The Next Big Shortage...Meat. Processing Plants Are Shutting Down Across The Country

arnoldwsimmons

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U.S. Could Be Weeks From Meat Shortages With Shutdowns Spreading
Plant shutdowns are leaving the U.S. dangerously close to meat shortages as coronavirus outbreaks spread to suppliers across the nation and the Americas.

Almost a third of U.S. pork capacity is down, the first big poultry plants closed on Friday and experts are warning that domestic shortages are just weeks away. Brazil, the world’s No. 1 shipper of chicken and beef, saw its first major closure with the halt of a poultry plant owned by JBS SA, the world’s biggest meat company. Key operations are also down in Canada, the latest being a British Columbia poultry plant.

While hundreds of plants in the Americas are still running, the staggering acceleration of supply disruptions is now raising questions over global shortfalls. Taken together, the U.S., Brazil and Canada account for about 65% of world meat trade.

“It’s absolutely unprecedented,” said Brett Stuart, president of Denver-based consulting firm Global AgriTrends. “It’s a lose-lose situation where we have producers at the risk of losing everything and consumers at the risk of paying higher prices. Restaurants in a week could be out of fresh ground beef.”

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New U.S. shutdowns are hitting at a dizzying rate. Smithfield Foods Inc., the world’s No. 1 pork producer, said Friday it was closing another operation, this one in Illinois. That news hit less than an hour after Hormel Foods Corp. said it was idling two of its Jennie-O turkey plants in Minnesota. JBS said Sunday it will shutter a beef production facility in Wisconsin.

The most-recent news added to a flurry of other halts announced in the space of just a few weeks.

“During this pandemic, our entire industry is faced with an impossible choice: continue to operate to sustain our nation’s food supply or shutter in an attempt to entirely insulate our employees from risk,” Smithfield said in a statement Friday. “It’s an awful choice; it’s not one we wish on anyone.”

Read More: Food Rationing Confronts Shoppers Once Spoiled for Choice

Prices are surging. U.S. wholesale beef touched a record in the week ended April 24, and wholesale pork soared 29%, the biggest weekly gain since 2012.

Jersey Mike’s Franchise Systems Inc., which has 1,750 stores across the U.S., is working with its ham supplier Clemens Food Group to ensure its supply of pork, something they sell quite a bit of in their sub sandwiches.

“We’re backing it up already because of the coming -- we feel -- the coming shortages,” said Peter Cancro, chief executive officer.

To be sure, some plants have restarted after testing workers and improving conditions, and most Brazilian facilities are still operating. Another point to consider: There haven’t yet been big shutdowns in Europe. The European Union accounts for about a fifth of global meat exports, U.S. government data show.

Still, executives from Tyson Foods Inc., JBS and Smithfield have all warned that consumers are likely to see impact at the grocery store.

It should be noted that the output from a plant where infection pops up doesn’t pose health concerns because by all accounts Covid-19 isn’t a food-borne illness. Products from a farm or a production plant with a confirmed case can still be sent out for distribution. But a production halt means that there’s no new supplies.

And these shutdowns are happening at a time when global meat supplies were already tight. China, the world’s top hog producer, has been battling an outbreak of African Swine Fever, which destroyed millions of the country’s pigs. Plus the virus is hitting production after some meat companies had already taken steps to slow output because of the closure of restaurants around the world.

Inventories can provide some cushion, though they may not last long.

Total American meat supplies in cold-storage facilities are equal to roughly two weeks of production. With most plant shutdowns lasting about 14 days for safety reasons, that further underscores the potential for deficits.

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Meanwhile, with slaughterhouses closing, farmers don’t have a place to sell their animals. That’s forcing some livestock producers to dispose of them. Plants are also facing a labor crunch as employees fall ill. It’s been reported that a large chicken-processing company was forced to kill 2 million of its birds earlier this month because of worker shortages.

That’s the latest cruel blow to supply chains, with food being wasted en masse at the same time that grocery store shelves are running empty.

The situation for U.S. farms is so severe that the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service is setting up a center to help identify potential alternative markets and assist on “depopulation and disposal methods.”

