TURKEY – Turkey’s top farming organization has warned of an ongoing decline in red meat production, a key factor in surging prices, and called for urgent measures to prop up production including cash incentives for cattle breeding.

TURKEY – Turkey’s top farming organization has warned of an ongoing decline in red meat production, a key factor in surging prices, and called for urgent measures to prop up production including cash incentives for cattle breeding.

TURKEY – Turkey’s top farming organization has warned of an ongoing decline in red meat production, a key factor in surging prices, and called for urgent measures to prop up production including cash incentives for cattle breeding.

organization has warned of an ongoing decline in red meat production, a key factor in surging prices, and called for urgent measures to prop up production including cash incentives for cattle breeding.

Red meat production regressed to 794,417 tons in the first nine months of the year with an 11.2 per cent year-on-year fall, official data showed on 13 November.

Following the release of the data, the head of the Agriculturalists Association of Turkey (TZOB) said an ongoing decline in cattle production had played a crucial role.

“Turkey’s sheep production and goat production rose by 10.2 per cent and 14 per cent respectively in the first nine months of the year compared to the same period of 2016.

“Even buffalo production saw a 330 per cent year-on-year increase in the mentioned period. However, Turkey’s cattle production has fallen rapidly in 2017, with the third quarter seeing a 29.4 per cent year-on-year decrease,” TZOB head Åžemsi Bayraktar said in a statement.

To address this plunge in cattle production, Mr Bayraktar called for urgent incentives to be offered to farmers in order to slash high red meat prices, rather than focusing mainly on import-based policies.

“Urgent measures are needed to support our farmers. A 1,000 Turkish Lira subsidy must be offered to producers per breeding cattle.

“This sort of incentive will fuel red meat production as well. Unless such measures are taken, Turkey will continue to pay billions of dollars to import beef and feeder or breeding cattle, after it paid $5 billion for such imports in the 2010-2016 period,” he said.

Meanwhile, the Meat and Milk Board (ESK) signed a deal early in November to sell cheaper red meat to two supermarket chains, A101 and BÄ°M, in a bid to ease rising meat prices in Turkey.

With the cabinet decision published on 3 May 2016, a zero per cent custom tax was implemented to government-affiliated bodies of the General Directorate of Agricultural Establishments (TIGEM) and the ESK for imports of breeding and feeder cattle.

 

Qvetech.com

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