The gap between Irish R3 steer prices and the equivalent in Britain widened further last week and now stands at 49c/kg, which is €200 per head on a 410kg steer.
Irish cow prices, which are usually among the best in the EU, have also fallen behind Britain, with an O3 cow making the equivalent of €3.03/kg there compared with €2.99/kg in Ireland. R3 heifers are worth €3.95/kg in Britain compared with €3.75/kg in Ireland.
EU steers and young bulls
Elsewhere in the EU it is a mixed picture on beef prices. Sweden is the strongest market by far in mainland Europe, with equivalent prices for R3 young bulls at €4.03/kg and the exact same for R3 heifers. Swedish cows are making €3.66/kg for the O3 grade.

Germany and Spain are the other countries in Europe that are ahead of Ireland on R3 young bulls prices. In Germany, R3 young bulls are making €3.84/kg while in Spain they are making €3.79/kg.
Italy and France lag behind Ireland on R3 young bulls with €3.68/kg the average for the R3 grade in France last week, while in Italy they were just worth €3.52/kg. The Netherlands, which is Ireland’s third most important export market for beef, returned just €3.34/kg for R3 young bulls.
Heifers
For heifers, Italy is the strongest market in the eurozone, with R3s making €4.07/kg, dramatically ahead of their young bull price. In Germany, R3 heifers made €3.76/kg, which is 8c/kg less than their R3 young bull price, while in Spain R3 heifers averaged €3.88/kg.
The French heifer trade was slightly ahead of their young bulls but still weak at €3.74/kg for the R3 grade.
Cow trade
Sweden is by far the dominant cow beef market, with O3 cows making the equivalent of €3.66/kg with France the next best on €3.27/kg. Ireland is comfortably the best of the rest in the eurozone on €3.99/kg, and Italy is on €2.76/kg.
The Netherlands, which has a huge dairy cow population, is on €2.64/kg and Spain is on €2.55/kg, while Germany is on just €2.42/kg for O3 cows.
Outside the EU
In Australia, where drought has become a major issue, the equivalent R3 steer is making €3.04/kg while the USA is on €3.26/kg. Brazil, the world’s biggest beef exporter this year so far is paying just the equivalent of €1.88/kg average for steers.