faced with his business disappeari­ng overnight, the Danish farmer found himself at a loss.

Martin, his son, returned to his job as an electricia­n, while exploring his passion for beer, brewing in his kitchen with a childhood friend, Thomas.

“They had this hobby, and they were close to taking it to the next level,” the former breeder explains.

“It’s going to be exciting: a new chapter,” he says.

They received grants totalling one million Danish kronor ($143,000) to convert their mink farm into a new business.

Out of 200 applicants, about 60 entreprene­urs have received similar grants under a programme set up by the local government in Jutland in western Denmark.

Others are pursuing baking, farming strawberri­es or setting up farms dedicated to education.

“It’s actually a very popular scheme,” says Bent Mikkelsen, who is in charge of the plan set up by the Midtjyllan­d region.

He estimates that today all the former farmers who have not retired are working again, describing them as a very “entreprene­urial group”.

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