UK pig backlog to last until summer, says AHDB
The backlog of pigs on farms would not be cleared until the second quarter of 2022, warns AHDB in a recent outlook for the sector. Pig farmers in the UK have been confronted with this problem since early autumn, due to the lack of workforce in abattoirs but the situation is to last or even get worst in the short time before it is cleared. AHDB outlook for the pork sector was based on assumptions that UK sow numbers would eventually fall from 415k head to 380k head by mid-year, and that UK slaughter capacity was constrained to around 220k head per week.
"But what if slaughter does not happen as laid out in the outlook? It is after all just one view of what we think is the most likely outcome, it is not the only possible outcome," AHDB warns.
Three scenarios have been presented for the current situation and, in each case, the situation is to last until the second quarter of 2022.
Scenarios:
1) The January outlook – GB slaughter of 186k head per week (approx. 220k for the UK). Based on the average weekly kill observed in Q4 2021, not including the last two (low) weeks.
2) Backlog high case – GB slaughter of 178k head per week. Based on the average GB kill observed between September and November.
3) Backlog low case – GB slaughter of 192k head per week. Based on GB weekly kill observed in the last 8 weeks of 2021 (again not including the final two (low) weeks).
"The following scenarios are based on varying the kill rate, in line with recently observed estimated slaughter. For simplicity, we have not varied the size in decline of the sow herd from that assumed in the outlook. This could further delay or bring forward changes in the size of the backlog. However, most of the pigs available for slaughter in the first half of 2022, including the backlog itself, were already on the ground as at 1 Dec 2021, the date of Defra’s most recent survey of the English pig population.
In the January outlook, we suggested the backlog could not be addressed until Q2. Here, in the “high case” scenario, the backlog worsens before it gets better, and is with us until July. In the “low case”, it is dealt with around seven weeks earlier than the “January outlook” case," commented Duncan Wyatt, Read Meat Lead Analyst, AHDB.
Currently, the UK government's revised Slaughter Incentive Payment Scheme increases payments to abattoirs to £10/head and runs until 31 March, which if taken up could increase throughputs. The arrival of additional butchers into the UK could also increase capacity. Some uptake of these schemes was already considered in January’s outlook.
"Even in the low backlog case, the implication is that some farmers will face significant practical challenges for weeks to come. This analysis is also limited to the possible physical size of the backlog. Pig producers are also struggling financially, as pig prices fall and feed costs remain high, with backlogged pigs doing nothing for cashflow or profitability," Mr. Wyatt said.
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