Stung by pandemic and JBS cyberattack, U.S. ranchers build new beef
plants
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[June 17, 2021] By
Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. cattle ranchers
and investors are sinking hundreds of millions of dollars into new beef
plants after temporary closures of massive slaughterhouses at the start
of the COVID-19 pandemic left farmers with nowhere to send animals
destined to be turned into meat.
A cyberattack against the U.S. unit of Brazilian meatpacking giant JBS
SA that idled nearly a quarter of America's beef production earlier this
month again highlighted vulnerabilities in the country's meat supply
chain and caused more headaches for farmers.
Ranchers, as well as the U.S. Agriculture Department (USDA), say the
sector is too consolidated and therefore reliant on a handful of large
processors and their industrial meatpacking plants.
Four industry behemoths - JBS USA, Tyson Foods Inc, Cargill Inc and
National Beef Packing Company - slaughter 85% of grain-fattened cattle
carved into steaks, ribs and roasts for consumers.
Smaller startup meat plants are aiming to provide local ranchers with
more places to slaughter cattle, particularly those raised to produce
higher-quality beef. They say adding plants can ensure some meat
production continues if large facilities close.
When large meat plants close, meat supplies tighten while ranchers get
stuck with cattle that would otherwise have been slaughtered. That means
the price of cattle generally falls, while the price of meat in
supermarkets rises.
Extended shutdowns of some of the biggest U.S. slaughterhouses due to
COVID-19 outbreaks hobbled meat production in spring 2020, leading to
limits on consumers' purchases at grocery stores and a decline in frozen
inventories that processors have yet to replenish.
Rusty Kemp saw the need for more processing capacity after a 2019 fire
at a Tyson Foods plant in Holcomb, Kansas, left meat buyers scrambling
for supplies and cattle producers with nowhere to sell their cattle.
Then, the pandemic and ransomware attack on JBS hit.
Kemp is now planning to break ground on a $300 million beef plant in
Nebraska this fall.
"We thought the Holcomb fire was an absolute train wreck and then COVID
came along and Holcomb didn't seem that bad," he said.
Kemp's plant, named Sustainable Beef, will kill 1,500 cattle a day and
use blockchain technology so consumers can track a piece of meat all the
way back to the ranch, he said.
Sustainable Beef is co-owned by cattle producers who will provide
animals for slaughter to the plant, instead of to major packers, Kemp
said. He hired former executives of one of the biggest processors,
Cargill, as consultants because of their expertise.
But Kemp said he is not trying to pick a fight with the four major
processors and that bigger plants are still needed to produce large
volumes of meat.
"We absolutely need more capacity and more players," Kemp said.
MORE ROOM TO SLAUGHTER
Nationwide, at least five new processing facilities of varying sizes
have opened or are planned following supply shocks early in the
pandemic. Combined with expansions at existing plants, including one
owned by JBS, daily U.S. slaughter capacity is set to increase by about
5%, according to a Reuters calculation and data from industry group the
North American Meat Institute.
Market conditions are favorable for new entrants. Cattle supplies are
ample, while beef prices and profit margins for packers have soared due
to strong exports and demand from U.S. consumers.
In Butler, Missouri, Todd Hertzog and his family opened Hertzog Meat
Company this month after considering the project for five years.
Though the $3.75 million plant is only slaughtering about 20 cattle a
day, it serves nearby ranchers who want to produce higher-quality beef,
said Hertzog, who manages the operation.
[to top of second column] |
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//File Photo
"The pandemic opened our eyes to the needs of local producers," he said.
Production disruptions during the pandemic pushed Cliff Welch to begin
construction on a meat processing plant near Central City, Kentucky, at
a price tag of more than $1.2 million. The cyberattack on JBS then
reinforced Welch's decision to build the facility, slated to open in
late 2021, he said.
Welch aims to slaughter 75 cattle a week to start, with the capability
to eventually kill 300 head a week. He said he will produce custom cuts
of meat using "old-style butchery" and plans to sell it locally.
"I'm starting from ground zero," Welch said. "It's a big undertaking."
Welch said he received a $250,000 grant from Kentucky for the project.
The U.S. Agriculture Department has pledged to support increased
processing as part of a $4 billion initiative to strengthen the
country's food system.
"The hope would be that by spreading out, by creating diversity in size
and diversity of ownership and diversity of operations, we create
greater resilience," USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack told reporters after the
JBS attack.
Missouri last year paid about $17 million in grants to meat processors
with fewer than 200 employees that wanted to expand or build new
facilities, state agriculture director Chris Chinn said. The payments
doubled the amount of red meat inspected by the state in a program
sparked by the pandemic, she said.
"It added stability to our local communities and our rural areas," Chinn
said. "They didn't have to depend on one local source to get their
food."
SMALLER PLANTS, SAME PROBLEMS
Small facilities are finding they face some of the same challenges as
larger outfits, notably a labor shortage, without the benefit of a big
corporation behind them.
After opening in March, Missouri Prime Beef Packers struggled to find
workers for a plant in Pleasant Hope, Missouri, that now kills about 200
cattle a day, despite putting ads in newspapers and on radio, said
Dallen Davies, director of company culture.
The facility is slaughtering cattle raised under special guidelines,
such as being grass-fed or certified for humane handling, as a way to
add value for ranchers and provide a better product for consumers,
Davies said.
Plants need to differentiate themselves because they cannot compete with
industry titans on volume or on low prices achieved with mass production
lines.
Former President Donald Trump last year said he urged the Justice
Department to look into allegations the meatpacking industry broke
antitrust law because the price that slaughterhouses pay farmers for
animals dropped even as meat prices climbed. U.S. governors and
lawmakers are pushing the department to keep probing.
Those involved in slaughterhouse expansion say they still need to do
something to give ranchers more options in the meantime.
"We really don't want to wait around and see if the government is going
to solve this problem," Kemp said. "We decided to take matters into our
own hands and do this."
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and
Matthew Lewis)
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