Canada’s cattle herd shrinks, hog supplies rise

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Published: August 22, 2011

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Canada’s cattle herd shrank as of July 1 to its smallest in 17 years, while the number of hogs rose by mid-year for the first time in five years, Statistics Canada said Monday.

Farmers had nearly 13.9 million head of cattle on their farms, down 0.8 per cent from a year ago, continuing a six-year slide. High costs of feed grains and a robust Canadian dollar have cut into farmers’ profits, although cattle prices are sharply higher than a year ago.

Farmers reported 11.9 million hogs at mid-year, up 0.8 per cent, marking their second straight quarter of growth. Supplies of sows and gilts, however — a measurement of the growth potential of hog supplies — dipped 1.1 per cent to their lowest level in 11 years.

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The USDA and AAFC differ on Canada’s canola ending stocks for 2025/26, while an analyst says both agencies are wrong. Photo: Greg Berg

Large gap in canola ending stocks between AAFC, USDA

There’s a 760,000-tonne difference in the ending stocks for Canada’s 2025/26 canola crop respectively estimated by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and the United States Department of Agriculture. Aside from that, the canola data from AAFC and the USDA remain quite similar.

Live cattle exports of 374,400 head during the first half of 2011 marked a drop of about 40 per cent from a year earlier.

The U.S. country-of-origin meat-labelling law (COOL), which Canada and Mexico are fighting through the World Trade Organization, has curtailed Canadian livestock exports to the United States for several years.

Hog exports eased 3.1 per cent during the second quarter to 1.4 million head.

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