March 24, 2014

 

Australia's chicken industry to grow progressively over five years

 

 

Over the next five years, Australia's chicken production and consumption is expected to continue its steady growth and will account for nearly a third of total meat production by 2019, according to a report by the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES).
 
In addition, chicken production will account for nearly a third of total meat production in the country by 2019.
 

Production is expected to exceed one million tonnes this year, up from 667,471 tonnes in 2000; while consumption, which averaged an annual 44.3 kilogrammes per capita in 2010-11, is slated to reach 46.2 kg per capita by 2015-16, according to data by the Australian Poultry Industries Association. This will make it by far the most consumed meat in Australia, 12.3 kg per capita more than beef and veal consumption, which is forecast to total 33.9 kg per capita in 2015-16.

 

APIA's executive director, Andreas Dubs, told GlobalMeatNews that the increase in poultry consumption had a lot to do with lifestyle changes: "There is an ever-increasing offering of further processed meal options available in retail shops, a development that seems more pronounced in Australia than in Europe, for example, and caters for the new generation of time-tight home cooks looking for easy but tasty and nutritious options," he said.

 

Dubs added there had been a strong uptake of chicken-based products by quick-service restaurants outside the traditional chicken businesses.

 

The ABARES report indicates price competitiveness as a driving factor in the rise of consumption, with low whole fresh chicken prices achieved due to increased productivity in Australian chicken farms, where birds (farmed without hormones and cages, according to the APIA) reach slaughter maturity at an earlier age, requiring significantly less feed than in previous decades.

 

Premium fresh and organic chicken cuts, however, can command top dollars. According to the online shopping facility of one of Australia's biggest supermarket chains, Coles, chicken breasts from Australian organic producer, Inglewood Farms, was advertised at AUD31.40/kg (US$28.57) while Scotch fillet steak on the same site was advertised at AUD28.50/kg (US$25.93).

 

Exports, meanwhile, make up a tiny fraction of Australian chicken meat production - just 5% according to ABARES. "About 95% of exports comprise frozen cuts and offal, such as feet, kidneys and livers. These attract a higher price in export markets than in Australia," the report noted.

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