Europe 1 with AFP / Photo credit: LOIC VENANCE / AFP 6:09 p.m., February 20, 2024

Four days before the Agricultural Show, slaughtering companies united in the Culture Meat union warned this Tuesday of the difficulties of the sector in "overcapacity" due to the drop in livestock and facing high costs. According to the union, a slaughterhouse closes every month. 

The slaughtering companies united in the Culture Meat union warned on Tuesday, four days before the Agricultural Show, of the difficulties of the sector in "overcapacity" due to the drop in livestock and facing high costs. “Since September, there has been a slaughterhouse which has closed every month and since the beginning of the year, (...) practically two slaughterhouses which have closed” each month, declared the director of Culture Viande, Paul Rouche, during a press conference.

Two million fewer pigs in 2023

Out of 230 slaughterhouses in France, those which have closed are mainly "small and medium-sized slaughterhouses" stunned by the surge in their production costs (electricity, transport, packaging, etc.), he added. Culture Viande defends the interests of nearly 300 slaughtering and cutting companies and the wholesale trade of butcher's meat (excluding poultry). These companies, including the leader Bigard, employ 36,000 people.

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The closures or restructuring will affect "also the largest slaughterhouses" because "we find ourselves with excess slaughter capacity" due to the drop in French livestock, forcing sites to operate only four days a week, added the president of the organization, Yves Fantou. In seven years, the number of cows has fallen by almost a million head to around seven million. And, in the year 2023 alone, "we lost (...) two million pigs, which is enormous, which represents [the volume processed by] a big, big French slaughterhouse", indicated Yves Fantou, at the head of a Breton company with around sixty employees.

A rise in prices

This drop in the number of animals inflates their prices: +35% since 2021 for large cattle, +50% for pigs. Even better paid, cattle breeders consider prices still too low to cover their production costs and the erosion of the herd continues. Producers are demanding the application of Egalim laws intended to prevent them from selling at a loss.

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So far, recognized Paul Rouche, "Egalim has had no effect on the prices paid to breeders. It is the drop in supply which is at the origin of the increase in animal prices." However, assured Yves Fantou, "the slaughterers have understood that without production, there is no more slaughter. So we must have breeders who are well paid and who must be supported."