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Precision farming techniques used by arable farmers to accurately
control inputs in relation to costs, yields and returns will have to
be adopted by pig producers on a global basis to help them remain
competitive, believes Hugh Crabtree, managing director of
Farmex.
"The poultry sector has shown the way, but it must now be done by
pig industries if pigmeat is to challenge poultry consumption in
many western cultures," he says.
Farmex, a specialist high-tech control equipment and data processing company
based in Reading, Berkshire, has been called in by Australian Pork Ltd -
that country's pig industry body - to
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help with the development of integrated
management systems, the basis of precision farming for pigs.
Farmex says it has found that by looking more closely at the
production process, using temperature, feed and water monitoring
farmers can identify opportunities to improve the productivity,
health and welfare of pigs.
"For example, monitoring has helped us better understand the
relationship between heater activation, minimum ventilation rate
setting and room temperature variation. On one UK farm this
has resulted in an 85 per cent reduction in heater use in nursery
rooms, worth 66p per pig - equivalent to 15,000 per year in a 1,000
sow enterprise," he said.
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