eccieuser9500                                               
              Valued Poster
Quote:                                                 After the administration announced tariffs on a host of Chinese  goods this spring, Beijing responded with levies on U.S. products. Those  included 62 percent tariffs on U.S. pork products, according to the  U.S. Meat Export Federation, an industry group. 
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47956960
Is China losing the battle against an incurable pig virus?
he latest threat comes from African swine fever, a highly contagious  virus with no known cure, and a near zero survival rate for infected  pigs.The good news is that the disease is not harmful to human health. The bad news is that it will probably hurt our wallets. 
The  epicentre of the current crisis is China, the world's biggest producer  and consumer of pork. It alone accounts for more than half of the  world's pig population.
China is struggling to contain the disease, which has spread to every part of the country since August last year.
                                                                After months of claiming the situation was under  control, Beijing is now warning that pork prices in China could rise by  more than 70% in the second half of this year.
This in turn would  have a knock-on impact on China's economy, given that pork prices are an  important contributor to its inflation levels.
Official data released over the past week reinforce the seriousness of the situation. 
China's  National Bureau of Statistics says the country's pig population has  fallen by nearly 40 million to 375.3 million from a year earlier,  because of the swine fever outbreak.
however  some analysts believe that China has been under-reporting the  situation, partly due to local farmers withholding information about  outbreaks.
Looking ahead, the epidemic could decimate around 200 million pigs in China, according to a grim report by Rabobank.
It forecasts that China's pork output will fall by 30% this year, creating implications for global commodity markets.
                                                                "To give you some context, the decline here in China  is now almost as much as the total amount of pork produced in the EU as  a whole," says Rabobank global strategist Justin Sherrard.
He says that China cannot import enough pigs to make up the shortfall.
"We don't believe there's enough animal protein available in the world to make up the difference.
"And so it will be disruptive in those other markets. You will see prices increase in those other markets. 
"At  one level you can say a shortage in one region is good news for another  region. But the magnitude of these changes are such that this is going  to be disruptive in other markets.
"It's not a simple situation where you can say 'oh yes but surely they can just import the difference'."
                                                                                                                                     China is, however, trying to boost pork imports from  another big producer - the US - to make up for its lost domestic  supply. There's just one problem - President Trump's trade war.
US pork exports to China are currently facing tariffs of 62% because of the continuing trade dispute between both countries.
The  usual tariff rate for US pork exports to China is 12%, but an  additional tariff of 50% was added last year due to their spat, making  American pork significantly more expensive for Chinese consumers.
Rabobank's  Mr Sherrard calls their current trade tensions an "unwelcome  complication", but predicts the pork shortage could lead to an  accelerated deal between the two sides.
"In the end, we will see  that there'll be some sort of temporary, or maybe even a permanent,  resolution of the trade dispute to try and get that pork meat and other  animal proteins flowing from the US to China," he says.
"In fact  there have been stories of huge volumes of US pork being shipped to  China already despite those tariffs being in place."
                                                                The situation is already being reflected in the  financial markets - US lean-hog futures on the Chicago Mercantile  Exchange have risen around 60% over the last month.
In addition to  the outbreak in China, there are also now reports of the virus in  Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and other countries in Southeast Asia.
Europe  has also been affected by African swine fever in recent years, which  can be carried by both domesticated pigs and wild boars.
"After  devastating the Baltic nations and eastern Poland in 2014, African swine  fever emerged in the Czech Republic and near Warsaw," says Lynn Morgan,  head of Europe at global research firm Ipsos Business Consulting.
"Pork prices collapsed due to insufficient domestic production and more than a third of pig farms went out of business." 
        
    
She believes that Germany, the largest pork producer and exporter in Europe, has the most to lose from further outbreaks.
"Recent  analysis has suggested we could expect African swine fever to emerge in  the German wild boar population over the next four years," she says.
Pigs infected with the fever usually die within 10 days.
If  a single pig is found to test positive for the virus, the entire herd  has to be slaughtered. Farmers usually suffer substantial financial  losses in the process. 
While African swine fever can live on for  weeks or months in uncooked and frozen pork, it is not harmful to  humans, according to the 
World Organisation for Animal Health.
                                                                But that could change. Russia's chief epidemiologist believes the virus could 
potentially mutate further given the similarity between pig and human physiology.
Meanwhile,  the UK's National Health Service website states that: "Many global  outbreaks of infectious illnesses (pandemics) that have occurred in  recent history are thought to have been caused by viruses previously  only found in animals. After mutating, the viruses became capable of  infecting humans."
Aside from being a meal staple, the pig is historically and culturally one of China's favourite animals. 
It is one of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac and 2019 is the Year of the Pig, according to the Chinese lunar calendar.
But until the African swine fever epidemic is brought under control, there is clearly little to celebrate.
             
 
China is in trouble with this virus decimating hog populations - and the Totalitarian govt is well aware of what hunger in china means.  The people enjoy a liberalized economy - based on CAPITALISM - but have no political freedom. 
China may well be forced to liberalize it's pork purchases from the US  - We need to stick it to them with prices and requirements to repay the years of theft of intellectual property.