May 14, 2020

 

Pork meat piles up in Flemish pork farms on dropping demand

 

 

A farmers union said that pig farmers in Flanders, the Flemish region of Belgium, are running out of space for their animals as pork demand slumps due to the COVID-19 outbreak and a swine flu epidemic, reported The Brussels Times.

 

The ABSvzw farmers union said that concern was rising among pig growers in Flanders as newborn piglets arrived into their stalls, which were growing increasingly engorged with already fattened hogs that they could not get rid off.

 

"On our pork farms, companies work with a rotating system in which new piglets are born all the time," the union stated on Facebook.

 

"This means that pigs must leave for the slaughterhouse at regular intervals to ensure that there is space for the new piglets in the stable."

 

But with demand from the restaurant and catering plummeting since the lockdown-imposed shutdown in mid-March, pork producers are appealing to authorities to buy and freeze up their animals.

 

"The demand for pork meat has fallen over the last few weeks due to the mandatory closing of [hotels, restaurants and cafés], of large kitchens and [other] food-service [industries] both at home and abroad," the union wrote.

 

"Psychologically, it is very difficult to not know when your pigs will be sold, that is why we ask the government to buy and freeze pigs," said Bart Vergote, pig committee spokesperson for the union.

 

"We are dealing with live animals that you cannot store like a product in a factory or warehouse," he added.

 

On the global market, the viral pandemic has brought the meatpacking industry to a dramatic slowdown, forcing some farmers to resort to culling their animals, gassing chicks and inducing abortions in sows.

 

On top of the coronavirus pandemic, a separate epidemic is also weighing down Belgian pig farmers, who have been struggling with an ASF outbreak since it broke out two years in Wallonia.

 

The farmers union said that the double epidemics hitting them was hurting them, as fast-growing markets such as China and others in Latin America stopped buying from Belgium but continued importing from other European pork producers.

 

Since issuing their appeal ahead of the weekend, the farmers union on Monday said they were still waiting for a response from authorities.

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