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Live Bird Markets Are Coming Back in China by Popular Demand

Live animal markets are suspected of being the source of many diseases, but the locals like their fowl freshly killed.

Live Bird Markets Are Coming Back in China by Popular Demand
A live chicken is weighed at the Kowloon City Market in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Jerome Favre/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- China is reopening some live bird markets in the south of the country because that’s the way the locals like their fowl -- freshly killed.

“We only buy chicken slaughtered in the markets to ensure that the meat is fresh, and it’s more delicious than the chilled variety sold in supermarkets,” said Rosie Luo, a student from Foshan city, Guangdong province.

While live animal markets are suspected of being the source of the novel coronavirus and some other diseases, the authorities had no choice but to let them reopen because some people won’t buy their meat anywhere else. And that’s important in a year when people need a cheap alternative to pork, which is in short supply because of virus lockdowns and African swine fever.

Poultry consumption in its various forms is rebounding as the country recovers from the coronavirus outbreak. That’s partly down to a plunge in pork output, which fell almost 30% in the first quarter from a year earlier, as swine fever cut herds and the lockdowns disrupted transport and labor.

Live Bird Markets Are Coming Back in China by Popular Demand

Worsening pork shortages should push up demand for chicken as sales of fast food, such as burgers, delivered to people’s homes and of chilled meat in supermarkets are seen rising, according to Kong Pingtao, general manager at agriculture portal www.boyar.cn. Poultry demand will see a rapid recovery in the second half, and consumption for the year will be up more than 7%, said Zhang Li, chief analyst with the agriculture ministry’s outlook committee.

Live Fowl Preferred

Poultry producers are responding. Wens Foodstuffs Group Co., the country’s largest breeder, said chicken sales rose 18% in March from a year earlier as consumption recovered from the coronavirus. Sales of baby chicks by Shandong Yisheng Livestock and Poultry Breeding Co. were up almost 30%. That will help boost demand for soybean meal and corn used in animal feed.

Back in the live bird markets, the agriculture ministry asked some provinces last month to reopen them gradually to help poultry production recover. Eight provinces, including Guangdong, the top chicken consuming area, have done so, though most are still closed, according to an industry survey.

A live bird wholesale market in the city of Dongguan, Guangdong province, resumed business last month because the locals prefer live fowl instead of chilled meat, said an official reached by phone, without giving his name. Still, some local governments, including Fujian, Guizhou and Chongqing, have shuttered their markets indefinitely, according to local media reports.

Yellow Birds

“Most live bird markets will eventually disappear, but it will be difficult to shut down all the markets across the country,” said Pan Chenjun, a senior livestock analyst with Rabobank. “In some rural areas where consumers have a strong preference for live birds, I would assume they might exist for a longer time.”

Another obstacle to the demise of live markets are the differing sizes of yellow-feathered chickens that are bred mainly in the southern provinces, which would present a challenge for modern slaughterhouses, said Pan.

The yellow birds are a favorite with people living south of the Yangtze River, according to Kong from the industry portal. They are used for soup, and well-known dishes, such as Baizhan chicken, where the meat is poached and served cold, and Yanju chicken, baked in salt.

The reopening of some markets could revive concern about their role in spreading disease from animals to humans. Research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the U.S. has shown that live poultry markets are a major source of human infection with avian influenza and their permanent closure should be considered to stop the occurrence of epidemics.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg