Disaster Why Did One-Quarter of the World’s Pigs Die in a Year? - Swine fever devastated China’s stock because with unsound governance, even sound regulations have perverse effects


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A wholesale pork market in Beijing in November. The pig population of China fell by 40 percent in 2018–9 after an epidemic of African swine fever.Credit...

On a recent visit to my hometown by the Yangtze River in eastern China, relatives welcomed me, as ever, with a feast: steamed perch and hairy crab, deep-fried river shrimp — and braised pork. My 84-year-old father made sure to serve pork, even though it was now twice as expensive as the year before. This time, he didn’t get the meat from my brother, who until this fall had been the village’s largest pork producer: All 150 pigs on my brother’s farm had either died or been culled because of African swine fever.

The disease was first reported in Shenyang, Liaoning Province, in early August 2018. By the end of August 2019, the entire pig population of China had dropped by about 40 percent. China accounted for more than half of the global pig population in 2018, and the epidemic there alone has killed nearly one-quarter of all the world’s pigs.

By late September, the disease had cost economic losses of one trillion yuan (about $141 billion), according to Li Defa, dean of the College of Animal Science and Technology at China Agricultural University in Beijing. Qiu Huaji, a leading Chinese expert on porcine infectious diseases, has said that African swine fever has been no less devastating “than a war” — in terms of “its effects on the national interest and people’s livelihoods and its political, economic and social impact.”

“We lost hundreds of thousands of yuan,” my sister-in-law bemoaned, several tens of thousands of dollars. “Haven’t you been compensated by the government for the dead pigs?” I asked. “Only 100 yuan per head,” less than $15, she said, “That didn’t help.”

She wasn’t being entirely forthright. The government said that it would hand out 1,200 yuan (about $170) per animal culled, but her calculation was based on the total number of pigs she and my brother lost to swine fever. For a time, the two of them tried to furtively bury the dead pigs, hoping they might be able to quickly sell off the ones that were still alive, sick or not.

My brother’s and his wife’s losses, as well as their attempts to prevent them, are emblematic of what the epidemic has brought out across China. A crisis that might have been manageable quickly became a small catastrophe because of how the Chinese state operates.

Much like severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, exposed the shortcomings of China’s public health system when it became an epidemic in 2002–3, swine fever today exposes the weaknesses of the country’s animal-disease prevention and control. But it also reveals something much more fundamental: notably, the perverse effects that even sound regulations can have when they are deployed within a system of governance as unsound as China’s.

According to Yu Kangzhen, a deputy minister of agriculture, the localities that struggled to control the spread of African swine fever were also those that lacked staff, funding or other resources in animal-epidemic prevention. Yet that alone cannot explain the breadth of the epidemic or the speed with which it swept across China.

Back in 2007, Russia was also hit by an outbreak of swine fever, first in the southern Caucasus region. And yet though it, too — like China today — had in place only a flawed system for monitoring and reporting animal diseases, African swine fever took about a decade to reach eastern Siberia, some 3,500 miles away from the outbreak’s source. In China, the disease spread throughout most of the country in just over six months.

As bizarre as this may sound, one major reason the disease disseminated as rapidly as it did is because of the Chinese government’s measures to combat pollution.

In 2015, in order to prevent water from being contaminated by animal feces and other waste, the authorities began to heavily regulate — and in some places, ban — livestock breeding in certain water-rich areas in the south. Yet instead of giving industrial pig farmers enough time to upgrade their facilities in compliance with new waste-disposal standards, local governments quickly dismantled pig farms, leading to a major cutback in production in the south.

But pork is China’s favorite meat, and so, fearful of a shortage, in April 2016 the central government mapped out a strategy called “nanzhu beiyang”: “raising pigs in the North for consumption in the South.” Much of the production became concentrated in northern China, and the livestock was then transported long-distance to the south.

Of the 689 million pigs that China produced for slaughter in 2017, 102 million were taken across provinces, according to the agriculture ministry — a practice that posed a major biosecurity risk as soon as the first outbreak of swine fever was identified in Liaoning, in the northeast. (The disease is extremely contagious, and though it doesn’t harm humans, they can spread it.) In fact, some 45 percent of the 87 outbreaks reported by mid-December 2018 involved long-distance transport. Call this problem No. 1.

