Reducing Costs in Pig Production
Thursday, May 01, 2003By Livestock Knowledge Transfer, UK - This article shows the results of questionnaires sent to pig producers and their organisations in late 2000, and identifies the technical priorities for the British pig industry.
Table 1. Technical priorities for British pig industry
The overwhelming need to reduce production costs relates to our ability to compete with
imports which are produced at lower cost. Analysis by BPEX and MLC has shown that production costs need to be reduced by about 15p/kg deadweight to make British pigmeat competitive (Table 2). This can be achieved if the changes shown in Table 2 are made.
Table 2. Basis for achieving 15p/Kg deadweight reduction in production costs
Type
Average
Target (4 years)
Days to slaughter (93 Kg)
180
-25
Lifetime growth rate (g/day)
500
+90
Feeding herd costs (p/Kg gain)
35
-5
The total value to the British pig industry if these changes are made is about £23 million according to BPEX.
They consider the changes are achievable over 4 years if producers adopt new technology and ideas. These will form the basis of a series of KT articles called ‘Getting the best from your pigs’ (Table 3).
Table 3. Getting the best from your pigs. Areas where improvement could reduce costs of production
In addition to reducing costs of production, the questionnaires identified two other areas where technical changes are needed.
The first is to provide an answer to the question: why don’t our genetically improved pigs perform so well in practice? KT articles under this heading are in Table 4.
Table 4. How to combat disease and achieve genetic potential
Another area of importance is the general area of ‘Quality’. To consumers this encompasses animal welfare and food safety as well as taste. How do we incorporate these into British Quality Standards at reasonable costs and how do we develop the integration needed so that all partners in the value chain benefit? These subjects will form the basis of a further series of articles (Table 5).
Table 5. Higher quality British pork and bacon

Source: Livestock Knowledge Transfer - First published 2001. Added to this site 2003.












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