Farmers and food companies across the country are throttling back production as the virus creates chaos in the agricultural supply chain, erasing sales to restaurants, hotels and cafeterias despite grocery stores rushing to restock shelves. American producers stuck with vast quantities of food they cannot sell are dumping milk, throwing out chicken-hatching eggs and rendering pork bellies into lard instead of bacon.
In part, that is because they can’t easily shift products bound for restaurants into the appropriate sizes, packages and labels necessary for sale at supermarkets. Few in the agricultural industry expect grocery store demand to offset the restaurant market’s steep decline.
Farms are plowing under hundreds of acres of vegetables in prime U.S. growing regions like Arizona and Florida. Chicken companies are shrinking their flocks, to curb supplies that could weigh on prices for months to come.
Mississippi-based Sanderson Farms Inc., which last week said demand from its restaurant customers was down 60% to 65%, has begun breaking eggs rather than hatch them and raise the chicks for slaughter. Other poultry companies are taking similar steps, meat-industry officials said.
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Sad with all the hungry people in the world
ReplyDeleteAnd as soon as this is over, I'm betting soon than later... will this cause a shortage of these products, causing inflation?
ReplyDeleteThe US Dollar is being inflated (printed).
DeletePrice inflation will follow.
What's wrong with freezing some of this stuff to save for leaner times?
ReplyDeleteSad with what the prices will go to also.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it a shame? We can't buy eggs in the grocery store yet the farmers are breaking them because they can't sell them! What's with that?
ReplyDeleteThey are different eggs.
DeleteWrite all the losses off !!!
ReplyDeleteHope there’s no food shortage or riots could break out.
ReplyDeleteSo much for let us " Eat Cake " they'll just toss out the ingredients for that too.
ReplyDelete