At that point, the spread of the disease could still have been prevented with accurate and timely reporting. This, presumably, is the reason that China’s Law on Animal Epidemic Prevention prohibits “cover-up, misreporting, late reporting and underreporting” of any animal diseases. Other government regulations stipulate that once an infected pig is identified on a farm, the farm’s entire stock must be culled.

Enter problem No. 2: The central fiscal authorities were called on to cover only part of the compensation to farmers, leaving local governments to shoulder the rest. But by the end of June 2019, China’s local authorities had amassed a total debt of at least 21 trillion yuan (more than $3 trillion), according to the Ministry of Finance — about 23 percent of China’s gross domestic product in 2018. And so even as the authorities in Beijing instructed local governments “to resolutely defend and prevent further spread and dissemination of the disease,” those local governments — given the financial burden they would have to bear to cover any culling of stock — had an incentive to not report the disease.

In Shandong Province, even though there were suspected outbreaks immediately after August 2018 and pig inventories soon dropped significantly, only one outbreak at one farm (involving 17 sick animals) had been reported by February 2019. While some farmers were saying that swine fever was spreading like fire in Zhaoqing, Guangdong Province, the local authorities did not officially disclose the problem. And when they did respond to farmers’ requests for compensation, the authorities provided amounts that were often much lower than what the central government had stipulated.

As a result, pig farmers themselves had strong disincentives to report suspected cases on their farms. They might quietly dump or randomly bury dead pigs, bypassing official safety measures. There was also panic selling of pigs, with farmers desperately trying to offload their hogs, sick or healthy, at fire-sale prices.

Pig speculators (“chao zhu tuan”) — yes, there is a specific term for them — traveled to various households and villages to collect these pigs and ship them to other localities, enabling the disease to cross administrative borders and disseminate. In northern and central China, some speculators even deliberately tried to spread the disease by using drones to drop contaminated pork products into farms. After causing an outbreak, or at least sparking fears about one, speculators could buy pigs for cheap — then stockpile the animals for a time to create shortages locally and sell them only after the prices had gone back up.

Under such circumstances — problem No. 3 — even the rules and regulations designed to ensure safety only fueled the spread of swine fever. For example, the requirement that slaughtering occur only at appointed abattoirs, a measure that was supposed to prevent sick pigs from being slaughtered illicitly (and, possibly, unsafely) turned those slaughterhouses into transmission hubs: Contaminated hogs came into contact with more animals and more people as they were brought to the facilities.

The government claims that the situation is now “under effective control.” And in light of a serious shortage of pork, it has begun to lure some farmers back into production. Outside my brother’s village, a large pig farm that was slated for demolition has been resurrected after the government showered it with vast amounts of subsidies and low-interest loans.

People who run small farms, like my brother, have not been so lucky. He converted his pig farm to house chicken coops, all at his own expense, and now raises about 400 chickens. It is a far less lucrative business than hog raising, yet no less risky. “What are you going to do if there’s a bird-flu outbreak next year?” I asked him. He didn’t answer and cracked a helpless, fatalistic smile.

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Wow that's a lot of dead pigs.
 
>aggressively oppress and abuse muslim population
>
force them to eat pork to break their faith
>this will show those superstitious barbarians the power of the chinese state
>suddenly all the pigs start dying
>depend on pigs for economy and to stop peasants rising up against government
>fuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuck.rice

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- HAPPY NEW YEAR CHINKFIDELS! -
 
A huge disruption of food production doesn't bode well for the Chinese. They're almost certainly covering up the real damage. It's likely more damaging than they'll ever admit.

I'll enlighten you: China is actively buying beef from Brazil, to the point there was a brief outflaring of inflation here in our prime cuts. So whatever it is they're doing, they're trying to flood their markets with the export volume of other countries, and this couldn't have come at a better time for Brazil.
 
Between this and China literally stealing donkeys from all over the world (mostly Africa) for their meat and especially hide (to make medicine of course), it seems like now's a great time to start farming meat animals if you want to get rich. Chinese farms have so much garbage like this going on that it's probably like every other industry where Chinese prefer foreign imports. Actually that's in part why the social credit system exists there, because the government wanted to find a way for their citizens to tell who was "trustworthy".
 
