CN China’s 26-storey pig skyscraper ready to slaughter 1 million pigs a year - The world’s biggest single-building pig farm has opened in Hubei province, but critics say it will increase the risk of larger animal disease outbreaks


On the southern outskirts of Ezhou, a city in central China’s Hubei province, a giant apartment-style building overlooks the main road. But it is not for office workers or families. At 26 storeys it is by far the biggest single-building pig farm in the world, with a capacity to slaughter 1.2 million pigs a year.

This is China’s answer to its insatiable demand for pork, the most popular animal protein in the country.

The new skyscraper-sized farm began production at the start of October when the company behind the facility – Hubei Zhongxin Kaiwei Modern Farming – admitted its first 3,700 sows into the farm.

Zhongxin Kaiwei is a newcomer to the pig sector – and farming. It started out as a cement investor, with multiple cement factories in provinces such as Hubei and Henan. One of them, Hubei Xinshiji Cement, is next to the new pig farm.

The company has said that it originally planned to invest in ready-to-cook food production, but that it changed its mind after a slump in the cement and construction industries in China. Jin Lin, the general manager of the company, has said that the company saw modern agriculture as a promising sector and an opportunity to use its own construction materials to build the pig farm.

According to statements on the company’s official WeChat account, the pig farm has two buildings. Behind the operational site, an identical-looking building of equal scale is nearing completion. When fully running, they will provide a combined area of 800,000 sq metres of space, with the capacity for 650,000 animals.

The 4bn yuan (£473m) farm has gas, temperature and ventilation-controlled conditions, with animals fed through more than 30,000 automatic feeding spots at the click of a button in a central control room.

The company says waste from the pigs will be treated and used to generate biogas, which can be used for power generation and heating water inside the farm. Workers will be required to go through multiple rounds of disinfection and testing before being given clearance to enter, and won’t be able to leave the site until their next break – reportedly once a week.

“It’s unfathomable,” a farmer in his 50s living in the village across the road from the farm told the Guardian. He said he was worried the farm’s proximity could lead to an odour issue when it is fully operational.

“About 30 years ago when I was raising pigs, we would only have two or three in our back yard pigsty. I’ve heard pigs raised in these farms can be ready for sale in a few months, and back in the day, it would take us about a year to raise one. But I think as technology advances, this will be the trend in the future,” he said.

China has tried to upgrade its pigmeat production – it consumes around half of all the world’s pork – after losing as many as 100 million pigs to the deadly pig disease African swine fever (ASF) between 2018 and 2020.

In a policy released in 2019, China’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs said it would allow the construction of high-rise breeding facilities. An announcement welcomed by investors, including Kingkey Smart Agriculture, which has reportedly said the high-rise production model is more efficient, bio-secure and environmentally friendly.

“Compared with traditional breeding methods, high-rise pig farms are more intelligent, with a high level of automation and biosafety. At the same time, it has the advantage of saving land resources,” said Zhu Zengyong, a professor at the Institute of Animal Science of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, who said their popularity had risen after the ASF outbreak.

In the south-western Sichuan province alone, 64 multistorey farms were planned, or under construction, as of 2020. “Inevitably, the pig farming industry is heading towards a highly automatic and intelligent future, and the standards and threshold for pig farmers will become higher as a result,” added Zhu.

However, other experts said large-scale intensive farms increased the likelihood of ever-bigger disease outbreaks.

“Intensive facilities can reduce interactions between domesticated and wild animals and their diseases, but if a disease does get inside they can break out between animals like wildfire,” said Matthew Hayek, an assistant professor in environmental studies at New York University.

“I have heard multiple reports of ‘biosecurity’, ‘efficiency’ and ‘sustainability’. We hear the same storytelling for US indoor facilities. However, there is very little evidence that these intensive facilities have any of those benefits in reality,” he said.

Dirk Pfeiffer, chair professor at One Health at City University of Hong Kong, agreed, and said: “The higher density of animals, the higher risk of infectious pathogen spread and amplification, as well as potential for mutation.

“The probably even more important question will be whether this type of production is consistent with the need to move towards reduced meat consumption, considering the apparently unstoppable threat of devastating climate change,” he said.
 
One of the reasons I was surprised that everyone else was surprised by Covid likely being from china (whatever the reason may be) is they're notorious for incredibly poor sanitation and nonexistent animal husbandry. That knowledge was clearly not as mainstream as I thought it was, but I do remember there were zoonotic outbreaks reported virtually every year before Covid, that ended up with sometimes dozens of dead chinese and the burying/burning of thousands of livestock. Maybe one day india will join the race to create the most virulent disease via hyper intensive, completely unsanitary animal processing, but I foresee enormous problems with Ling Ling's porktower that everyone will somehow be shocked by.
India is a major manufacturer of generic drugs, and they dump stuff into rivers that leads to drug resistant superbugs:

India is a global drug manufacturing hub but also suffers from the highest levels of drug resistance globally. There are many causes of rising resistance today. The environmental contributions to AMR include the discharge of untreated antibiotic residues from factories and hospitals into local water bodies.

However, there is limited data that is scientifically verified and universally accepted to ascertain the cause-effect relationship specific to antibiotic manufacturing. Hence, the global focus has been on mitigating the human, agricultural and water, sanitation and hygiene contributions to AMR.

There is an urgent need to address the environmental contributions from antibiotic manufacturing to complete the missing part of the One Health approach to tackling AMR successfully.

