Social
Media Censors as Food Shortages Begin
https://www.naturalblaze.com/2020/04/social-media-censoring-food-shortages-labels-them-a-conspiracy.html?fbclid=IwAR3-YGRmkAsllDPGJ_ccYNEoLa_dV0EANRhJ5aBdnOPsg-QPT1RCXqr0Izc
https://www.naturalblaze.com/2020/04/social-media-censoring-food-shortages-labels-them-a-conspiracy.html?fbclid=IwAR3-YGRmkAsllDPGJ_ccYNEoLa_dV0EANRhJ5aBdnOPsg-QPT1RCXqr0Izc
Meat Shortages Will Reach Retail Stores in 2 weeks
24
April, 2020
Tyson Foods Inc. on Wednesday said it was idling its largest pork plant, making it at least the sixth major U.S. meat facility to shutter in the last few weeks. Currently, about 15% of hog-slaughtering capacity is completely offline, and there are also additional slowdowns at pork, beef and poultry companies across the nation.
Meat
prices are starting to surge on the disruptions. But with
slaughterhouses closing, farmers don’t have a market for their
animals. That’s causing hog futures to drop, potentially creating a
situation where pigs get euthanized and buried as supplies back up.
Meanwhile, retail costs may rise as grocery stores mandate rationing
on pork chops.
Things
are so dire that Iowa, the biggest hog state, activated the National
Guard to help protect supplies.
ALL
MEATS AFFECTED
“Meat
shortages will be occurring two weeks from now in the retail
outlets,” Dennis Smith, a senior account executive at Archer
Financial Services, said, citing industry sources. “There is simply
no spot pork available. The big box stores will get their needs met,
many others will not.”
Much
has been made of the frozen inventories that are kept in warehouses,
which could help cushion the blow of plant closures — as long as
they don’t last very long. While there are hundreds of millions of
pounds of frozen meat in U.S. warehouses, the supplies account for
only a fraction of what’s typically produced in any given month.
In
March, frozen pork inventories dropped 4.2% from February, U.S.
government data showed on Wednesday. It was biggest drop for the
month of March since 2014, and the decline came before the major
slaughterhouse shutdowns that started in April.
“For
all the talk of cold-storage supplies, it’s just never a lot,”
Bob Brown, an independent market consultant in Edmond, Okla., said
about supplies of pork, beef and poultry. “It’s roughly a week’s
worth of production in the freezer.”
The
Tyson facility in Waterloo, Iowa, will stop running midweek until
further notice, the company said, adding that reopening would depend
partly on the results of employee testing for the coronavirus.
Outbreaks have also forced closures for JBS SA in Minnesota and
Colorado and Smithfield Foods Inc. in South Dakota. A Tyson plant in
Columbus Junction, Iowa, has resumed some operations after an earlier
halt, as has been reported for a National Beef Packing Co. facility
in the state.
On
Wednesday, Hormel Foods Corp. said that multiple employees at its
Jennie-O turkey plant in Willmar, Minn., tested positive for the
coronavirus. The plant is continuing to operate.
“It
means the loss of a vital market outlet for farmers and further
contributes to the disruption of the nation’s pork supply,” said
Steve Stouffer, head of Tyson Fresh Meats.
Shutdowns
for slaughtering plants are cascading through meat supply chains and
causing weird dislocations for prices — finished products are
surging, while farmers are getting paid much less for animals.
Prices
for pork bellies, the cut that’s turned into bacon, have more than
doubled in just the four days through Tuesday on supply concerns.
With so many fewer hogs moving through slaughter, Smithfield Foods
had to shutter facilities in Wisconsin and Missouri that turn pork
into finished products like bacon and sausage.
Meanwhile,
prices for the hogs themselves are plummeting. There are way more
pigs than can be processed right now, so animals are backing up on
farms. Hog futures traded in Chicago are down about 21% in April.
That
means sky-rocketing margins for meat packers — the folks who do the
slaughtering and turn pigs into chops and bacon. They’re paying
less to farmers to get the animals, and then turning around and
getting higher prices for their finished products. Pork margins are
up about 340% since April 1, according to data from HedgersEdge.
Some
meatpackers are giving raises and bonuses to workers, in part to
protect against rising absenteeism at plants.
Shutdowns
haven’t been limited to the U.S.
Almost
half of Canada’s beef-processing capacity has been halted after a
closure for Cargill Inc. this week in Alberta. A JBS plant in the
province has also slowed production. Many ranchers in the region have
been left with nowhere to sell their cattle. Canada exports about 50%
of its beef.
“The
solution, of course, is to make sure the plants can be back up and
running as soon as possible,” Marie-France MacKinnon, spokeswoman
for the Canadian Meat Council, said in an email.
Now
that they have officially admitted this, you folks better get what
you can get, and get it now.
https://www.wvlt.tv/content/news/Nashville-police-investigating-possible-COVID-19-outbreak-at-Tyson-chicken-plant--569552081.html?fbclid=IwAR0T9pB4q9Eadzvi5HHja6g7uxHLfQ2uLp1L1QJYp9iJm8MaDPNOzBLoc-k
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-04-21/food-rationing-is-new-reality-for-buyers-once-spoiled-for-choice?fbclid=IwAR3h-ULy1vxGpS6gRM4nLxGu9st3XdKfkjPstunud6plio1cVeWRhMCKcoo
https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/2020/04/22/more-than-95-canadas-beef-comes-from-3-processing-plants-two-of-them-have-covid-19-outbreaks.html?
fbclid=IwAR0uM2XAyKE1RRdeLByiuRtm1QizoMeQN6bH3oBrsvLoMgYWYtY5N3QoX4I
https://www.ccn.com/u-s-stock-futures-shudder-with-looming-food-shortage-crisis/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.