Business Day

Slaughterh­ouses massacred by virus

- Jason Scott and Ainslie Chandler Canberra/Sydney

A coronaviru­s outbreak has shuttered a mutton-processing plant in southern Australia, in an echo of much broader closures in North America, but a top industry representa­tive said it is an isolated incident.

Cedar Meats, less than 10km from the centre of Melbourne, can slaughter, process and transport up to 10,000 units a day, supplying brands including Southern Pride Premium Lamb and Jimba Premium Lamb and shipping to places such as the US, EU and China, according to its website.

All workers at the Cedar Meats facility are self-quarantini­ng and the company is working closely with state health authoritie­s, GM Tony Kairouz said in a statement to radio station 3AW.

All meat processed from the facility is safe to eat, he said.

Kairouz was not available for comment when Bloomberg tried to reach him by phone.

A total of 19 cases detected on Sunday originated at the factory, bringing the plant’s total to 34, Brett Sutton, chief medical officer for Victoria state, told reporters on Monday.

The facility employs about 350 people, The Age reported.

“Meatworks are particular­ly vulnerable — we’ve seen from the US extremely large outbreaks in meatworks, in some ways because they are forced to work closer than in some other workplaces,” Sutton said.

After the Australian cluster was identified, the meatproces­sing plant moved to allow only essential workers who could deal with animal welfare issues, he said.

A top industry representa­tive said this was an isolated event.

“This is a single incident at a single site, and we are not seeing any broader implicatio­ns for the industry as a whole,” said Patrick Hutchinson, CEO of the Australian Meat Industry Council.

“It won’t have a major impact with regards to supply.”

The council says the industry employs more than 100,000 people directly.

There is some risk to the supply chain when any facility shuts down, said Commonweal­th Bank of Australia commoditie­s strategist Tobin Gorey.

“This is the first case I’m aware of in Australia, so alone it’s unlikely to have a big impact on consumers,” he said.

“And hopefully Cedar Meats can be back up soon — that’s been the US experience so far with similar issues.”

Australia has about 6,800 cases of infection by the new coronaviru­s with 95 fatalities, and Prime Minister Scott Morrison is expected to release detail of plans to lift social distancing curbs on Friday.

The daily growth of new infections has slowed to less than 1%, but there are concerns that clusters — such as in meat plants or aged-care facilities — could jeopardise a quick end to the lockdown that has closed large sections of society and pushed the country towards its first recession in nearly three decades.

In the US, meat plants have been forced to slow output as producers grapple with a loss of labour.

Social distancing measures in the country are also likely to keep output trailing normal levels even as facilities reopen under an executive order from President Donald Trump.

Outbreaks have led to slaughterh­ouses being retrofitte­d with physical barriers to keep workers safely away from each other.

US cattle slaughter dropped 37% last week from a year earlier, department of agricultur­e data shows. That far outstrips the 10%-15% of capacity that has been halted from meat plants being closed after coronaviru­s outbreaks among employees.

Hog slaughter was down 35%, also topping the shutdown figure of 25%-30%.

WE’VE SEEN LARGE OUTBREAKS IN MEATWORKS, BECAUSE THEY ARE FORCED TO WORK CLOSER THAN IN OTHER WORKPLACES

37% the drop in cattle slaughter in the US from a year earlier

 ?? /AFP / William West ?? Lean times: The Cedar Meats Australia abattoir in Melbourne remains closed after it was linked to a cluster of 34 cases of coronaviru­s infection.
/AFP / William West Lean times: The Cedar Meats Australia abattoir in Melbourne remains closed after it was linked to a cluster of 34 cases of coronaviru­s infection.

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