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The Rural Voice, 2000-03, Page 22THE SWINE INDUSTRY IN Industry observers look at the trends in consumer preference, marketing, environment and biotechnology that will shape the industry in five years' time By Keith Roulston The rapid change in the pork industry in the past decade has left most producers with their heads spinning, trying to grasp the new realities. How then do producers look ahead and see where they should be in five years time? A group of speakers focussed on that topic at the Centralia Swine Research Update in Kirkton, February 2. The speakers looked at' everything from market forces to the environment to the future of biotechnology in outlining where the current trends seem to be in the industry. 20 THE RURAL VOICE Having just returned from a European trip, Ken McEwan, an economist from Ridgetown College was able to bring a different perspective to the discussion of where the market for pork is heading by 2005. Pork makes up 48 per cent of all meat eaten in the world, McEwan said. Beef makes up 27 per cent of world meat consumption but has been losing ground. Chicken and turkey make up 22 and three per cent respectively but they've been gaining a greater share of the market. By world consumption rates, Canadians are far behind countries like Germany in the amount of pork they eat. That holds potential for Canadian pork producers to gain more consumption right at home, McEwan said. Eastern Europeans are big consumers of pork and as the economy recovers from the effects of 50 years of communism, there's a potential for greater consumption there. It's a potential Smithfield Foods Inc., which already produces 12 million hogs in the U.S., is already banking on with new European investment, McEwan said. Elsewhere in Europe, pork production is moving to Spain, now part of the common market, from the Netherlands, which is expected to reduce pork production by 25 per cent because of environmental concerns, and concentrate more on the greenhouse industry. In Europe, the number one consumer concern is food safety, with price a secondary factor. In Canada, where consumers have taken food safety for granted, price drives the market. That kind of consumer confidence is a thing of the past in Britain where, after scandals like mad cow disease, consumers no longer trust their government, farmers or scientists to protect them. They do, McEwan says, trust the retailers who ensure that confidence by tracing food