China for Mass Production of Pork, Puts up 26 Story of Pig Farm
High-rise
hog farms have sprung up nationwide as part of Beijing’s drive to enhance its
agricultural competitiveness and reduce its dependence on imports.
·
The building, on the outskirts of Ezhou,
a city on the southern bank of the Yangtze River, is hailed as the world’s
biggest free-standing pig farm.
·
Trails most of the developed world when
it comes to efficient food production. China is the biggest importer of
agricultural goods, including more than half the world’s soybeans, mostly for
animal feed.
·
As China has modernized with hundreds of
millions of people moving from the countryside to urban centers,
small backyard farms have disappeared.
·
Pork prices tripled in a year, coupled
with Beijing’s support of large-scale pig farms, the rewards appeared to
outweigh the risk.
·
Pork prices are down roughly 60 percent
from 2019 highs.
The first sows arrived in
late September at the hulking, 26-story high-rise towering above a rural
village in central China. The female pigs were whisked away dozens at a time in
industrial elevators to the higher floors where the hogs would reside from
insemination to maturity.
This is pig farming in China,
where agricultural land is scarce, food production is lagging and pork supply
is a strategic imperative.
Inside the edifice, which
resembles the monolithic housing blocks seen across China and stands as tall as
the London tower that houses Big Ben, the pigs are monitored on high-definition
cameras by uniformed technicians in a NASA-like command center.
Each floor operates like a self-contained farm for the different stages of a
young pig’s life: an area for pregnant pigs, a room for farrowing piglets,
spots for nursing and space for fattening the hogs.
Feed is carried on a
conveyor belt to the top floor, where it’s collected in giant tanks that
deliver more than one million pounds of food a day to the floors below through
high-tech feeding troughs that automatically dispense the meal to the hogs
based on their stage of life, weight and health.
The building, on the
outskirts of Ezhou, a city on the southern bank of the Yangtze River, is hailed
as the world’s biggest free-standing pig farm, with a second, identical hog
high-rise opening soon. The first farm started operating in October, and once
both buildings reach full capacity this year, it is expected to raise 1.2
million pigs annually.
China has had a long love
affair with pigs. For decades, many rural Chinese households raised backyard
pigs, considered valuable livestock as a source of not only meat but also
manure. Pigs also hold cultural significance as a symbol of prosperity because,
historically, pork was served only on special occasions.
Today, no country eats more
pork than China, which consumes half the world’s pig meat. Pork prices are
closely watched as a measure of inflation and
carefully managed through the country’s
strategic pork reserve — a government meat stockpile that can
stabilize prices when supplies run low.
But pork prices are higher
than in other major nations where pig farming went industrial a long time ago.
In the last few years, dozens of other mammoth industrialized pig farms have
sprung up across China as part of Beijing’s drive to close that gap.
Built by Hubei Zhongxin Kaiwei Modern Animal
Husbandry, a cement manufacturer turned pig breeder, the Ezhou farm stands like
a monument to China’s ambition to modernize pork production.
“China’s current pig
breeding is still decades behind the most advanced nations,” said Zhuge Wenda, the company’s
president. “This provides us with room for improvement to catch up.”
The farm is next to the
company’s cement factory, in a region known as the “Land of Fish and Rice” for
its importance to Chinese cuisine with its fertile farmlands and surrounding
bodies of water.
A pig farm in name, the
operation is more like a Foxconn factory for pigs with the precision required
of an iPhone production line. Even pig feces are
measured, collected and repurposed. Roughly one-quarter of the feed will come
out as dry excrement that can be repurposed as methane to generate electricity.
Six decades after a famine
killed tens of millions of its people, China still trails most of the developed
world when it comes to efficient food production. China is the biggest importer
of agricultural goods, including more than half the world’s soybeans, mostly
for animal feed. It has about 10 percent of the planet’s arable land for around
20 percent of the global population. Its crops cost more to produce, and its
farmlands yield less corn, wheat and soybean per acre than other major
economies.
