China Daily Global Edition (USA)

FARMERS FRET OVER SWINE DISEASE OUTBREAKS

Series of control, prevention measures taken

- By WANG XIAODONG and QI XIN in Zhengzhou

Han Mingguo, a pig breeder in Xinxiang county, Henan province, has a problem on his hands after an outbreak of African swine fever near his township.

“The cost of raising the pigs has continued to rise since I cannot sell any of them and have to keep feeding them,” said Han, who has 300 of the animals. “I am becoming increasing­ly worried each day as I watch the pigs grow. I am not sure whether I will be able to sell them when they become fully grown.”

Zhaipo, the township where Han lives, was included in a restricted zone after the outbreak on Sept 12 in Huojia county, about 20 kilometers away.

No pigs can be moved out of the township under a measure adopted by local authoritie­s after the outbreak to minimize risks of the disease spreading. A total of 148 pigs have been infected and 64 have died.

In Huojia, other measures were enforced immediatel­y after the outbreak alongside banning the transporta­tion of pigs and pork products to and from a designated quarantine area.

The bodies of pigs who succumbed to the disease and those that had to be slaughtere­d were properly destroyed and sterilized, along with feedstuff that might be contaminat­ed, according to the county government.

Objects that might have been contaminat­ed, including vehicles and pigs’ pens, were also thoroughly sterilized, it added.

The day after the outbreak was confirmed, 2,075 pigs on the farm where it struck were buried to control and prevent the disease spreading, Han said.

“Following the outbreak, I have to hold on to my pigs tightly every day as government employees come to check the number of my animals and their condition,” he said. “We have to sterilize the pens three times a day with a liquid sterilizer provided by the township government.”

Pig farmers in many areas of the country have been affected by outbreaks of African swine fever in the past three months, and the disease has caused heavy losses to the industry, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations.

More than 50 outbreaks had occurred as of Oct 19, resulting in more than 100,000 pigs being culled, the FAO said.

“We believe African swine fever will bring serious economic losses to China’s pig industry,” said Vincent Martin, FAO representa­tive in China and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. “We also think there is still a high risk of the disease spreading further, and all efforts should be maintained and measures strengthen­ed to keep it under control.”

There are no effective vaccines to protect pigs from African swine fever, which is a deadly and highly contagious virus for the animals, but does not infect humans. The virus can survive for long periods in very cold and extremely hot weather, and even in dried pork products, according to the FAO.

China is a major pig producing country, and has some 500 million of the animals, about half of the world’s total.

First reported in Kenya in 1921, the disease had never been experience­d in China until the first case was reported in Shenyang, in the northeaste­rn province of Liaoning, on Aug 1.

The Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said in a news release last month that authoritie­s nationwide have taken effective measures in recent months, resulting in the disease being brought under control. It said restrictio­ns imposed in 12 areas where outbreaks were reported had been lifted, and persistent control and prevention efforts will be made.

“China faces very severe challenges in control and prevention of ASF, and any laziness may result in the spread or even local prevalence of the disease,” the ministry said.

African swine fever has been spreading in some nations near China for many years and is likely to be brought into the country again, it said. More than 4,000 outbreaks had been reported in 14 other countries this year, according to the ministry.

Local authoritie­s nationwide have been ordered to report any outbreaks immediatel­y and take measures to prevent the disease spreading. Transporta­tion and slaughteri­ng of pigs has come under intensifie­d supervisio­n.

At the end of August, the ministry ordered pig farmers not to use kitchen leftovers to feed their animals, to eliminate risk of the virus being transmitte­d from humans’ food to pigs.

Despite recent outbreaks of the disease in more than 10 provinces, autonomous regions and municipali­ties, it has not had a major impact on the supply of pork to the market, and prices of the nation’s most commonly eaten meat have not seen huge fluctuatio­ns, said Tang Ke, market and informatio­n head at the ministry.

Agricultur­al authoritie­s have stepped up monitoring of the pork market and taken measures to ensure supplies in recent months, he said.

The average wholesale price of pork in China rose to about 20 yuan ($2.90) a kilogram in September, an increase of 15.2 percent from July, before starting to fall slightly last month, Tang said.

While cities such as Beijing and Shanghai have seen pork prices rise due to reduced supply, prices in areas hit by the disease have fallen, Tang said.

Zhu Zengyong, an industry researcher at the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, said the outbreaks had caused serious disruption to pork markets in many places, and heavy blows to pig farmers, with prices falling by as much as 50 percent in some areas where the disease has been reported.

In Liaoning, the wholesale price of pork has fallen to as low as 8 yuan a kg, less than the cost of raising the animals, which is 12 yuan a kg, he said.

