Swine Grist - Fall 2022

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Swine Grist

A PERIODIC NEWSLETTER PRODUCED BY GRAND VALLEY FORTIFIERS VOLUME 24, ISSUE 3 | FALL 2022

Dear Friends, Happy belated Thanksgiving and best of the fall harvest to you. With bean harvest pretty much complete and soon well into corn harvest, the impact of very regionalized rains are being realized. Ontario crop yields and bushel weights will be all over the map this harvest as some regions received timely and significant rains, while other areas suffered through drought like conditions. Most people associate mycotoxins with an over abundance of moisture, but mycotoxins can develop through untimely rains as well as heat and drought stress. As always, regardless of your yield and visual crop quality, be sure to test your fall harvest corn for mycotoxins before incorporating into your swine diets – especially sow diets. With new, significant geo-political news at least weekly, impacts on energy supply, energy costs, Fx, freight costs, grain costs and pork prices are seemingly in constant flux. In this issue of the Swine Grist, Brian Gonder and Matt Schoenmaker provide some updates on what we are experiencing in terms of premix ingredient prices and why. With this kind of price inflation and volatility and the constant reporting surrounding climate change and (we believe, incorrectly) the “poor” role livestock agriculture is playing in this, it is easy to fail to recognize the incredible improvements, and increases in productivity, efficiency and production that the pork industry has achieved over the past 100 years. Dr. John Carr has provided a very positive retrospective perspective on these realities as well as a reminder that the growing relative affluence and population size in Asia and Africa will continue to drive the need for the production of significantly more pork each year in the ensuing thirty years. As it seems for various reasons that globally we have moved from the challenge of abundance to the challenge of scarcity, we believe that societal priorities will shift from what we have experienced in the past several decades back to the more basic priorities of life – a key one being the provision and consumption of amino acid rich protein food sources. Thankfully, that is what we are all in the business of producing. Sincerely, Ian Ross, President & CEO, GVF group of companies

IT’S GREAT TO BE IN PIGS!

by: DR. JOHN CARR BVSc PhD DPM DiplECPHM MRCVS

This is a further increase of 2.5 to 3 billion people and about a billion more pigs per year are going to be required to feed these people.

T

he next 25 years are gonna be real exciting! What the global pig industry has done in the last 100 years is impressive: moving from weaning 6 to 8 pigs at weaning with 2 litters per year (14 pigs per year per sow) we have doubled this output per sow. The growth has also doubled from less than 0.5 kg to over 1 kg average daily gain in finishing pigs. The genetics have also moved from the lard hog to the bacon pig. But the vital role of the pig in being the primary meat protein source feeding the human population has not changed. The population in 1920 was about 2 billion, in the 2020’s it is now over 7 billion. In 1920 there was about ¼ billion pigs a year (pigs finished at a year) thus one pig per 8 people. In 2020 there are 1.5 billion pigs a year (given our pigs now live 6 months) thus one pig per 5 people. In the last 100 years the pig industry has increased output by 600%, a most impressive achievement. Currently, there are about 800 million pigs on the planet at the same time. The Canadian industry in the 1920’s was just over 1% and now it is 2% of the global population and many pigs go next door (the States) to finish! The role of the Canadian pig is only set to become more important. The next 25 years are going to be the most difficult time for the human population and the pig farmer is going to be key. We are beginning to control our population growth, but it will still reach 10 billion people in 2050. GRAND VALLEY FORTIFIERS PO Box 726 Cambridge ON N1R 5W6 1-800-567-4400 grandvalley.com

The world’s population changes over time. | Source: www.worldometers.info

The most significant aspect is that this population growth is going to be in parts of the world, which like us, love pork! Typical Asian household preparing dinner African pork market

Ian Ross, President & CEO | David Ross, VP & CMO Martin Clunies, Ph.D. | Tom Reidy, M.Sc. | Adam Totafurno, M.Sc. | Youngji Rho, Ph.D., Monogastric Nutritionists Curtis Ebanks, Layout Editor


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Swine Grist - Fall 2022 by Grand Valley Fortifiers - Issuu