Trade and commerce can quite often be strange.. a simple understanding of Trade would be the supply or making available the goods in a place where they are most required from the places where they available in plenty. One does not try selling a Refrigerator to an Eskimo – ‘Carrying Coal toNew Castle” is an idiom of British Origin portraying the foolhardy or pointless action.
Newcastle upon Tyne is a city in North East England on the bank of River Tyne which grew as an important trade center for wool and a major coal mining area. The economy of the area flourished with the distribution and sale of coal and the phrase indignantly meant the act of doing an act which no sane person would do and the act doomed to failure. It is another matter that Timothy Dexter known for his eccentricity did consign coal to Newcastle and made a profit during a miner’s strike which had crippled local production !! - the importance of coal to industry has much declined with the usage of diesel and then electricity as power; still the expression is still used with accuracy and exactitude. Later the harbor of New Castle in New South Wales in Australia also grew to be a major handler of coal is another matter.
Pigs are one of the animals to be domesticated before centuries and are one of the most widespread mammals found in many parts of the World. They have been introduced to many parts of the World and rearing of pigs has been a flourishing trade thanks to the adaptation of this creature to the environment. Pork is the culinary name for meat from the domestic pig eaten in many countries. Burgers are the most sought food in many places and usually connotes a sandwich consisting of cooked patty of meat (usually beef) placed inside a sliced bread roll. There are many vegetarian variations though ! The meat is processed in different forms which extends its shelf-life (what a misnomer extending life after one is killed !!)
Once in a hotel, there was this particularly tempting fried brownish dish ‘sausage’ which I sheepishly enquired whether it was vegetarian ? [fortunately before ripping into it] - and by that Q came to know that ‘sausage’ is a food usually made from ground meat, mixed with salt, herbs and spices. Though vegetarian versions are available,typically they are made from intestine.. this is no post about ‘what was not eaten and what should not be’ – but something on why British pigs are flying in Jumbo jets toChina !!
China is one of the largest consumers of pork and a Country famous for its sweet and sour pork. Typically what is available locally should not find market from elsewhere ! – again no one would ever think it logical that somebody would spend amounta as high as £2,000 per pig when locally it much much cheaper. But in reality it is happening for satisfying the growing appetite of the burgeoning middle class of China and because British stock have a far higher fertility rate than Chinese breeds. Daily Mail reports that an entire Boeing 747 was hired at £330,000 per trip to fly pigs in more comfort on the 5,500-mile journey than humans often have in economy class. It is an extraordinary turn of events for a country of 1.3 billion once known for eating everything and anything. The report states that due to sophisticated breeding programmes, an average British-bred sow gives birth to 22 piglets a year, compared with 14 for a Chinese one. The initial price for a breeding sow in Britain is between £400 and £500, but with transportation the cost of exporting one rises to £2,000. A total of 1,239 pigs left the UK before the summer and a further 900 are flying out this month. By the end of the year close to 5000 pigs would be living in their new home of China after a new livestock trade agreement.
The Chinese liking to the pig dish has rejuvenated the beleaguered pig rearing industry inUK. A spokesperson of British Pig Executive was quoted as saying that they were seen as top-notch in the World (when it came to pig breeding stock) and will conquerChina, aiming forVietnam andSouth Korea. In the early part of the last Century, they had claimed that ‘Sun never sets in theBritish Empire’.
With regards –S. Sampathkumar.
31st Oct 2011.