BEIJING, Dec. 24 (Xinhua) -- China has earmarked 15.2
billion yuan (2.05 billion U.S. dollars) so far this year to support pig
breeders, in an effort to ensure adequate pork supplies, said Zeng Xiao'an, a
senior official with the Ministry of Finance, on Monday.
The ministry has supported breeders through a range of
policies, including direct subsidies, insuring fertile sows and vaccinating
animals against major epidemic diseases, he said.
The production of pork, a staple meat in China, has
slumped since May as breeders faced rising feed costs. Production has also been
limited by a massive pig cull after an outbreak of blue-ear disease in some
regions.
The government has promised to double the subsidy for
every fertile sow to 100 yuan from July 2008 for a whole year.
The sow insurance, which was launched in August to
cover losses from disease and disaster, would be extended to "as many sows as
possible," according to a State Council executive meeting held by Wen Jiabao
earlier this month. By November, China had insured 21.2million sows, or 44.5
percent of the herd nationwide, according to the China Insurance Regulatory
Commission.
The central government also planned to spend 2.5
billion yuan next year to help breeders build "standardized, large-scale" pig
farms, according to a decision reached at the meeting.
Vaccinations against major epidemic diseases would be
available free of charge and subsidies should be offered to farmers whose pigs
were culled to control diseases, it said.
Agriculture Minister Sun Zhengcai on Sunday urged
local governments to strive for steady supply of pork next year, pushing up pork
production to 53 million tons.