As feed costs spike, pig farmers are calling on retailers to pay more for their pork.

The crisis on pig farms has pushed many farmers beyond the survival limit since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine prompted a dramatic leap in the wheat price.

It now stands in the region of £300/tonne, compared with around £215/tonne just a few days ago.

Pig farmers, who have already faced more than a year of heavy financial losses, are currently losing tens of thousands of pounds per week, and face a serious and imminent risk of being unable to afford to feed their pigs and keep their businesses going.

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The National Pig Association (NPA) is asking retailers to pay enough to at least cover pig farmers’ costs of production.

One desperate producer said on Tuesday (March 8) at a NPA meeting: "We need something to happen very, very soon. Many pig businesses can only last weeks, in some cases days."

Pig producers have typically lost around £25/pig in the first half of 2021, increasing to an unprecedented £39/pig in the final quarter.

This was a result of a ‘perfect storm’ of a falling pig price, combined with record feed costs, compounded by having to feed heavier pigs for longer due to the pig backlog.

A number of pig businesses have quit the industry over the past six months with a lot more cutting back on pig numbers.

Many businesses had been determined to dig in despite the big losses, in the expectation that the situation would all eventually come good.

The recent spike in the wheat price has now shattered that prospect, particularly, with soya, energy, fuel and labour costs also increasing.

“Nobody can survive with wheat at £300/tonne. The situation is now beyond desperate and there is no light at the end of the tunnel,” NPA chairman Rob Mutimer said.

At Tuesday’s meeting, pig producers highlighted just how dire the situation had become.

One producer explained how their feed costs increased from £78/pig in April 2021 to £101/pig this month, and are set to soar to £119/pig in April 2022 due to the higher wheat price.

Another said his business’s overall costs of production had risen from 160p/kg in December to over 200p/kg now and are likely to go higher. Others put similar, or higher, figures on current production cost.

A producer estimated that, with forecast losses of £50/pig, a 700-sow pig unit will lose £1 million over the next year at current prices and costs.

Others pointed out that producers have not been buying as much feed forward as usual as prices were already at record levels, meaning they are hugely exposed to the higher wheat price, up £80/tonne in a few days, with potentially more to come.

Concerns were expressed that many farmers are reaching their credit insurance limit for feed which will mean that soon feed companies will be unable to supply feed.

There are still many pigs backed up on farms which risks making an already dire situation far worse.

More than £2/kg is needed to allow producers to break even, which is around 70p/kg above the current price they are being paid.

Mr Mutimer said: “We are staring down the barrel of a total collapse of the British pig industry, which is not only a tragedy for the producers, themselves, but will leave UK consumers short of one of their favourite and most versatile meats.

"Retailers will not be able to rely on EU pork, either, as it gets shorter in supply and more expensive.

“They need to act now to ensure that they can continue to secure our high quality British pork - we haven’t got long.”