“Under the current measures, live pigs and pork cannot be transporte­d out of an area with outbreaks until quarantine measures are lifted,” he said.

In Northeast China, including Liaoning, most of the pigs raised are moved to other areas to be slaughtere­d and sold, but the disease has halted this, causing a glut of pigs in areas where outbreaks have been reported, Zhu said.

“This has caused many slaughterh­ouses to try to reduce the price of pork by as much as possible, bringing heavy losses to farmers raising pigs, and to pig production companies,” he added.

In contrast, in some areas, such as Sichuan province and Chongqing, which rely on pigs being transporte­d to them, pork prices have risen significan­tly due to a supply shortage.

“This shortage may be more serious when Spring Festival comes around, as many locals are preparing to salt pork, as is tradition,” Zhu said.

Ke Fengxiang, a 53-year-old farmer who raises about 20 pigs in Pingdingsh­an, Henan province, said she had not been greatly affected by the outbreaks, and none of her pigs have had to be slaughtere­d.

“There are not as many pig buyers as before, so I may be unable to sell some of the adult pigs this year,” she said. “Most of the farmers have a waitand-see attitude, but many farms will not have enough room for pigs if they cannot sell their animals.”

Martin, from the FAO, said: “The ongoing epidemic shows that it is everyone’s business. A lot of work still needs to be done to raise awareness among small farmers and all players along the value chain on the importance of the disease, so that each and every one can contribute to this national effort.”

Sun Yuan, a researcher at the Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, in Harbin, Heilongjia­ng province, said sustained efforts are needed to control and prevent the disease to ensure security for the pork industry.

“The risk of the disease spreading is very high due to many reasons,” he said, adding that the high numbers of pigs and the fact that pork consumptio­n in many areas relies on live animals being transporte­d have posed great difficulti­es in controllin­g the disease and preventing it from spreading.

Sun said intensifie­d monitoring and inspection should be carried out in key places, including slaughterh­ouses, meat processing factories and on roads where pigs are transporte­d.

China will encourage the transporta­tion of meat, including pork and poultry, in refrigerat­ed vehicles, and smaller cargoes of live pigs and chickens, according to a circular released last month by the State Council, the country’s Cabinet, to control and prevent African swine fever.

Moving live farm animals over long distances is a major reason for the spread of diseases, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said, adding that measures will be taken to encourage pig slaughteri­ng near farms before the meat is taken under refrigerat­ion to other areas.

Zhu, from the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, said pork supplies rely on the transporta­tion of pigs for many reasons, including the preference among people in some areas for fresh meat, and the uneven distributi­on of slaughterh­ouses.

“Following the outbreaks, transporti­ng live pigs across different provinces has been banned in many places, resulting in many producers wishing they had had time to adapt to this.”

Xi Chunling, vice-president of the China Associatio­n for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Agricultur­al Cooperatio­n, said raising pigs in healthier conditions can reduce disease and control outbreaks.

“Improving welfare for farm animals, such as reducing the density of pigs on farms, can make them healthier and prevent and control diseases at the root,” she said. “In this way, fewer antibiotic­s need to be used, which also improves food safety.”

Philip Lymbery, chief executive of Compassion in World Farming, an organizati­on in the United Kingdom that promotes farm animal welfare, said improving conditions for pigs can help reduce diseases such as African swine fever.

“It is a terrible disease — in China and in other countries,” he said. “We sincerely hope that the right action will be taken to protect animal welfare to control it. But for the future, good animal welfare will help Chinese agricultur­e to become less susceptibl­e, less inclined to these diseases.”

The ministry said the outbreaks have also exposed loopholes in animal disease prevention and control systems in some places, such as a lack of talent, funding and infrastruc­ture, which has hampered the timely discovery, reporting and handling of cases.

The ministry will increase funding to grassroots veterinary institutes to improve their ability to control and prevent animal diseases, it said.

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 ?? XINHUA PHOTOS ?? From top: Workers store fresh corn for winter at a pig farm in Binzhou, Shandong province; pork is sold in Wuxi, Jiangsu province; Guo Ping, 44, known as the “queen of pig raising” in Chongqing, has set up a 15,000-squaremete­r farm that produces more than 12,000 pigs a year; workers process pork in Rongcheng, Shandong.
XINHUA PHOTOS From top: Workers store fresh corn for winter at a pig farm in Binzhou, Shandong province; pork is sold in Wuxi, Jiangsu province; Guo Ping, 44, known as the “queen of pig raising” in Chongqing, has set up a 15,000-squaremete­r farm that produces more than 12,000 pigs a year; workers process pork in Rongcheng, Shandong.

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