From
back in summer. Only the Indians could come up with a pun like that!
Fowl
weather: Chicken prices soar as heatwave kills over 17 million birds
1
June, 2015
Mumbai:
Chicken prices in India soared to a record high after a heat wave
killed more than 17 million birds in May, as temperatures regularly
above 40 degrees Celsius led to mounting casualties among livestock
as well as humans.
May
and June are typically India's hottest months but this year
temperatures have been above normal in some regions partly due to the
emergence of an El Nino weather pattern, which in 2009 brought the
worst drought in four decades to the country.
Chicken
prices in India have soared. Reuters Chicken prices in India have
soared. Reuters
The
millions of dead birds will be a major blow both for the growing
poultry sector in the world's second-most populous country and for
local corn producers who were hoping rising feed consumption would
soak up their grain supplies.
India
has been struggling to export corn after global prices hit five-year
lows late last year on record U.S. and South American production. And
the outlook has now been further muddied by indications the country's
poultry producers may not consume as much of the grain as previously
expected.
"In
the last two-three weeks poultry feed demand has fallen nearly 30
percent," said K V Krishna Charan, general manager at feed
producer Komaral Feeds and Foods Pvt Ltd.
Prices
of corn and soymeal have dropped nearly 4 percent in May due to the
weak demand driven by higher bird mortality.
Usually
bird mortality rate remains around 2-3 percent during summer, but it
rose to 10 percent last month amid the scorching heat, said Prasanna
Pedgaonkar, deputy general manager at chicken processor Venky's
.
With
more than 17 million broiler chickens dying in May - the highest ever
deaths per month - wholesale chicken prices in western India jumped
to a record 95 rupees ($1.49) per kg, up 35 percent over a month.
A
ban imposed by the western state of Maharashtra on beef also
contributed to the rise in chicken prices, offsetting a drop earlier
in the year when a bird flu outbreak pushed down prices to below
production costs.
Chicken
is set to become more costly as mercury levels continue to rise in
June, industry sources said.
Broiler
chickens cannot survive if the temperature stays above 45 Celsius for
long, said Vasant Kumar, president of the Poultry Breeders Welfare
Association of Maharashtra.
Maximum
temperature in the southern states Andhra Pradesh and Telangana,
which account for a third of India's poultry output, rose above 47
degrees Celsius last week, 3 to 7 degrees above normal, killing more
than 2,100 people.
India
was expecting monsoons to bring some relief, but the arrival of the
June-September rains over the southern coast of Kerala has been
delayed. The rains are now expected to reach by June 4, instead of
May 30, a weather department official said.
"Temperatures
need to go down. Further extension of the heat wave by a week can
kill a few more million birds," said Pedgaonkar from Venky's.
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