I miss 15 seconds ago when I didnt know the specifics of gutter oil, what the fuck is wrong with the chinks?
I and others have discussed this at length. It boils down to
a) the vast majority of the population, including party officials and police and military, being literally on the level of feudal age peasants, especially in terms of basic-ass "how to not poison yourself and those around you" knowledge, which has run headfirst into 21st century urbanisation

b) the absolutely insane levels of corruption and nepotism endemic in every level of the system which results in officials being both utterly ignorant and inept at their jobs, but also completely uninterested in doing their damn jobs beyond the bare minimum to not be fired. This includes regulatory bodies and other important positions needed to ensure public health nightmares like this dont happen who will be more than happy to award perfect ratings in exchange for a stack of yuen and will fudge as many numbers needed to make sure nobody notices a thing.

c) the past century of both systemic destruction of culture and heritage and any sense of ethics not derived from the party will, and the nightmarish numbers of people who died during the famines and purges has resulted in a society utterly divorced from any moral structure beyond basic "protect myself and my loved ones, everyone else can go to hell" which is why businessmen have zero qualms pulling this shit on their neighbours

d) the state sponsored "FACK YEW OUTSIDE WORLD! WE THE SMARTEST AND BESTEST AND AWESOMEST!" dogma which makes average citizens a hell of a lot less willing to change dangerous behaviour in response to criticism from the outside world

All of the above can also be used to explain shit like the dumbass "traditional medicine" obsession which is currently wiping out endangered species for magic potions
 
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Rights-denying communist dictatorship, and its heavy-handed incompetence results in the death of livestock forcing the people to eat bugs to survive? I take back what I've said about Greta Thunberg not criticizing China, whatever else she is she's not a hypocrite because obviously China's way of doing things is a wet dream to her.
 
The more I read about their society, the more I am convinced that the Chinese have no soul.
This is what happens when a society that was built on the principle of being the literal centre of the universe and the grand suzerain of all humanity by the mandate of heaven, with all barbarian outside nations being tributary vassels who were legally and morally property of the chinese, and spent a thousand years fanatically believing this concept as the foundation of their worldview to the point of smugly rejecting any outside technology or innovation as "worthless" solely because it was foreign, spends a solid century getting the glorious shit kicked out of it, first by a bunch of boisterous-boaty-bois and their dopey barrels of wonder, and then pretty much the whole of europe and eventually even their retard midget island neighbours to the east.

Combine this with decades of autistic warlords ripping apart the country and the return of the aformentioned retard midget island neighbours having themselves a forcey-fun-time tour of the east coast, and you can imagine that the whole superiority complex thing they had going was pretty solidly broken, which might have been why when the new communist overlords took power one of the first things they decided was "BURN EVERYTHING! START FUCKING OVER! GODDAMN IT ALL OUR HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY AND CULTURE FUCKING SUCKED!"

Sadly it took about 0 seconds for them to take this idea way too literally, and combined with casually wiping out tens of millions of people in various artifical and punitive famines and the ascended super-stalin tier purges and repressions ordered by an increasingly senile leadership, this effectively broke whatever was left of the old moral/ethical philosophies and principles of the past, which despite their problems still helped to ensure society didnt regress to niggest africa levels of "fuck everyone who isnt my immidiate family, and even they are disposable" among the people trying to survive without starving or being shot.

Eventually the totally-still-communist-but-we-kinda-like-shekels party tried to backtrack and resurrect the burnt carcass of chinese culture, which is why these days we see the mix of totalitarian-survivalism and that old douchebag ultranationalism become the norm in chinkland.

To cut a long story short, they had serious societal and political flaws for a longass time, but when given the chance to reform and progress they wound up flubbing it until the communists came along and burnt the entire social/political system down...only to eventually replace it with the same shit but worse
 
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I miss 15 seconds ago when I didnt know the specifics of gutter oil, what the fuck is wrong with the chinks?
You should miss it, gutter oil was a thing in 2006. It's far cheaper to use actual food oil nowadays, that's not even remotely a problem.
I would usually get really sick from eating street food back in the days, sometimes cockroaches are found inside the food. That's (luckily!) no longer the case.

