EU pork production at lowest level in almost a decade

Thursday, 16 March 2023

For European pork producers the last 12 months have been challenging (as they have been here in the UK) with input costs soaring, further outbreaks of ASF, new greening requirements and the consumer cost of living to name but a few headline challenges. This has led to pig meat production for the region falling to the lowest annual volume since 2014 in 2022, to total 22.1million tonnes, a year on year decline of 5.6% (-1.3million tonnes).

All key producing nations saw significant decline, but most noticeable was Germany. Although Germany has been recording production declines since 2017, the annual decline has only been in the region of 2-3%, however in 2022 the annual decline stood at almost 10%. A loss of nearly half a million tonnes in 12months. Poland, Spain, Denmark, and Belgium each recorded annual production declines between 110,000-180,000 tonnes in 2022.

bar chart showing annual volumes of pig meat produced in key EU nations

Reducing slaughter numbers have been the driving force behind the production decline. Total pig kill for the EU27 stood at 237million head in 2022, the lowest recorded numbers since 2014 and a steep decline year on year of 12.6 million head (-5.1%). The largest declines by country were seen in Germany (-4.8million head), Poland (-1.9million head), Spain (-1.7million head) and Belgium (-1.1million head).

Looking at the EU December pig count, the trend in decline continues and answers for much of the reduction in slaughter numbers. In 2022 the EU pig herd* reduced by 5.8% as a result of the challenges faced by producers and processors. What will be of more significance to the marketplace looking forward is the reduction in the number of breeding sows and particularly the number of sows in pig at -6.2% and -5.5% respectively. The loss in these sow numbers indicates that we should see a reduction in the number of available pigs for slaughter in 2023 and supports wider industry commentary of tight supplies. This may mean we continue to see strong prices on the European pig market if domestic consumption remains steady, as forecast in the last EU short term outlook. Longer term, declines in both consumption and production are forecast, which is anticipated to bring the market into a more balanced position.

  Data table showing the year on year change in the EU pig herd

Image of staff member Freya Shuttleworth

Freya Shuttleworth

Senior Analyst (Livestock)

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