Current:Home > InvestBrazil unveils $4 million supercow, twice as meaty as others of her breed -Triumph Financial Guides
Brazil unveils $4 million supercow, twice as meaty as others of her breed
View
Date:2025-04-16 22:13:44
Brazil has hundreds of millions of cows, but one in particular is extraordinary.
Worth $4 million, Viatina-19 FIV Mara Movéis is the most expensive cow ever sold at auction, according to Guinness World Records. That's three times more than the last recordholder's price. And — at 1,100 kilograms (more than 2,400 pounds) — she's twice as heavy as an average adult of her breed.
Along a highway through Brazil's heartland, Viatina-19's owners have put up two billboards praising her grandeur and beckoning people to make pilgrimages to see the supercow.
Climate scientists agree that people need to consume less beef, the largest agricultural source of greenhouse gasses and a driver of Amazon deforestation. But the cattle industry is a major source of Brazilian economic development and the government is striving to conquer new export markets. The world's top beef exporter wants everyone, everywhere to eat its beef.
The embodiment of Brazil's cattle ambitions is Viatina-19, the product of years of efforts to raise meatier cows. Prizewinners are sold at high-stakes auctions — so high that wealthy ranchers share ownership. They extract the eggs and semen from champion animals, create embryos and implant them in surrogate cows that they hope will produce the next magnificent specimens.
"We're not slaughtering elite cattle. We're breeding them. And at the end of the line, going to feed the whole world," one of her owners, Ney Pereira, said after arriving by helicopter to his farm in Minas Gerais state. "I think Viatina will provide that."
The snow-white cow's eye-popping price stems from how quickly she put on vast amounts of muscle, from her fertility and — crucially — how often she has passed those characteristics to her offspring, said Lorrany Martins, a veterinarian who is Pereira's daughter and right hand. Breeders also value posture, hoof solidity, docility, maternal ability and beauty. Those eager to level up their livestock's genetics pay around $250,000 for an opportunity to collect Viatina-19's egg cells.
"She is the closest to perfection that has been attained so far," Martins said. "She's a complete cow, has all the characteristics that all the proprietors are looking for."
In Brazil, 80% of the cows are Zebus, a subspecies originating in India with a distinctive hump and dewlap, or folds of draping neck skin. Viatina-19 belongs to the Nelore breed, which is raised for meat, not milk, and makes up most of Brazil's stock.
The city of Uberaba, where Viatina-19 lives, holds an annual gathering called ExpoZebu that bills itself as the world's biggest Zebu fair. Held several weeks ago, it was a far cry from the Brazil that's imagined abroad. The dress code was boots, baseball caps and blue jeans. Evening concerts drew 10,000 spectators belting out their favorite country songs. But the main attraction was the daily cattle shows where cows compete for prizes that boost an animal's auction price.
The most prestigious auction is called Elo de Raça, held April 28. As the first cow entered the paddock, speakers blared Queen's "We Are the Champions." But that cow was a mere appetizer before this year's starlet, Donna, and three of her clones; the final sale price put her total value at 15.5 million reais ($3 million.)
A commodities boom in the 2000s turbocharged Brazilian agriculture, especially with a rising China buying soy and beef. Today, agriculture's influence extends to Brazil's Congress and the national consciousness. And Brazil, along with the U.S., is at the forefront of cattle genetics.
Showstoppers like Donna and Viatina-19 are rarities in Brazil, which has more than 230 million cows, according to the USDA. It's the world's largest beef cattle population, and that's problematic; huge swaths of Amazon rainforest have been slashed to create pasture, releasing carbon stored in trees. And cows belch methane that's far worse for the climate.
Genetic improvements that reduce cows' slaughtering age are helpful but limited ways to reduce warming. Simpler, more effective measures include planting better grass for grazing and regularly moving cattle from pasture to pasture, said Beto Veríssimo, an agronomist and the co-founder of an environmental nonprofit called Imazon.
Meanwhile, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has been working to open new markets. Last month, he met Prime Minister Fumio Kishida of Japan, home to the premium, marbled Wagyu beef; he urged his counterpart to taste Brazilian meat and become a believer.
"Please," he said, addressing his vice president at the event, "take Prime Minister Fumio to eat steak at the best restaurant in Sao Paulo so that, the following week, he starts importing our beef."
Clones coming soon
Down the highway from the Elo de Raça auction is the laboratory of the company Geneal Animal Genetics and Biotechnology. In a small pen behind it, a cloned calf recently lay in the sunshine, still too unsure of its newborn legs to stand. Another born by cesarean section 20 minutes earlier pressed backward against a stall's rear wall, unsettled by this strange new world. Clones of Viatina-19 are due in a few months, said Geneal's commercial director, Paulo Cerantola.
Some ranchers wouldn't want a big herd of her clones. High-maintenance cows like Viatina-19 aren't profitable on a large, commercial scale because they couldn't meet their energy needs from grass alone, said P.J. Budler, international business manager for Trans Ova Genetics, an Iowa-based company focused on improving the bovine gene pool.
"For the environment and the resources that it would take to run a cow like (Viatina-19), she fits the mold ideally, but she's not the answer for all cattle everywhere," Budler said.
Viatina-19's owner, Pereira, said she gets special treatment to boost egg cell production, but would thrive were she put to pasture — where almost all his elite cattle feed.
Meanwhile, Viatina-19 is pregnant for the first time, and Pereira's eyeing expansion; her egg cells have sold to Bolivian buyers and he wants to export to the United Arab Emirates, India and the U.S.
His veterinarian daughter, Martins, is looking even farther ahead.
"I hope she is the basis for an even better animal in the future, decades from now," she said.
- In:
- Brazil
- Agriculture
veryGood! (69)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Ford recalls nearly 43,000 SUVs due to gas leaks that can cause fires, but remedy won’t fix leaks
- Conjoined twins Abby, Brittany Hensel back in spotlight after wedding speculation. It's gone too far.
- Love Is Blind's Jessica Vestal Shares Why She Lost Weight After Quitting the Gym
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Sen. Bob Menendez’s wife cites need for surgery in request to delay her trial
- Warren Buffett has left the table. Homeless charity asks investors to bid on meal with software CEO
- An America fighting itself in Civil War: It's a warning
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Stock Up On Your Favorite Yankee Candle Scents, Which Are Now Buy One, Get One 50% Off
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Psst! L’Occitane Is Having Their Friends & Family Sale Right Now, Score 20% Off All Their Bestsellers
- Group of Jewish and Palestinian women uses dialogue to build bridges between cultures
- US Postal Service seeking to hike cost of first-class stamp to 73 cents
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- My job is classified as salaried, nonexempt: What does that mean? Ask HR
- Biden's new student loan forgiveness plan could help 30 million borrowers. Here's who would qualify.
- Russ Cook, Britain's Hardest Geezer, runs length of Africa in 10,000-mile epic quest for charity
Recommendation
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
What to know about UConn head coach Dan Hurley, from playing to coaching
Family of Nigerian businessman killed in California helicopter crash sues charter company
Real Madrid and Man City draw 3-3 in frantic 1st leg of Champions League quarterfinals at Bernabeu
'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
Court upholds California’s authority to set nation-leading vehicle emission rules
Rape case dismissed against former Kansas basketball player Arterio Morris
'We just went nuts': Michael Keaton shows new 'Beetlejuice' footage, is psyched for sequel