Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 

 

Inishowen pig farmers face meltdown 09.12.08

Shops withdraw pork products following weekend order

By Liam Porter, Inishowen Independent

A CLONMANY-based pig farmer has said pig farmers will be facing meltdown within weeks unless steps are taken immediately to ensure the market gets moving again quickly.
Charlie Doherty’s comments came following confirmation at the weekend that all Irish pork products were being recalled after a toxin was found in pig food.
Speaking to the Inishowen Independent Mr. Doherty who with his brother Martin keeps 1,000 pigs on their farm in Clonmany, admitted that if the market does not get moving again pig producers would be facing serious difficulties.
“The whole thing moves in a certain way, we have around 60 pigs born every week and we’d sell around 60 pigs a week to make space for them. But if we can’t sell on our pigs it will only take a short while before we have a serious backlog.”

Supermarket shelves were emptied yesterday of pork products. Not alone will that mean producers have to find space for extra pigs on their farm, they will also have to absorb the costs of extra feedstuffs to feed them.
“Within two weeks the whole industry will be in crisis unless urgent steps are taken to get the markets moving again.
Until that happens there will be a huge backlog that will leave farmers wondering what they are going to do with all these pigs.”
Mr. Doherty who said he believed the Irish housewife would be quick enough to regain confidence in the pork industry, said he was not as sure if the same could be said of the export market.
“All of a sudden the people we export to have no confidence in our product and we need to do all we can to address that as quickly as we can. Producers really depend on the export market and we need the government to do everything necessary to ensure that the factories do not collapse because if they collapse then producers will be left with pigs and nowhere to sell them.”
The local farmer added that a collapse in the industry would have devastating knock-on effects that could see producers, hauliers, millers and factory workers all out of work.
“In Belgium a few years ago there was a similar problem and it cost around €1 billion, people in the industry here are wondering who is going to pick up the tab? Somebody is going to have to because if the factories are left to take the hit and they don’t manage to survive that the whole industry could go into meltdown.”
As shops across the peninsula removed all pork products from the shelves yesterday HSE officials were understood to have visited a number of premises to ensure that shops were complying with the order.
However at least one local shop will be able to supply fresh Irish pork to its customers the Inishowen Independent learned yesterday.
Dominic O’Donnell of O’Donnell’s Premier Meats in Ardaravan Square, Buncrana, confirmed that he has been given a green light from the Food Safety Authority of Ireland (FSAI) to sell fresh Irish pork.
“I have a written guarantee from my supplier that none of their pigs were fed from the contaminated sources and following that the FSAI have given me the go-ahead to sell my products,” he confirmed yesterday evening.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home