Read More: Farmers Are Starting to Destroy Their Pigs After Factories Close

It’s hard to say exactly why the virus is spreading so fast among meat-plant employees. Some analysts have cited the fact that these are usually low-paying jobs that are often filled by immigrants and migrants. That means workers can live in cramped quarters, with sometimes more than one family sharing the same dwelling -- so if one person gets sick, the disease can spread quickly.

Employees are also in close proximity on the job, with the work on some processing lines being described as “elbow-to-elbow.” Even if line speeds are slowed, workers spread out and shifts are staggered, there’s still the chance of mingling in break rooms and hallways. These plants see thousands of people coming in and out every day -- it’s basically the opposite of social distancing.

Sick Inspectors
At the same time, U.S. federal employees responsible for inspecting meat plants are falling ill. More than 100 inspection-service employees have tested positive for Covid-19, the government confirmed. At least two deaths of inspectors have been reported.

U.S. inspectors travel among facilities. That’s adding to fears that shutdowns will keep occurring if a sick federal employee brings the infection to plants where there’s not yet an outbreak.

In Brazil, JBS’s Passo Fundo poultry plant in Rio Grande do Sul state was ordered to close, according to Priscila Schvarcz, a labor prosecutor in the municipality. There have been about 48 cases among employees, with 27 positive tests and others confirmed through epidemiological criteria, according to the latest data from Passo Fundo and neighboring municipalities.

JBS said measures implemented at the plant “are fully supported by reports and technical recommendations from health agencies and medical specialists.” The company said it trusts operations would resume shortly and that “employee protection has always been the first JBS goal since the pandemic started.”

The closure comes amid a jump in Covid-19 cases in Brazil.

“Brazilian meat companies have been taking a lot of preventative measures, but we don’t see progress in agglomeration of people,” said Jose Modelski Junior, a spokesperson for Contac, which represents food-industry workers. “They are not willing to change the number of workers in the same shift, and we are worried about that.”
 
In the end, the lesson big businesses will learn from this isn't that they should protect their workers more or even pay them better. The lesson they will take from this is:

1 For the worker/employee: Invest heavily in automation on farms, manufacturing/processing facilities and in stores ... ASAP!
2 For the customer/consumer: Invest in more self checkout kiosks, incentivize more paperless transactions, incentivize more online sales with delivery/pick-up (like they do in much of Asia and lots of Europe).

The day Tesla announces they are turning on full self driving is the day that nearly every job in the world can be replaced by a robot.

Yang, Sanders and Warren have it right. The world is changing faster than we ever thought it could, it is leaving more and more people behind and many of us either don't understand what that really means or they don't care because they think it won't touch/effect them. Drastic measures will need to be taken to keep people gainfully employed in the major disruptions that are about to change all of society worldwide for the better and the worse.
 
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I knew being a vegan most of my life would pay off one day. :rolleyes:
No ones loves eating meat more then me but it seems like a good interval to get away from eating so much of it if not all of it....eating so much could be the root cause of a lot of the illnesses in the Black community that along with a lot of other processed foods. Been testing out those meat subs and I have to admit they make the transition very easy taste wise, I just hope they are healthy.
 
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Oh great now these idiots are gonna ransack all the carnivore delights in a few weeks cause of this.. I been slowdown on the beef and pork..but I need my poultry and seafood

I hear ya!! I guess they are calling on the meat shortage to begin at the end of the week.. Go figure, it's going to be like the run on toilet tissue!!
 
No ones loves eating meat more then me but it seems like a good interval to get away from eating so much of it if not all of it....eating so much could be the root cause of a lot of the illnesses in the Black community that along with a lot of other processed foods. Been testing out those meat subs and I have to admit they make the transition very easy taste wise, I just hope they are healthy.

Yep meat substitutes have come a long way since I went vegan years ago. Just be careful to check and research the ingredients pro and con. There are definite general health benefits to giving up animal flesh you won't regret it. Good luck. :hmm:
 
Yep meat substitutes have come a long way since I went vegan years ago. Just be careful to check and research the ingredients pro and con. There are definite general health benefits to giving up animal flesh you won't regret it. Good luck. :hmm:

Brotha, you ever think about starting a vegan thread?? For the Kats on the fence about kicking that red meat habit??
 
