Eggs are available -- but pricier -- as the holiday baking season begins
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[November 26, 2024] By
DEE-ANN DURBIN, JOSH FUNK and MARK VANCLEAVE
Egg prices are rising once more as a lingering outbreak of bird flu
coincides with the high demand of the holiday baking season.
But prices are still far from the recent peak they reached almost two
years ago. And the American Egg Board, a trade group, says egg shortages
at grocery stores have been isolated and temporary so far.
“Those are being rapidly corrected, sometimes within a day,” said Emily
Metz, the Egg Board's president and chief executive officer.
The average price for a dozen eggs in U.S. cities was $3.37 in October,
according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That was down slightly from
September, and down significantly from January 2023, when the average
price soared to $4.82. But it was up 63% from October 2023, when a dozen
eggs cost an average of $2.07.
Metz said the egg industry sees its highest demand in November and
December.
“You can’t have your holiday baking, your pumpkin pie, your stuffing,
without eggs,” she said.
Avian influenza is the main reason for the higher prices. The current
bird flu outbreak that began in February 2022 has led to the slaughter
of more than 111 million birds, mostly egg-laying chickens. Anytime the
virus is found, every bird on a farm is killed to limit the spread of
the disease.
More than 6 million birds have been slaughtered just this month because
of bird flu. They were a relatively small part of the total U.S.
egg-laying flock of 377 million chickens. Still, the flock is down about
3% over the past year, contributing to a 4% drop in egg production,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
The latest wave of bird flu is scrambling supplies of cage-free eggs
because California has been among the hardest hit states. California,
Nevada, Washington and Oregon all require eggs sold in their states to
be cage-free.
“We’re having to move eggs from other areas of the country that are
producing cage-free to cover that low supply in those states, because
those states only allow for cage-free eggs to be sold,” Metz said.
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A woman buys eggs at a Walmart Superstore in Secaucus, New Jersey,
on July 11, 2024. (AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez)
Cage-free requirements are set to go
into effect in Arizona, Colorado and Michigan next year and in Rhode
Island and Utah in 2030.
Demand for such specialty eggs may also be contributing to avian
flu, which is spread through the droppings of wild birds as they
migrate past farms. Allowing chickens to roam more freely puts them
at greater risk, said Chad Hart, a professor and agricultural
economist at Iowa State University.
“It's really hard to control that interaction between domesticated
birds and wild birds,” Hart said. "Some of those vectors have been
opened up because we’re asking the egg industry to produce in ways
that we didn’t ask them to before.”
Metz said climate change and extreme weather are also blowing some
wild birds off course.
“We have birds that have been displaced by hurricanes, by wildfires,
and those birds are now circulating in areas that they otherwise
might not circulate or at times of the year that they otherwise may
not be circulating," she said. "And those are all new variables that
our farmers are having to deal with.”
Hart said the egg industry is trying to rebuild the flock, but that
also can limit supplies, since farmers have to hold back some eggs
to hatch into new chickens.
Still, there is some good news on U.S. poultry farms. The price of
chicken feed — which represents 70% of a farmer's costs — has fallen
significantly after doubling between 2020 and 2022, Hart said.
___
Durbin reported from Detroit. Funk reported from Omaha. Vancleave
reported from Minneapolis.
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