UK: further decline for the female pig breeding herd
The small year-on-year increase of 0.7% (32,000 head) seen in the overall UK pig population has been driven by an uplift in the number of fattening pigs. At 4.30 million head, fattening pig numbers have grown just shy of 1% (40,000 head) year-on-year but remain significantly lower than the 10-year average.
However, the female breeding herd recorded a loss for the third consecutive year, back 11,000 head (3.1%) to 327,000 head as of 1 June 2024. Half of this decline was driven by a fall in the number of gilts in pig, with other sows (those either being suckled or dry sows kept for further breeding) also recoding significant losses. Sows in pig saw a smaller decline. Boars being used for service also fell for the third year in a row.
On the contrary, gilts intended for first time breeding grew by 4,000 head (4.6%), offsetting some of the decline. This has resulted in total breeding pig numbers standing at 421,000 head, a 1.7% loss (7,000 head) compared to the same point in 2023.
When splitting the figures by country, Scotland has seen the largest change in pig numbers year-on-year. Overall, England accounts for 78% of the UK’s total pig population with Northern Ireland holding a 15% share and Scotland holding 7%. Wales accounts for less than 1% of the UK pig population.
Over the last 5 years these splits have stayed relatively stable, with Northern Ireland gaining a 2% share and England easing 2%.
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