People love to talk about bringing democracy or whatever, I disagree. China houses 1.4 billion people, some of which are soulless fucks deprived of morality, such vile scum are best ruled with an iron fist. If 1% are scum, then that's many millions in China. Want to put out gutter oil or produce fake milk powder? Take a bullet, one less from 1.4 billion isn't even statistically significant.

Peoples get the government they fucking deserve.

Speaking of pigs dying, there's lots of memes floating on Chinanet about pork being a luxury. I guess Muslims are happy, less swine, less trigger happy.

This is what happens when a society that was built on the principle of being the literal centre of the universe and the grand suzerain of all humanity by the mandate of heaven, with all barbarian outside nations being tributary vassels who were legally and morally property of the chinese, and spent a thousand years fanatically believing this concept as the foundation of their worldview to the point of smugly rejecting any outside technology or innovation as "worthless" solely because it was foreign, spends a solid century getting the glorious shit kicked out of it, first by a bunch of boisterous-boaty-bois and their dopey barrels of wonder, and then pretty much the whole of europe and eventually even their exceptional individual midget island neighbours to the east.
This autistic pile applies to most religions and nations historically. When travel was hard and scarce, when frogs lived under a well, they automatically think they are at the epicentre of everything.

Also it's communism, this has nothing to do with the archaic autism of the continent. The same archaic shit that made people think drinking mercury actually leads to Eternal life. This is what happens when an ideology as destructive as communism take its roots. People throw morality, human decency, culture, and kindness out of the window. Communism is cancer. As "alright" as I would personally think the current party is doing, the destructive ideology still exists, especially among human trash that are either incapable or too lazy to participate in capitalism, a system that brings shelter and food. Most are lazy fucks that should just be left to rot. A capable being with the ability to work but denies to do so is more useless than cow shit.
 
You should miss it, gutter oil was a thing in 2006. It's far cheaper to use actual food oil nowadays, that's not even remotely a problem.
I would usually get really sick from eating street food back in the days, sometimes cockroaches are found inside the food. That's (luckily!) no longer the case.

On the bright side, simply knowing such a thing exists on this planet was a driving force in me resolving to cook as much shit as possible from scratch and to never willingly walk in to a restaurant again

This autistic pile applies to most religions and nations historically. When travel was hard and scarce, when frogs lived under a well, they automatically think they are at the epicentre of everything.

Thing is with china though, is that thanks to its geography/population and all the resources they had/farming they could do, they had extremely long lasting hegemonies over east asia, only occasionally broken by northern horse nomads, who themselves usually wound up incorporating themselves in to said hegemonies. This near total lack of anything resembling a local rival made china's brand of nationalist posturing a hell of a lot more deep rooted since they essentially were the centre of the universe in east asia before the age of imperialism and there was never really any contrary evidence until the gwielo figured out the art of "put wheels on a cannon and put that bitch on a ship".

European and middle eastern and even native american and african nations by contrast were kicking the shit out of eachother every decade for dumb reasons since the dawn of history, and so there was never really any time for a "we are totally the divinely most foremost perfect nation ever" mindset to take deep root given how easy it would be for people to just say "ok then why the fuck did the spanish/turks/welsh just kick our asses last week then?"

And hell, in european nations that did a regional/global hegemony like Rome or Britain, they eventually wound up drinking double shots of "yup we are totally the biggest fucking cheese on the table" until their empires came crashing down, so imagine if Britain or Rome had a couple more centuries of stability/peace to act super fucking smug about things and slap their dicks on everyones faces, until the fucking martians came down and heat-rayed their shit apart in order to sell moon-kush to everyone.
 
>aggressively oppress and abuse muslim population
>
force them to eat pork to break their faith
>this will show those superstitious barbarians the power of the chinese state
>suddenly all the pigs start dying
>depend on pigs for economy and to stop peasants rising up against government
>fuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuckfuck.rice


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- HAPPY NEW YEAR CHINKFIDELS! -
Alhamdullilah, truly Allah's wrath comes about swifter than gutter oil induced diarrhea.
 
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