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THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES IFAD Jimmy W. Smith, Livestock Team Leader The World Bank
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2 THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES 1. EXPANDING DEMAND AND SUPPLY, AND TRADE 6. QUALITY, SAFETY AND SOCIAL STANDARDS 5. LIVESTOCK AND THE ENVIRONMENT 4. LIVESTOCK DISEASE 3. FOOD-FEED-ENERGY COMPETITION 2. DRIVERS OF THE TRENDS
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3 1. Expanding Demand and Supply, and Trade THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
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4 WORLD MEAT CONSUMPTION (in million tons) Source: FAPRI
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5 The Livestock Revolution: Growth in all species and commodities Projected production growth of various livestock products to 2020 Livestock to 2020: The Revolution continues, Delgado et al (2003)
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6 The Livestock Revolution: Growth mainly in industrial systems Livestock to 2020: The Next Food Revolution, a joint IFPRI, FAO, ILRI study. Growth Rates (%/Y) of Meat Production in Different Production Systems in Developing Countries -5% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% AsiaSSAWANACSA grazing systems mixed systems industrial systems
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7 GLOBAL IMPORT DEMAND FOR MEAT FORECAST HIGHER IN 2009
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8 PORK IMPORTSPOULTRY IMPORTS Growth in Pork Trade: 1990 - 2017
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9 THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES 2. DRIVERS OF THE TRENDS Population Growth Income Urbanization
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10 Population Growth in Developing and Industrialized Countries: 1750 - 2050
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11 A strong increase in demand for meat and milk as income grows 0 1 2 3 4 5 45678911 Log per capita GNP Log per capita consumption of meat Livestock to 2020: The Next Food Revolution, a joint IFPRI, FAO, ILRI study. 10 China India Trend The Livestock Revolution:
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12 Per Capita Meat Consumption, 2000-2050 Source: IFPRI IMPACT projections, September 2007 Relatively low but increasing consumption in developing countries means that overall demand will continue to grow
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13 THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES 3. FOOD – FEED – ENERGY COMPETITION
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14 Balancing Needs for Food, Feed, and Fuel http://www.ers.usda.gov/Publications/WRS0801/WRS0801.pdf TOTAL WORLD GRAIN AND OILSEEDS Production, Yield, Area Harvested and Per Capita Production
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15 ETHANOL PRODUCTIONBIODIESEL PRODUCTION Mostly from grain feedstocks – except for Brazil Source: USDA Agricultural Projections to 2017 Millions of gallons
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16 Real world cereal prices projected to rise 30-40 percent beyond current high levels Cereals Source: IFPRI
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17 FAO MEAT PRICES (1998 – 200 = 100)
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18 Real world meat prices projected to rise 20-30 percent beyond current high levels Meat Source: IFPRI
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19 4. LIVESTOCK DISEASES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
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20 Avian Flu, EU $500m Economic Impact of Selected Diseases 1996199719981999200020012002 2003 $50bn $40bn $30bn $20bn $10bn Source: Bio-Era. Courtesy of Dr. Will Hueston, Center for Animal Health and Food Safety, UM Estimated Cost BSE, UK $10-13bn Foot & Mouth Taiwan, $5-8bn 1992 19931994 1995 Foot & Mouth UK $30bn Avian Flu, Asia US, Canada $10bn 2004 BSE, US $3.5bn BSE, Canada $1.5bn Lyme disease US, $2.5bn SARS China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Canada,… $50bn+ Nipah, Malaysia $350-400m Swine Flu, Netherlands $2.3bn BSE, Japan 1.5bn
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21 EMERGING AND RE-EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES 1996 - 2003
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22 Source: OIE ZOONOTIC POTENTIAL OF ANIMAL PATHOGENS 60% of human pathogens are zoonotic 80% of animal pathogens are multi-host 75% of emerging diseases are zoonotic 80% of agents with potential for bioterrorist use are zoonotic pathogens Nearly all new human diseases originate from animal reservoirs
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23 “Systems and Species Mix” Infrastructure IntensificaitonSpecies mix
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24 Poultry Swine Urban and peri-Urban Concentration Source: FAO/LEAD
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25 5. LIVESTOCK AND THE ENVIRONMENT THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
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26 Livestock’s contribution to greenhouse gas emissions NH 3 (Ammonia) 64% of total anthropogenic NH 3 emissions CO 2 (Carbon dioxide) About 2.7 billion tonnes CO 2 9% of total anthropogenic CO 2 emissions CH 4 (Methane) About 2.2 billion tonnes CO2 equivalent 37% of total anthropogenic CH4 emissions N 2 O (Nitrous oxide) About 2.2 billion tonnes CO2 equivalent 65% of total anthropogenic N2O emissions
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27 5. THE ENVIRONMENT ON LIVESTOCK THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
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28 THE ENVIRONMENT ON LIVESTOCK Changing cropping patterns on feed resources (residues & range lands) Availability and access to water resources Demographices of vectors and pathogens Stress on production and productivity
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29 THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY: GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES 6. Quality, Safety and Consumer Standards
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30 Cost of meeting changing regulatory and private standards Consumer standards Quality, Safety and Consumer Standards Environmental Animal welfare Fair trade
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31 ACTIVITIES OF THE WORLD BANK Investments in Animal-Human Health Pursuing the OWOH Paradigm Investments in Livestock-Environment Investments in Community Driven Dev. –Building a Global Alliance for Livestock –Elevating the profile Coordination –Building national capacity –Learning & Sharing –Research
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The World Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, DC 20433 USA Tel: (202) 458-7373 jsmith5@worldbank.org GLOBAL CHALLENGES CONFRONTING THE LIVESTOCK INDUSTRY
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