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China food safety
ChinaPolitics

China’s 'backyard' pig farmers squeezed as sector scales up

The move towards industrial-scale pork production is part of a broader plan to develop more modern and efficient agriculture and improved food safety

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A farmer tends to her pigs at a traditional small farm outside Beijing. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Walking through swarms of flies at his piggery on the outskirts of Beijing, Liu Jin shows off 1,500 hormone-free black hogs raised for China’s growing organic meat market.

Liu employs a dozen people to look after the swine that are kept in indoor sties and outdoor pens -- the type of large-scale operation China hopes will one day replace the millions of “backyard” farms across the country.

“Even ordinary people care a lot about whether their food has hormones,” said Liu, describing his pigs as “green”.

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About 90 per cent of China’s estimated 40 million pig farmers raise fewer than 50 hogs and account for about one third of supply, according to Dan Wang, an analyst at The Economist Intelligence Unit.

Millions of backyard pig farmers in China are being forced out of the industry as the government cracks down on pollution and encourages producers to modernise. Photo: AFP
Millions of backyard pig farmers in China are being forced out of the industry as the government cracks down on pollution and encourages producers to modernise. Photo: AFP
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Poorly educated and lacking an understanding of market cycles, they often buy and sell their pigs at the wrong time, triggering supply disruptions and price volatility.

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