this will ripple out off the farm and impact the entire agribusiness sector.
ray price, president and ceo of sunterra group, said market prices have improved the past couple of weeks for pigs, but “it has been a tough 12, 14, 16 months.”
sunterra has been in operation for 50 years near acme, less than an hour north of calgary, and has expanded to include a processing facility near trochu, additional farms in south dakota and iowa, a cropping division and greenhouse, and eight retail outlets in calgary and edmonton.
they are also the main processor for hartland among others. much of what flows through their facilities heads to japan. but their processing has dropped 60 per cent this year over last due to issues with the japanese economy.
this goes to the bigger picture of the struggles of the meat industry in canada.
“we’ve relied on agriculture exports a lot from a canadian gdp economy, especially in western canada,” he said. “and every pound that is not sold or every kilo that’s not sold to the export market is less gdp in the ag industry and less value added.”
ray price, president and ceo of sunterra group, said pork producer are struggling amongst global pressures and inflation to continue in operation.
handout/alberta pork
‘the hog industry will bounce back’: expert
sylvain charlebois, senior director of the agri-food analytics lab at dalhousie university in halifax, said a downsizing of the industry in canada is necessary at this time due to export demand.