Eat Frozen Pork
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Eat Frozen Pork campaign in Singapore was initiated by the Singapore government in late 1984 as a means of encouraging Singaporeans to partake in frozen, as opposed to fresh, pig meat. Targeted at predominantly Singaporean Chinese, the campaign tied in with the shutting down or relocation of all pig farms in the country. The government's initiative was not considerably successful, with mixed reaction from the people. In 2008 it was brought back and subsumed under the Frozen Meat Public Education Programme.
Singapore once had a burgeoning pork industry, which used to yield S$300,000,000 annually.[1] By 1985, there were at least 520 pig farms situated within the island-state, to keep up with the citizens' demand for fresh pork. Most of the consumers were of Chinese ethnicity.[2] However, Singapore's status as a land-scarce nation could not allow for the sheer number of pig farms and thus in mid-1984 the government began closing down or relocating these farms.[2] Stricter sanitation guidelines were also imposed on the farm owners.[3] By 1990, the number of pig farms in Singapore had already been reduced to 22,[4] with neighbouring country Indonesia supplying the majority of the country's fresh pork.[5] To minimise reliance on overseas imports of fresh pork, the government decided to promote an alternative – frozen pork.[3]
Publicity
The campaign was officially introduced in November 1984.[3] To promote frozen pork as a healthier and cheaper alternative to fresh pork, island-wide talks on pork were organised and about one million copies of a cookbook dedicated to frozen pork dishes were distributed to the public.[2] Notably, Goh Keng Swee delivered an extensive speech on frozen pork during a parliamentary session in March 1984.[6] Other ad hoc events to promote the campaign included an "Eat Frozen Pork" poster contest[7] and a "roving display" of frozen pork.[8] A "frozen pork hotline" was specially established to give consumers a platform for expressing their thoughts on the frozen meat.[9] The line is now defunct.[10]