Ireland

Ireland to export more cattle to Turkey

Livestock

Irish Minister for Agriculture Michael Creed has declared during a trade mission in Turkey that Ireland has obtained new live export to the Turkish market this year.

Posted on Feb 02 ,12:41

Ireland to export more cattle to Turkey

Ahmet Esref Fakibaba, the Turkish Minister for Agriculture, and the director general from Turkish Meat and Milk Board (ESK) told the Irish official that starting from May private sector buyers will be allowed to import cattle for fattening, the Irish Farmers Journal reports.

Currently, all sales of livestock are being held through the state-controlled ESK.

"Being able to sell fattening cattle direct to private buyers will open up valuable new opportunities for trade," Minister Creed said.

Last year, Ireland's cattle sales to Turkey reached 16% of the country's total live shipments or 30,000 cattle.

According to the Irish Farmers Association (IFA) National Livestock Chairman Angus Woods, IFA and Bord Bia visited this market last October and it is clear that there is real potential for increased export.

“Based on positive discussions we had with the Turkish Meat and Milk Board (ESK), it is clear Turkey has an import requirement for 500,000 head of live cattle each year. Ireland could supply up to 100,000 head of this requirement on an annual basis,” Mr. Woods said.

Furthermore, Mr. Woods said the priority on live exports right now is for Minister Creed to secure full ferry access for Irish calf exports to EU markets over the coming weeks when the Stena ferry goes into dry dock. He added that Minister Creed is responsible for market access and he has to deliver alternative full ferry access before February 20th until March 19th, which is peak calf export season. Angus Woods said with the IFA's increased cow numbers the Minister needs to target an additional 100,000 head of live exports this year, according to a statement released by IFA.

 NEWSLETTER - Stay informed with the latest news!

Comments





Similar articles

DENMARK

More slaughtering in an uneven year for Danish Crown Beef

Despite fewer cattle being slaughtered overall in Denmark compared to the previous year, Danish C...


Read more Read more
DENMARK

Denmark confirms details of new meat tax

Farmers will pay a methane tax (£34 per tonne – doubling by 2035) including cattle an...


Read more Read more
WALES

HCC Chair shares farm stock concerns after latest survey results

"The flock figure of around 8.7 million recorded for the last two years is the lowest level since...


Read more Read more
Websolutions by Angular Software and SpiderClass