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The Rural Voice, 2003-06, Page 16Canadian genetics (above) and modern building technology (below) could help pull Russia's pork industry out of a decade-long decline. (Rural Voice file photos) 1/ t. 1 1 ): P/ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1, 1 1 1, 11 1i111f 11 tl 111111111111 12 THE RURAL VOICE To Russia with advice Some of Ontario's top pork people are helping redesign a Russian pork industry so outdated, the country has to import pork By Keith Roulston Russian pork production, in a freefall since the fall of the Communist system that artificially kept alive an inefficient industry, is getting a boost thanks to some of Ontario's top innovators. Jim Donaldson of Donaldson International Livestock Ltd. in Tavistock and Fred Groenestege of Fred Groenestege Construction at Sebringville have been working with a Russian company to take top -line Canadian genetics to Russia and house the pigs in new facilities of the kind Canadians have developed in modern three -site systems. In 1992, Russia was producing 31.5 million pigs but that number plummeted to 16.7 million in 1998 before recovering to 17.4 million in 2000, Donaldson explained when he spoke at the Centralia Swine Research Update earlier this year. Despite having a large land base and potential to grow large amounts of quality feed, Russia is currently importing 600,000 tonnes of pork a year, Donaldson said. "The country is in dire need of new investments from the outside and modernization and legislative changes are the key to economic revival." Most of the hog hams in Russia are huge state farms,