Copied From Minneapolis Newspaper
When
coronavirus outbreaks forced shutdowns at America's giant meat plants,
it quickly created a bottleneck: Farmers had nowhere to sell their
animals, while consumers faced shortages and surging prices. New,
smaller slaughterhouses could be the antidote to industry concentration,
but it's no quick fix.
Opening
a slaughterhouse has plenty of hurdles. The facilities -- where animals
are killed, butchered and meat is packaged into consumer-friendly cuts
-- aren't always welcomed by locals. And there can be other challenges
to finding the right location.
There
needs to be enough livestock produced nearby and easy access to
trucking routes, said Jeremy Robinson, who in March opened one of the
country's newest beef plants in Lone Jack, Missouri. He also had a hard
time finding workers in an area where few had prior experience.
"Training was intense," he said.
Then
there are local, state and federal regulatory requirements for zoning
and building. Even buying a defunct plant with a plan to revive it comes
with a set of headaches. Old slaughterhouses have usually been out of
commission for years, so updated permits are required. And the building
has to be refurbished and outfitted with new equipment.
The whole process can take years, and it's expensive, said Robinson, a managing partner of Republic Foods.
"In
a normal market, starting a plant for 300 to 400 cattle a day, you need
to be able to lose $4 million to get to profitability," he said.
The
pandemic laid bare how America's system of churning out cheap meat is
vulnerable to failure. Covid-19 outbreaks sickened thousands of workers,
while plant shutdowns left grocery store shelves empty. Federal
regulators and legislators have opened up probes to investigate industry
concentration. But it remains to be seen how quickly the supply chain
can change -- and whether consumers are willing to pay more for protein
that's produced under smaller economies of scale.
The
meat sector is dominated by a handful of titans-- Tyson Foods and its
top two rivals, JBS and Cargill, control about two-thirds of America's
beef. The picture is similar for pork and poultry.
Most
meat is produced in large, federally inspected plants. In January,
there were 835 of those facilities, down 52% from 1,741 in 1976,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Meanwhile, red meat
production surged almost 40% in that period to 55.1 billion pounds.
The
drop in facilities doesn't tell the whole story because just a handful
of plants today make up the bulk of production. In 2019, the 12 largest
plants accounted for 52% of the total cattle slaughter.
The
industry makeup not only can hit a huge chunk of supply when even one
plant is down, but also leaves farmers with few options for selling
their animals, which critics say gives the processing companies too much
power over prices.
"We
don't have this robust infrastructure of small, mid-sized processing in
this country," said Ben Lilliston, interim co-executive director of
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy. "It's been wiped out."
While
the biggest U.S. cattle plants can process more than 5,000 animals a
day, Robinson of Republic Foods says the sweet spot is closer to 500 to
1,000 head. That would ensure a fair market for local farmers, a plant
workforce that's not overloaded and that nearby restaurants and grocers
get fresh meat, he said.
There's movement underway to get more small plants running.
Congress
is considering amending the Federal Meat Inspection Act and Poultry
Products Inspection Act to make it easier for smaller processors to sell
their products. At the same time, Democratic Senators Cory Booker and
Elizabeth Warren have opened a probe into meatpacker price manipulation.
Meanwhile, the Justice Department has brought criminal charges in the
poultry industry just as it opened a formal probe of beef companies.
Breaking
up the big companies would result in more plants, more investment and
more slaughterhouses, and in turn, make the industry less susceptible to
widespread disruptions, said Christopher Leonard, author of the "The
Meat Racket." But it doesn't need to be a choice between the
"monopolistic industry" that exists today and a "Utopian idea of small,
local farming and backyard chickens," he said.
History
could be a guide to the change that's needed now. A century ago, the
U.S. sought to break apart a group of meat companies that dominated
output, paving the way for more competition and laying the groundwork
for the modern industry that lasted until rapid consolidation in the
late 1980s.
"These
monopolistic companies that have a stranglehold over the industry right
now are telling us change is impossible, but the industry underwent
really radical transformation over the last couple of decades and it was
just driven by a business plan and a strategy to boost profit at a
handful of companies," Leonard said.
It
takes about two years of construction and an initial investment of at
least $2.5 million to get a new slaughterhouse up and running, plus the
patience of dealing with government regulations and inspections, said
Joshua Applestone, owner of Applestone Meat Company in New York's Hudson
Valley.
"There's not enough people willing to take on the responsibility to do it," Applestone said.
Smaller
slaughterhouses can be better for workers. Since they handle fewer
animals per day, processing lines can run at slower speeds, helping to
eliminate some of the most dangerous aspects of the job. Slower lines
also allow for more social distancing. While some of the country's
bigger meat plants saw infection rates topping 50% for employees, not a
single worker at Robinson's Missouri plant has fallen ill so far.
There
are questions over whether Americans will be willing to pay more for
meat, since scaling down processing will almost certainly result in
higher costs.
Large
plants can typically operate for $100 less per head than smaller
operators, and those costs are taken out of farmer profits, said Stephen
Koontz, a professor at Colorado State University College of
Agricultural Sciences who's studied the economics of packing plants. If
farmers are paid less, they typically shrink the size of their herds
which results in higher meat prices for consumers, he said.
The
idea of having more smaller, regional processing plants doesn't make as
much sense economically as the current facilities, which were built to
maximize efficiency and economies of scale, said Mark Dopp, general
counsel and senior vice president of regulatory and scientific affairs
for the North American Meat Institute, which represents companies that
process the bulk of red meat and turkey products in the U.S., including
Cargill and JBS.
"Where
would you put them? Who's going to build them? Who's going to pay for
them, and who's going to run them?" Dopp said. "We've never had
something like this happen before. Should we be overreacting and
completely rebuild an industry based on this incident? I think the
answer is no."
And
the meat giants seem to have proven they can recover quickly from
crisis. After 30% to 40% of slaughter capacity was wiped out in April
and May, processing has bounced back. Cattle and hog operations are back
to about 98% of where they were this time last year, U.S. government
data show.
Still,
some farmers are facing a huge backlog of animals and they're eager to
find new plants where the livestock can get processed.
For cattle buyer Kim Ulmer, that has presented an unexpected opportunity.
He
didn't know anything about beef processing but wanted another option
for farmers. So Ulmer got a group of 14 investors together, lined up the
Dakota Prairie Bank and South Dakota Governor's Office of Economic
Development to bring an old plant in Fort Pierre, South Dakota, back to
life. They're hoping for a grand opening July 1.
Ulmer's
phone hasn't stopped ringing from retailers and restaurants, as well as
other would-be slaughterhouse operators who heard about the new
operation and want to replicate it.
"We're
trying to create a duplicable system," he said, adding that he hasn't
even advertised the new plant beyond creating a website. "They're
tracking us down by word of mouth."
No comments:
Post a Comment