Fifth-generation cattle rancher aims to build biggest U.S. beef plant
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[June 06, 2022]
By Christopher Walljasper and Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A fifth-generation
cattle rancher and consultant plans to build the country's largest beef
plant in South Dakota with capacity to slaughter 8,000 head of cattle a
day.
The $1.1 billion project could help address the Biden administration's
concerns about rising food prices and a lack of competition in the meat
sector, though it would not be up and running until at least 2026.
The project is spearheaded by Kingsbury and Associates and Sirius
Realty, both run by Megan Kingsbury of a South Dakota ranching family.
She told Reuters she expects construction on the plant to begin in 2023
and take three years.
The Biden administration and Congress scrutinized the beef industry
after COVID-19 outbreaks temporarily shut slaughterhouses in early 2020,
leaving ranchers with nowhere to deliver cattle and consumers facing
meat shortages.
Four big companies - Cargill, Tyson Foods Inc, JBS SA, and National Beef
Packing Co - slaughter about 85% of all U.S. fed cattle, according to
industry data. The administration has blamed a lack of competition in
the sector for rising food prices. Meat companies deny the accusation.
Kingsbury's project would slaughter around 1,000 more
cattle per day than the current top processor, a Tyson's plant in
southeastern South Dakota.
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Cargill employees trim beef at the Cargill Beef Processing Plant in
Schuyler, Nebraska October 10, 2013. REUTERS/Lane Hickenbottom
"That's the kind of investment the industry is going to need in the
coming years," said Derrell Peel, an agricultural economist at
Oklahoma State University.
But some industry analysts said the plant may struggle to find
labor, develop supply chain relationships from scratch, and be
profitable amid tighter cattle supplies.
Ranchers have reduced the size of the U.S. herd due to historic
drought and low profitability, leaving fewer cattle for processors
to slaughter.
Kingsbury said she is confident the new plant will overcome tight
cattle supplies and labor issues. The plant aims to employ 2,500
people and use advanced technology seen in Europe and Asia to
process beef with less labor, she said.
"We have to break the old mentality of the packing plant being a
sweatshop," Kingsbury said.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek and Christopher Walljasper; Editing by
Marguerita Choy)
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