China Daily (Hong Kong)

Mink farmers feel the chill as Russian market weakens

Many plan to focus on growing demand for high-quality garments in domestic market, report Wang Zhuoqiong in Beijing and Zhao Ruixue in Weihai, Shandong.

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Mink farmers in China had a harsh winter as prices and demand fell in reaction to weak markets in Russia and Eastern Europe.

Wang Yongquan, deputy head of the Husbandry Bureau in the Wendeng district of Weihai, a city in East China’s Shandong province, said the export volume of fur in 2014 in Wendeng dropped 30 percent year-on-year. Russia has long been its largest foreign market.

Fur prices have been low since September, said Wang. For example, the price for a male mink’s pelt was 300 yuan ($48) or more, and that of a female was 200 yuan, at the peak in 2013. But in 2014, male pelts were priced at an average of 180 yuan.

According to the China Fur Associatio­n, exports of raw fur products in the first 11 months of last year totaled 6 million kilograms, down from 7.5 million kg in 2013.

“Many farmers are holding back their furs and waiting for the price to surge this year,” Wang said. “The number of farmed fur animals was cut 30 to 40 percent in 2014.”

Wendeng district is home to more than 8,600 farms that raise 14 million furbearing animals. Of those, about 7 million are minks and 2 million are foxes.

These farms account for about onethird of domestic mink production.

Mink farming is concentrat­ed in Shandong, Liaoning and Hebei provinces. Shandong is by far the dominant source, accounting for over 76 percent of total mink products, according to the CFA.

Sun Kai, secretary-general of the Textile and Garment Chamber’s fur branch at the All China Federation of Industry and Commerce, said that slowing global demand for fur products has had a major impact on farmers in Shandong province and a lesser effect on producers in Northeast China.

“About one-fifth of farmers will be driven out of the market this year.”

But he said that the sluggish market is a warning to the industry that it must further consolidat­e, given that small, individual farmers are still a majority of the industry. There is no national auction system for fur, and the sector mainly relies on 10 trading markets that connect farmers and manufactur­ing companies.

Shandong is viewed as a province that produces low- and mediumend fur products, so farming companies there are now scrambling to meet rising domestic demand for high-end fur products.

“The best mink is now sold to China. We should grab that market by raising the best breeds,” said Lin Zijun, general manager of Weihai Shengtaiyu­an Mink Industry Co Ltd.

China is currently the world’s largest importer of fur. Demand is also strong in North America, Europe and Russia. There are also eager customers in developing markets such as Ukraine, Turkey and Kazakhstan.

The biggest exporter of fur is Europe, according to the Internatio­nal Fur Trade Federation.

The key to improving the quality of domestic fur is the introducti­on of foreign breeds. But the challenges lies in raising them, said Lin.

“Our farming facilities are worldclass. The compositio­n of feed and breeding procedures are the most

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