Nov.
30, 2009
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information contact:
Steve Suther,
Certified Angus Beef LLC Industry Information Director at 785-889-4162 or ssuther@certifiedangusbeef.com
Photos available at: http://www.dropbox.com/gallery/1415343/1/FQF?h=af0b0c
http://www.dropbox.com/gallery/1415343/1/FQF%20for%20media?h=ae0bcc
Exports
key to beef demand
Feeders focus on the high-quality
beef that leads to a brighter future.
Opportunities
hide within every challenge, but beef producers can find them through analysis
and planning. That was part of the take-home message at the Feeding Quality
Forums, Nov. 10 in South Sioux City, Neb., and Nov. 12 in Garden City, Kan.
“While
domestic demand struggles, tremendous economic growth in Asia points to market
potential for high-quality U.S. beef,” said Dan Basse,
president of the Chicago-based AgResource Company,
who reprised his 2007 role as lead speaker.
The
fourth annual sessions were sponsored by Pfizer Animal Health, Certified Angus
Beef LLC (CAB), Feedlot magazine and
Land O’ Lakes Purina Feed LLC. More than 150 cattle feeders and allied
professionals attended.
Beef
exports represent just 7% of production, compared to pork and poultry each
around 19%, Basse told them. “If U.S. beef could get
that export share up to 14%, it could add $9 to $13 per hundredweight (cwt.) to
cattle prices.”
He
suggested devoting some beef checkoff funds to
building global demand. “You will need to broaden your base to generate more
income and finance feed purchases in the volatile grain markets,” Basse said. In the short term, demand from a recovering
ethanol industry will help support an upward trend in corn prices, he added.
Mark McCully, CAB assistant vice president for supply, pointed
out reasons for the recent increase in beef quality grades and highlighted the
greater demand for Certified Angus Beef
® brand product that makes it a more rewarding and stable target than simply
USDA Choice.
One measure of that demand can be seen in CAB
international sales. At 10% of the company’s 663 million pounds (lb.) in 2009,
the ratio outpaces exports of all U.S. beef.
McCully agreed that global markets hold
a key to the future and noted there are few obstacles to greater supply.
“We keep
finding more areas where the high-quality beef target coincides with making a
profit,” he said. “Producers just have to understand their own cost-value
relationships that govern the purchase of feeder calves, use of technology and
marketing strategies.”
Genomics,
or DNA marker-assisted selection of cattle, holds greater promise to adding
more quality and profit potential, according to Mark Allan and Kent Andersen of
Pfizer Animal Genetics.
The
charted markers for various traits have increased from just seven in 2004 to
54,000 today. That lets seedstock producers make
decisions earlier to focus on promising lines, and plans for “marker-assisted
management” will open this world to commercial cow-calf, stocker and feedlot
operators, Allan and Andersen said.
Making
the most of genetic potential requires focused nutrition, said Ron Scott,
director of beef research for Purina Mills. He reviewed data on health and
weather factors relating to performance and grade before settling into a
discussion of feeding strategies.
The ideal
balance of grains, vitamins and minerals optimizes beef quality and producer
profitability. Scott presented details on industry research into distillers’
byproducts and the most effective feeding levels, generally from 12% to 25%.
However, finishing diets mainly just fill the
marbling cells determined much earlier in life. Recent research has concluded
that nutritional marbling starts with fetal programming, especially in the
third trimester, Scott said.
“It’s
based on the concept of epigenics, that the
environment can cause genes to behave differently,” he explained. “Studies of
Holocaust survivors and their offspring prove such changes are permanent and
can be passed on to future generations.”
Beef cows
are “the most nutritionally challenged” of livestock, seemingly by design. “We
plan for them to lose weight during the winter,” Scott noted, countering, “What
if we cared for the cow herd like we do pregnant women?”
In a
closing presentation Alex Avery, director of research for the Hudson Institute,
suggested “the tide is about to turn” in both the real and figurative “Food
Wars.”
Fear of
hunger has fueled war for centuries, but Avery focused on the war of ideas
about how food should be produced, considering that demand for it will more
than double in the next 40 years. It could triple if living standards keep
trending higher.
All that
added demand won’t come just from the growth in population, which should peak
at 8.25 billion in 2050, but mainly from growth in disposable income in Asia,
he said.
Echoing
comments from Basse, Avery said the beef industry
should not look to U.S. demand for its future base, because domestic demand for
meat has stagnated to the point of “social debates that elevate myth over
science.”
Among the
myths he works to dispel are global warming, organic utopia and the supposed
unsustainable nature of large-scale farming.
“Corn-fed
beef and dairy are the most planet-friendly products we can have,” Avery said.
“Unfortunately, some research is ignored by mainstream media and even
government organizations. Pandering to perceptions justifies their budgets.”
Author of
“The Truth About Organic Foods,” Avery challenged
producers to engage the media by adding “planet-friendly” claims to all
packaged fresh beef. “That will force them to face facts, even though it’s a
debate they don’t want to have,” he said.
The event
was covered by BeefCast, and audio versions of the
presentations are available at http://www.beefcast.com/2009-certified-angus-beef-feeding-quality-forum. E-mail info@certifiedangusbeef.com for print or other details.
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