India is the world’s largest producer of antibiotics, supplying over 40 per cent of the global market. The industry is diverse, with small, medium, and large companies engaged in active pharmaceutical ingredients and formulation manufacturing.

Over the last few years, there has been a growing concern due to the presence of high levels of antibiotic compounds in water resources near pharmaceutical manufacturing clusters due to the discharge of untreated effluents from the factories.

You want zoonotic? They gots it:

60 Minutes traveled to India with Ramanan Laxminarayan, director of the Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy and a senior research scholar at Princeton University. While superbugs can emerge from anywhere, he says developing countries create the "perfect storm" for antibiotic resistance. In addition to selling antibiotics over the counter, the use of antibiotics to promote growth in animals is widespread.

At a poultry farm outside Delhi, Laxminarayan explained, "The chicks are eating constantly. There are antibiotics in that feed, which means that their bacteria are being exposed to the antibiotics on a constant basis, and constantly selecting for resistance." Once a superbug evolves, it can easily spread between animals and humans.

 
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I didn't notice the captivity angle on my first read.
Eh simple captive workers is mundane for China. I'm excited for the innovator that tries making a closed-loop system out of this and the concept of company towns. Sure, people can't eat people, and pigs shouldn't eat other pigs. But people eat pigs all the time and a pig will turn a corpse into taste pork. Lock the whole compound down tight and make the only escape an irradiating tunnel. People inconvenient to the party enter, sterile pork leaves.
 
I check every meat product I buy to double, triple make sure it doesn't come from China and now I guess I'm adding pork to that list.
lol you'll eat GOOD OLD AMERICAN PIG FLESH laced with Ractopamine (banned from animal feed in all civilized countries) instead?
 
I feel like this is going to create as many problems as it solves.

According to the internet, pigs are 6 months old at slaughter, so there would be 500,000 pigs in the thing at any given time. That's 20,000 pigs per floor.

Pig farms in the US produce a metric shitton of waste. Soil science trade journals are full of articles about how much swine effluent can be sprayed on fields before the surrounding ground water goes to shit, there's a ton of surface and ground water pollution associated with pig farms, there are enormous effluent lagoons in parts of the country.

One of the other problems is air circulation. I learned the gnarly fact the other day that slave ships were recognizable from afar because they had special sails along the side to promote air circulation in the slave deck. There were many documented cases of slaves suffocating during the voyage. The hydrogen sulfide or ammonia alone could kill.

Finally, a 26-story tower for humans involves a lot of plumbing challenges. There are towers in San Francisco where the plumbing is all fucked up and once it gets fucked it's hard to un-fuck.

I don't know why the Chinese would build something with the infrastructure problems of a large city just to save ground space.
 
One of the other problems is air circulation. I learned the gnarly fact the other day that slave ships were recognizable from afar because they had special sails along the side to promote air circulation in the slave deck. There were many documented cases of slaves suffocating during the voyage. The hydrogen sulfide or ammonia alone could kill.
I don't know of any method of using sails to provide air circulation, but they did open scuttles, have extra ports, and open galleys where a typical ship would not. Slave ships became easily identifiable by their small size, aforementioned features, and speedy sails. When slavery became illegal in the 1800s, slave ships had to be faster than european military ships. Speed came at the price of quality of life for slave captives with as much as 20 inches of headroom within the "slave shelf". There's a nice book which elaborates upon this.

 
In a country with the landmass of china do you really need some Minecraft skyblock style mob farm? How do you need that much pork in such a concentrated area? How do other countries produce their needed amounts of food without dumbass projects like this? How inefficient is china?
The fact that it is a cement company doing this is a clue. Why build ghost cities when you can build pork towers?
 
That sounds horrifying and incredibly unsanitary.

Why are the ching chongs so fucking filthy?
Unironically speaking, hygiene is not a public priority. While the city-dwelling Chinese people tend to be more educated and more put-together than their rural counterparts, they still keep some disgusting habits. I think it's a general sense of apathy coupled with the fact that cutting corners in terms of hygiene practices keeps things inexpensive.

I have been to several cities in China (Beijing, Shenzhen, Guilin, etc. -- haven't been to Wuhan before the question is asked) and Hong Kong for several weeks on vacation years before Covid. It doesn't really matter where you go in terms of city, rural, or suburban areas, everywhere is generally unkempt and smells of human waste and cigarettes. Especially in the city. The more touristy places are cleaner because China tries to make it appealing to foreign money as possible, but if you stray several blocks off the beaten path in the city, it quickly descends into filthy territory. Open defecation isn't really a thing, but open urination is ok for kids to do. See, the more humans are crammed into a space, the less value the society places as a whole on each person. You have cities covered in so much smog that the last time you see sunlight for a few days is right before your airplane lands. The general climate of China is hot and humid most of the year - perfect for the proliferation of bacteria and other nasty bugs.

That being said, hygiene is pretty much non-existent and not considered important.

You have people whose literal job is to salvage oil from sewers (yes, really) and reuse them for cooking street food because it's so cheap. Health effects? Who cares? We have traditional medicine made up of ground horns and dried-up plants.

Edit: I forgot to mention that they tend to hawk loogies and spit everywhere they go as well as sneeze or cough open-mouthed. "Saving face" when it comes to appearances in front of family or friends doesn't extend to being a walking Petri dish.
 
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