December 11, 2024
UK beef production in October rose by 19% compared to September this year
UK beef production totalled 92,000 tonnes in October this year, an increase of 19% from September, according to the United Kingdom's Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board (AHDB).
This was also up on October 2023's levels by 12% (+10,000 tonnes) with forecasted production expected to reach 933,000 tonnes by the end of the year.
Prime cattle slaughter grew in October by 17% to 204,000 head, representing a 13% year-on-year increase compared to 2023 and driving growth in overall beef production.
Additionally, cull cow slaughter grew by 32% in October compared to the previous month to just under 70,000 head. Although largely a seasonal rise, this figure is still 6,000 head above October 2023 and a 9% year-on-year rise.
A key driver of this has record Northern Irish kills of 47,000 head in October, an increase of 13,000 head from the previous month. Reports suggest as well as strong prices, carbon reduction schemes are likely adding incentive to slaughter. Stable year-on-year beef volume sales and market reports suggest encouraging festive demand are supporting prices into the winter months.
Yet, October prime cattle carcase weights have remained relatively consistent with previous months and compared to the same time last year at an average of 340 kilogrammes.
For the year-to-date (January to September), UK fresh and frozen beef imports reached 177,000 tonnes, an increase of 7% compared to the same period in 2023. September volumes fell marginally compared with August, down by 200 tonnes.
Imports from Ireland have continued to climb this year with 15,000 tonnes imported in September, an increase of 750 tonnes from August, contributing to a year-on-year (January-September) increase of 15,000 tonnes (+12.8%).
Ireland's market share of imports to the UK has grown further year-to-date, January to September, with a market share now at 76.7% compared to 72.9% over the same period in 2023.
Other key exporters, Poland, the Netherlands, and Germany, have seen their products to the UK fall down by 15%, 23%, and 77% respectively, likely contributing to Ireland's increased market share of UK imports.
Ireland's ability to pick up excess demand for imports is likely the result of relative price differentials, providing incentive to export across the Irish Sea together with their own increase in production.
For the year-to-date (January to September), exports of fresh and frozen beef from the UK were up 10% on the same period in 2023, an increase of 7,500 tonnes. Exports in September grew by over 1,000 tonnes compared to August, reaching 9,300 tonnes.
A large contributor to this recovery in export figures has been an increase in exports to France, up 13% on 2023, year-to-date, and Hong Kong, China, where export volumes increased from 2,900 tonnes in 2023 to 4,500 tonnes in 2024 year-to-date (+54%). This is despite the UK's higher price differential relative to the EU in 2024.
- AHDB