Brotha, you ever think about starting a vegan thread?? For the Kats on the fence about kicking that red meat habit??

Not really. In the beginning my aversion to meat was not so much the meat itself, it was what was being done to it by meat packers like injecting it with steroids, growth hormones and other harmful chemicals. Although I gotta admit back then there where times when seeing and smelling a slab of ribs or a plate of hot chicken made me want to rethink my choice. But persevere I did and over the years I just got to a place where the thought of eating animal flesh just seemed at times repugnant. Most people did not, and do not, feel this way and knowing that I rarely let it be known that I don't eat meat because on the few occasions I did I was met with insinuations that I felt my preference somehow made me superior to them. So to avoid that vibe in the future when I was asked why did I stop I just gave my stock answer that there's nothing wrong with meat, it's just what's done to it.

Over the years I've added that I don't know if giving up meat will add one more day of life but I feel reasonably sure the quality of that life will be better. So now if someone shows genuine interest I'll give personal examples of its benefits like my weight being within five pounds of what it was 20 years ago, below average blood pressure, low cholesterol, little evidence of artery clogging plaque, good digestion including regular and easy daily evacuation of the system (if you know what I mean) and a general sense of physical well being. So to sum up, nowadays when the subject comes up I just keep in mind no one likes being told what they should or shouldn't do, so I don't. I just answer as honestly as I can and say good luck. So good luck my man... :hmm:
 
So some of us have been looking at this for a few weeks now and have made contingency plans .At the moment we are seeking a forth person to devide a cow 4 ways ,about 125-175 lbs each person after being butchered . You will need a deep freezer .Lowes and Home Depot didnt have any deep freezers left in the state of Georgia. when I checked 2 months ago . if Interested hit me up on messages .
 
No ones loves eating meat more then me but it seems like a good interval to get away from eating so much of it if not all of it....eating so much could be the root cause of a lot of the illnesses in the Black community that along with a lot of other processed foods. Been testing out those meat subs and I have to admit they make the transition very easy taste wise, I just hope they are healthy.

It would be good to know the differences between all the meat substitutes. Anyone got a good link comparing the various brands / companies?

I switched to poultry and fish some years back with only the occasional meat dish. I eat Morningstar veggie sausage but would be nice to see what other meat substitutes are worthwhile.
 
It would be good to know the differences between all the meat substitutes. Anyone got a good link comparing the various brands / companies?

I switched to poultry and fish some years back with only the occasional meat dish. I eat Morningstar veggie sausage but would be nice to see what other meat substitutes are worthwhile.
supposedly you can make Jack fruit taste like pull pork

there's a root that supposedly can taste like fried shrimp
 
Yeah they are going to start switching out real meat for fake shit. I heard the Impossible brand is expanding to hundreds of stores. Say goodbye to Meat, poultry and eventually fish.
 
Right on, bruh!! Ain't nobody listening, bruh.. This shutdown has been going on for a few weeks and people are focused in on the covid19!! The whole farm system is slowing down..

they’ve had articles saying this for the last 3 weeks, all the other ones I read would say closed indefinitely but then when I’d read the article it would say they would be open back up in a few days after a deep cleaning

edit..I just read the article above and it’s saying the same thing I was saying the other articles in the past 3 weeks have said

To be sure, some plants have restarted after testing workers and improving conditions, and most Brazilian facilities are still operating. Another point to consider: There haven’t yet been big shutdowns in Europe. The European Union accounts for about a fifth of global meat exports, U.S. government data show.

Oh great now these idiots are gonna ransack all the carnivore delights in a few weeks cause of this.. I been slowdown on the beef and pork..but I need my poultry and seafood

yeah they shouldn’t have even put this report out, if there’s a shortage just let it happen. They’ve already seen that people are idiots with the whole toilet paper rush
 
supposedly you can make Jack fruit taste like pull pork

there's a root that supposedly can taste like fried shrimp

Safeway has the jackfruit pulled pork in their vegetable section.

I can't tell you if it tastes authentic, but it's pretty damn good.
 
Good!