The shortcomings became more
pronounced in the last few years when trade disputes with
the United States, pandemic-related
supply disruptions and the war in Ukraine
underscored China’s potential food security risk. In a December policy address,
Xi Jinping, China’s leader, called agricultural
self-reliance a priority.
“A country must strengthen
its agriculture before making itself a great power, and only a robust
agriculture can make the country strong,” Mr. Xi said. In the past, he has
warned that China would “fall under others’ control if we don’t hold our rice
bowl steady.”
And no protein is more
important for the Chinese rice bowl than pork. The State Council, China’s
cabinet, issued
a decree in 2019 stating that all government departments needed
to support the pork industry, including financial aid for more large-scale pig
farms. In the same year, Beijing also said it would approve multistory
farming, which allowed pig farming to go vertical to raise more hogs on
relatively smaller parcels.
“This is a milestone and not
only for China, because I think multistory farms will
have an impact on the world,” said Yu Ping, executive director of Yu’s Design
Institute, a company that designs pig farms.
As China has modernized with
hundreds of millions of people moving from the countryside to urban centers, small backyard farms have disappeared. The number
of pig farms in China producing fewer than 500 hogs a year plunged 75 percent
from 2007 to 2020, to around 21 million, according to an industry report.
The shift toward megafarms
accelerated in 2018 when African swine fever ravaged China’s pork industry and
wiped out, by
some estimates, 40 percent of its pig population.
Brett Stuart, founder of
Global AgriTrends, a market research firm, said hog
towers and other giant pig farms exacerbated the biggest risk facing China’s
pork industry: disease. Raising so many pigs together in a single facility
makes it harder to prevent contamination. He said large U.S. pork producers
spread out their farms to reduce biosecurity risk.
“U.S. hog farmers look at
the pictures of those farms in China, and they just scratch their heads and
say, ‘We would never dare do that,’” Mr. Stuart said. “It’s just too risky.”
But when pork prices tripled
in a year, coupled with Beijing’s support of large-scale pig farms, the rewards
appeared to outweigh the risk. A building boom ensued, and a market constrained
by supply became overwhelmed with available pigs. Pork
prices are down roughly 60 percent from 2019 highs. China’s pork industry
is marked by Bitcoin-like volatility, riding boom-or-bust cycles that spin off
huge profits or losses depending on the wild price swings.
Last month, Jiangxi Zhengbang Technology, a giant hog producer that has
expanded rapidly in the last few years, said it had been warned that it
may be delisted from the Shenzhen Stock Exchange over
concerns that the company is insolvent.
“The hope from the
government is that consolidation will make prices more predictable and less
volatile over time,” said Pan Chenjun, executive
director at RaboResearch’s food and agriculture
division. “That’s the ultimate goal.”
In rural villages, where
backyard farms once dotted the countryside, megafarms are sprouting up. Three
years ago, as property and infrastructure sectors started to slump, Hubei Zhongxin Kaiwei decided to use a neighboring plot and apply its construction expertise to
branch out into a business with better growth prospects. It invested $600
million to build the high-rise pig farms with an additional $900 million
earmarked for a nearby meat processing plant.
Its background in cement is
useful in pig farming, the company said. Using its existing employees, it built
a land-saving high-rise with reinforced concrete. It is using excess heat from
the cement factory to provide hot baths and warm drinking water to the pigs.
This, according to Hubei Zhongxin Kaiwei,
will help the pigs grow faster with less feed.
Small backyard pig farmers
are finding it hard to keep pace with that type of scale.
Qiao Yuping, 66, raises about 20 to 30 pigs a year with her
husband in Liaoning Province in northeastern China.
When pork prices fell last year, she said, they didn’t make any money. She said
it was hard to ignore the impact of megafarms that drove up feed and vaccine
prices for the animals.
“Everything has gone up in
price,” Ms. Qiao said. “How can we not be affected?”