Chinese pork exports down in beginning of 2008
// 06 May 2008
In January and February, China exported 12,000 tonnes of fresh and frozen
pork, down 55.2% from the same period last year. Export value declined by 16.8%
to $37.62 million.
Pork exports began to slow down in June last year and
recovered in September, but it went down again from the beginning of this year,
according to China Customs.
Pork prices went up to $3,284 per tonne
in February, a record since January 2007.
Narrowing
gap
Analysts say the narrowing gap between domestic and international
prices made companies more hesitant to export. Robust domestic sales during the
spring festival in February, when Chinese people buy more food to prepare feasts
during the traditional holiday, also diverted part of the pork
supply.
Severe winter weather in southern China this year had disrupted
transportation and caused delivery delay of many overseas orders, analysts say,
adding that the cold weather had also hurt pig husbandry and tightened
supply.
Related websites:
• China
Customs
• Xinhua
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