That means less disease, less water and air pollution, and more land for housing humans
Not true.. Lot of those man made vegan meals still got unnatural suit in it that can fuck you up.. In fact I think they found out there's something negative in the beyond burger.. If it's mass produce and man made+ from America always know it's some funny shit going on with the process.. There's shit loads of land humans can live on.. hell I think it's been said that you could fit the world's population on 1 continent.. People don't realize how big earth is and land mass size.. It's just lot of greed goes behind human existence and they try to sell you wrong info in order to make profits.. Like the fact on how many people could get fed with all the amount of food we throw away.. Hell they just said in the article they slaughtered mad animals and just threw them away.. Think about that..you got perfectly good food and instead of passing it to the next man they just throw it away
 
In the end, the lesson big businesses will learn from this isn't that they should protect their workers more or even pay them better. The lesson they will take from this is:

1 For the worker/employee: Invest heavily in automation on farms, manufacturing/processing facilities and in stores ... ASAP!
2 For the customer/consumer: Invest in more self checkout kiosks, incentivize more paperless transactions, incentivize more online sales with delivery/pick-up (like they do in much of Asia and lots of Europe).

The day Tesla announces they are turning on full self driving is the day that nearly every job in the world can be replaced by a robot.

Yang, Sanders and Warren have it right. The world is changing faster than we ever thought it could, it is leaving more and more people behind and many of us either don't understand what that really means or they don't care because they think it won't touch/effect them. Drastic measures will need to be taken to keep people gainfully employed in the major disruptions that are about to change all of society worldwide for the better and the worse.


I don't think folks realize the scope of the changes coming down the pike. Automation and Climate Change will make this COVID-19 situation look like a walk in the park if we don't start reimagining what it means to be a citizen in the early 21st century. We're applying a 20th century lens to our ideas around the "social contract" and these changes are going to be more jarring than any of our previous industrial revolutions. Unfortunately our political and economic thinking hasn't kept pace at all with this new reality. I think we're in big trouble tbh.
 
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Not true.. Lot of those man made vegan meals still got unnatural suit in it that can fuck you up.. In fact I think they found out there's something negative in the beyond burger.. If it's mass produce and man made+ from America always know it's some funny shit going on with the process.. There's shit loads of land humans can live on.. hell I think it's been said that you could fit the world's population on 1 continent.. People don't realize how big earth is and land mass size.. It's just lot of greed goes behind human existence and they try to sell you wrong info in order to make profits.. Like the fact on how many people could get fed with all the amount of food we throw away.. Hell they just said in the article they slaughtered mad animals and just threw them away.. Think about that..you got perfectly good food and instead of passing it to the next man they just throw it away

The difference is that even the most unhealthy plant based products don't pollute our water table with manure. It also doesn't require animals to crowd into tight spaces and share infectious diseases which occasionally pass on to humans.

As for the land, it's estimated that the average meat eater needs 8 acres to produce the food they eat. The average vegetarian needs 3 and the average vegan needs only 1.

I completely agree with you about throwing away food. One of the flaws of capitalism is that any commodity which isn't sold becomes worthless. Same reason we have more empty houses than homeless people.
 
The difference is that even the most unhealthy plant based products don't pollute our water table with manure. It also doesn't require animals to crowd into tight spaces and share infectious diseases which occasionally pass on to humans.

As for the land, it's estimated that the average meat eater needs 8 acres to produce the food they eat. The average vegetarian needs 3 and the average vegan needs only 1.

I completely agree with you about throwing away food. One of the flaws of capitalism is that any commodity which isn't sold becomes worthless. Same reason we have more empty houses than homeless people.
it will just pollute our air more with pesticides, more consumption of those toxic chemicals, more over cropping which destroys the soil and land.. Just in case you didn't know there's a couple of fruit that's facing extinction due to rare plant type bacteria that destroys certain plants.. On the low low they are worried about the bananas future.. They just haven't sounded the alarm on it yet to the public but I read about it and the future not looking so bright.. That's just 1 of the crops that are facing extinction... Production has to increase if you push a plant base life cause you have to consume more plants cause it tends to be less filling than meat... If more healthier that means people will live longer which means more mouths to feed at a longer pace
 
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