China is cracking down on a black market for fur animal carcasses by turning them into animal feed ingredients. A pilot program was proposed by agricultural officials as part of an initiative to create substitutes for soybean meal in animal feed. Two years later the situation on the ground doesn't look much like the nice, neat program designed by agricultural officials.
Shanghai news publication The Paper posted a video of a “shadow visit" to expose a black market for carcasses of foxes and raccoon dogs raised for their fur (full text version here). The 34-minute video showed lines of outdoor metal cages holding foxes and raccoon dogs on muddy ground covered with feces, warehouses piled with skinned carcasses, bags of fox and raccoon dog legs prepared for shipment to southern China, and a rudimentary oil refining shed where fat from carcasses is mixed into oil used in animal feed.
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screenshot from video by The Paper |
The video focused on fraudulent sale of fox and raccoon dog carcasses as meat from sheep, dogs, rabbits and hind quarters used as beef jerky. Chinese standards do not allow foxes, raccoons, or mink to be used as food or animal feed. A Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs (MARA) official claimed that strict regulation prevents carcasses of fur animals from entering the food supply.
The video was posted on China's March 15 consumer day when state media reveal revolting food safety practices. This video displayed bags of fox and raccoon dog meat and piles of skinned carcasses sold to traders who pass it on to rural tourism operations, restaurants and street hawkers offering rustic food with strong flavor, including braised, stewed, and barbecued meat. One butcher openly advertises on an online platform "fresh raccoon dog meat, accepting large orders, shipping nationwide."
A report issued by China's Leather Association said China produced 10.76 million skinned carcasses of farmed minks, foxes and raccoon dogs in 2024. (In comparison, China slaughters about 700 million pigs and billions of poultry annually.) Presumably the fur is used in luxury apparel, calligraphy brushes and other products that use animal hair. Most of the farm-raised foxes and raccoon dogs are in 2 northern provinces of Shandong and Hebei. The journalists' investigation focused on localities where production is concentrated: Tangshan of Hebei Province and Linyi and Weifang districts of Shandong Province.
Tangshan is the main source of illegal raccoon dog meat commerce. In Tangshan farmers electrocute the animals, skin them on the spot and deliver the skins to brokers who visit the farms. The carcasses are stored in warehouses and sold to other merchants who sell them for meat.
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screen shot of raccoon dog carcasses from The Paper video. |
The fur-animal meat trade has been suppressed in the Shandong districts of Weifang and Linyi. News media have previously exposed the illicit meat trade there and local authorities are said to very strict. Hyper-competitive meat butchers also watch each other and turn in their competitors if they suspect they are butchering fur animals.
In Linyi and Weifang fox carcasses are illicitly used as animal feed ingredients. After skinning, the carcasses are bought by traders who deliver them to hidden workshops that extract the fat, then mix it with fat from chickens, ducks, and pigs for use by animal feed mills. The fur animals cannot be used in feed either but mills seldom test the fat.
The government subsidizes disposal facilities to grind up the carcasses. According to a broker in Weifang dealers collude with the facilities to secretly buy up carcasses to use for fat extraction.
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China's fur ranches are concentrated in Tangshan, Linyi, and Weifang districts in Hebei and Shandong Provinces. |
Two years ago, Chinese agricultural officials decided to begin a pilot program to legalize the use of fur-animal carcasses for feed. The program was introduced under the guise of China's efforts to cut reliance on soybean imports. In April 2023 the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs (MARA) issued a plan to reduce the proportion of soybean meal in animal feed that included pilot programs to utilize fur animal carcasses as a protein source in animal feed in Hebei, Shandong, and Liaoning Provinces.
Shandong announced its pilot program in January 2024 to be implemented in Linyi, the province's main fur-animal production site. The 3-year plan aimed to use 20,000 metric tons of fur animal carcasses to produce 4,000 tons of fat and 8,000 tons of meat and bone meal that could replace soybean meal and fish meal in animal feed.
The pilot program promised to set up a controlled "closed loop" supply chain that begins and ends at farms where foxes and raccoon dogs are raised. Only designated companies would have the right to acquire the carcasses where the animals are skinned, transport, store and process them, and then return the feed products to feed fur animals. No carcasses could leak out of the system for other uses, and feed products could not be used for other animals. Everything would be monitored by video to ensure compliance. The pilot designated 3 companies to monopolize the collection, storage, transportation and processing of carcasses into fat and meat and bone meal for use exclusively in feed for local fur animals. Two companies were designated to grind up diseased carcasses into fertilizer and to use fat in biodiesel and cosmetics.
A year into the 3-year pilot the journalists' investigation in Linyi found that implementation did not correspond to what had been promised. Linyi Liyuan Bioenergy Co. was still building a processing plant to be used for fur animal meat and bone meal, and the reporters found no equipment in the building. The address of the company responsible for grinding up diseased and spoiled carcasses was a village; the facility was actually several kilometers from its listed address.
A designated feed mill's employees were evasive when asked whether fox carcasses from Linyi are marketed to other customers besides the pilot project's designated companies. A staff member asked how the reporter knew about the pilot project and insisted that the feed company was only a "small link" and "just helping out." He refused to say how much feed was produced for the pilot project in the previous year and refused to answer questions about processing fees.
A farmer told the reporters he knew nothing about plans to install video cameras to watch collection points for skins, had never seen anyone install video cameras, and wondered who would pay for such cameras.
The journalists apparently did not investigate whether promised supervision of the pilot is in place. The pilot program write-up had identified a provincial leadership office for the pilot. Professors and experts were designated by name for a technical guidance team. Policy measures, technical training and problem-solving were supposed to be coordinated.
A document launching a fur animal carcass program in Liaoning Province is on a list of provincial agricultural documents issued in 2023, but no additional information can be found online. There is no indication that Hebei Province launched a pilot.
It is unclear how the pilot program would contribute to the reduction in soybean meal use that was its stated intent. According to the pilot program's background document, fur animals apparently do not consume soy meal. They are fed mainly on fur animal carcass scraps, small fish, and viscera from the local poultry processing industry. The pilot program's feed products were not supposed to be used for other types of animal feed.
Neither the Shandong pilot description nor the journalists' investigation mentioned that production of fur animals has been dropping precipitously since the pandemic. The Leather Association report shows production of foxes peaked in 2018 and production of racoon dogs peaked in 2019. Production of the two species combined plummeted from about 28 million in 2019 to 6.5 million in 2024. The Association identified weak clothing sales, high inventories, and a 60% drop in exports last year as problems for the industry. It is unclear whether facilities and production lines dedicated to fur animals are financially viable when the volume of carcasses is shrinking and unstable from year to year.
"Supply chains" made up of boxes and arrows neatly drawn on paper often morph into a tangled bowl of noodles when implemented on the ground. Digging into a recent exposé of the black market for carcasses of fur animals indicates how assurances of "full traceability," "biosecurity," and "closed loops" can break down when no one is watching and/or the economics don't work. In a worst-case scenario this can lead to disease epidemics and food safety scandals.