Large chicken and restaurant companies, including Tyson Foods Inc
and McDonald's Corp, have raced to cut antibiotics from poultry
supplies as public health experts have warned about the link between
use of the drugs in farms and the rise of drug-resistant bacteria.
Antibiotic-free chickens made up an average of 40.5 percent of all
fresh U.S. production for the first 10 months of 2017, Sanderson
Farms Inc said in a regulatory filing. However, only 6.4 percent of
sales were for products sold as antibiotic-free (ABF), according to
Sanderson, the third-largest U.S. poultry producer.
The company declined to identify the source of the data.
Consumers of antibiotic-free chicken, which can cost more to
produce, mainly want breast meat and chicken tenders, Sanderson
said. Producers are forced to sell other parts of the bird,
including wings, against lower-priced meat from conventionally
raised chickens.
"Industry data indicate that the supply of ABF chicken is currently
significantly greater than demand for the product, and that
oversupply has increased," the company said in its filing.
Sanderson's assertion challenges a belief that the U.S. supply of
antibiotic-free chicken is not enough to meet demand. As recently as
three years ago, some poultry producers claimed that switching from
conventionally raised birds would be too expensive to stay in
business.
Sanderson is the only large U.S. chicken producer that has not
committed to limit the use of antibiotics, though it has a plan to
eliminate them if it is in the company's best interest.
Chief Financial Officer Mike Cockrell said in an interview on
Tuesday that proper antibiotic use was good for animal welfare and
gave the company a competitive advantage.
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"It allows us to produce product at a more affordable price point,"
he said.
Perdue Farms, which eliminated the routine use of antibiotics in its
chicken in 2016, does not know the source of Sanderson's data,
Perdue spokeswoman Andrea Staub said in an email. Demand is strong
for Perdue products, she added.
Tyson, the biggest U.S. chicken producer, did not respond to a
request for comment.
The market for antibiotic-free chicken is mainly limited to breast
meat, said Christine McCracken, animal protein analyst for Rabobank.
"All indications are that demand is increasing," said Austin Wilson,
program manager for activist group As You Sow, which is pushing
Sanderson to stop using certain antibiotics.
"Even if it's not currently keeping pace, it may catch up."
(This story has been refiled to add dropped word 'certain' as in
'certain antibiotics' in paragraph 14.)
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by Richard Chang)
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