Rare air: U.S. meatpackers try air cleaning tech after COVID-19
outbreaks
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[July 18, 2020]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Two of the world's
largest meatpackers said on Friday they have installed ultraviolet air
cleaning equipment in some U.S. plants, as pressure mounts on food
companies to protect workers amid growing concerns about airborne
transmission of the coronavirus.
JBS USA, owned by Brazil's JBS SA <JBSS3.SA> and one of four major U.S.
beef processors, said it installed "ultraviolet germicidal air
sanitation" equipment in plant ventilation and air purification systems
that use a specific frequency range of light waves to kill germs.
Tyson Foods Inc <TSN.N>, which produces beef, pork and chicken, said it
is doing extensive research on air flow and testing ultraviolet air
treatment systems across several plants.
It is not known whether such technologies kill the new coronavirus.
The moves underscore the mounting pressure to protect workers in the
U.S. meat industry, which has seen more than 16,000 plant employees in
23 states infected with COVID-19 and 86 worker deaths related to the
respiratory disease.
Plant employees and their families have said processors like JBS and
Tyson Foods told sick workers to show up at plants, and moved too slowly
to protect them with social distancing and equipment like masks.
As worker infections grew, so have meatpackers' legal problems. In one
case, the family of a Pennsylvania man who died from COVID-19 sued JBS
USA parent company JBS SA for failing to protect him at the meat plant
where he worked.
Low temperatures, which generally allow viruses to survive in the air
longer, and crowded working conditions have made meatpacking plants
global coronavirus hotspots.
In Germany, a COVID-19 outbreak forced meatpacking plants to review
infection risks posed by their cooling systems. One meatpacker had to
install high-efficiency HEPA filters typically used in hospitals before
being allowed to reopen on Friday.
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Employees walk around with face masks at the JBS USA meat packing
plant, which on Monday was closed after numerous employees tested
positive and two have died from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19),
in Greeley, Colorado, U.S., April 14, 2020. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton
The World Health Organization last week acknowledged "evidence
emerging" of the airborne spread of the novel coronavirus.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended
meat companies consider consulting engineers to ensure adequate
ventilation in work areas, but has not required changes to air
systems.
JBS told Reuters it also installed "plasma air cleaning technology"
in U.S. plants that uses bipolar ionization to neutralize
particulates in the air, including virus cells and bacteria.
The company said it is still collecting data on how well the air
treatment system works.
Some rivals are holding off. Privately held chicken company Perdue
Farms said it has not made any ventilation changes because it has
not seen scientific data that shows the virus is spread through
industrial air systems. Employees are wearing masks and practicing
social distancing for protection, according to the company.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago; Editing by P.J. Huffstutter
and Leslie Adler)
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