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Finally, pig breeding feed and pig finishing feed both dropped below their respective returns from 2019, with the former’s production dropping by 400 tonnes or 14.3 per cent to 2,400 tonnes and the latter’s dropping by 500 tonnes or 6.5 per cent to 7,200 tonnes. Total poultry feed had also fallen to its lowest August output since
2016. The 62,100 tonnes of production was a significant 5,800 tonnes or 8.5 per cent below the levels amassed in 2019. The current total was enough to surpass the decade long average for the month by a minor 300 tonnes or 0.5 per cent. Chick rearing feed was the sole sector whose total rose above that
of a year earlier and even then only by 100 tonnes or 5.6 per cent to 1,900 tonnes. In contrast, broiler feed, at 34,100 tonnes, dropped 1,300 tonnes or 3.7 per cent below 2019’s output and the two remaining poultry feed subsectors also dropped dramatically from year previous levels. Layer and breeder feed did so by 3,500 tonnes or 13.9 per cent, down to 21,600 tonnes whilst turkey and other poultry feed did so by 1,000 tonnes or 18.2 per cent, down to 4,500 tonnes. At 2,700 tonnes, total sheep feed for August 2020 bettered its
production from a year previous by 200 tonnes or 8.0 per cent. This output was nonetheless significantly lower than the record high returns from 2018 and as a result, was 300 tonnes or 10.5 per cent below than the decade long average for August. Regardless of the overall rise in production growing and finishing
sheep compounds was the only sector whose output increased from year earlier levels with production, at 1,800 tonnes, 400 tonnes or 28.6 per cent greater than in 2019. Coarse mixes or blends for sheep matched year earlier levels of 600 tonnes whereas, breeding sheep compounds fell markedly by 300 tonnes or 60.0 per cent to 200 tonnes, the lowest output for the subsector since 2009. Total other feed output for the month under review of 5,700 tonnes
was a marked 700 tonnes or 10.9 per cent below the unprecedented levels recorded a year earlier. Nevertheless, the current total was a significant 1,200 tonnes or 23.5 per cent above the 10 year average for August. No subsectors of other feed were able to better their year earlier
levels. Flaked maize and maize meal production dropped 400 tonnes or 12.5 per cent to 2,800 tonnes, its lowest output since 2015. Other other feed also fell to 2,800 tonnes of production, a drop of 300 tonnes or 9.7 per cent, however, this output was the second highest on record. Finally, as it has done for the past 5 years, August production of flaked barley and barley meal remained at 200 tonnes. Diverging from the pattern that we have seen emerge throughout the
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first half of the calendar year, it was the ruminant sectors that surpassed year earlier levels whilst all the non-ruminant sectors fell below them. One thing that remained consistent was that both the pig and poultry sectors continued to better their long term averages whereas sheep feed once again struggled to attain the levels produced earlier in the decade. However, a significant difference was the upturn in cattle feed production, which for the third month in succession, bettered both year earlier returns and its long term average having failed to do so for the first five months of 2020.
PAGE 10 NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2020 FEED COMPOUNDER
Comment section is sponsored by Compound Feed Engineering Ltd
www.cfegroup.com
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