Electricity Consumption in the Pork Production Chain From the Western Region of Paraná State, Brazil

Silva, Danieli Sanderson and Siqueira, Jair Antonio Cruz and Nogueira, Carlos Eduardo Camargo and Souza, Samuel Nelson Melegari de and Feiden, Armin and Tokura, Luciene Kazue and Kostaneski, Patrícia Caroline and Adame, Karina Sanderson (2019) Electricity Consumption in the Pork Production Chain From the Western Region of Paraná State, Brazil. Journal of Agricultural Science, 11 (3). p. 474. ISSN 1916-9752

[thumbnail of 5c4851e746b9e.pdf] Text
5c4851e746b9e.pdf - Published Version

Download (367kB)

Abstract

The development of swine farming resulted in the specialization and transformation of the productive chain with direct impact on the agroindustry. The intensive swine production is representative, with relevant performance in the international scenario, with an expressive increase in volumes and values produced and exported, contributing significantly to the performance of the Brazilian trade balance. This performance is due to the technological and organizational advances of the last decades. The constant changes and advances that swine farming has been undergoing promote the search for new ways of raising pigs. There is a constant incorporation of new technologies and an uninterrupted reorganization in the production systems in the industry, aiming to follow the industrial progress with greater cost reduction and increased profitability. In this context, the objective of this study was to evaluate the consumption of electric energy in the productive process of pig termination in rural properties in the western region of Paraná. The study was conducted in three pig farms, where data were collected on the consumption of electricity in the production, slaughter and processing of pigs. The average specific energy consumption in the production of pigs in the termination stage was 0.0058 kWh kg-1, accounting for 1% of the process, while at slaughter it was 0.22 kWh kg-1, responsible for 38.22 kWh kg-1 % of consumption and processing of 0.35 kWh kg-1, accounting for 60.78%. Thus, results showed that the processing stage consumes the most energy within the pig meat production chain.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Oalibrary Press > Agricultural and Food Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 11 May 2023 06:01
Last Modified: 06 Feb 2024 04:17
URI: http://asian.go4publish.com/id/eprint/2046

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item