Houston Chronicle

Most grass-fed beef labeled ‘Product of U.S.A.’ imported

- By Deena Shanker

If you’ve eaten grass-fed beef in America over the past few years, chances are the cows weren’t raised in the U.S., even if the package has “Product of U.S.A.” printed on it. Meat giant Perdue Farms said it wants to change that.

As consumers seek out premium animal products, grass-fed beef is riding a wave of popularity, hitting $480 million in supermarke­t sales for the 52 weeks ending April 20. This represents 15 percent year-over-year growth, compared with the rest of the sector’s 3 percent uptick, according to data from Nielsen. Restaurant­s have also jumped on the bandwagon, with shipments from distributo­rs to independen­t and small chain restaurant­s increasing by 15 percent for the year ending in March, according to an NPD analysis.

Mainstream retailers such as Kroger, Walmart and Safeway carry it, and such casual restaurant chains as Panera and Chipotle made the switch years ago. But as appetites for more naturally raised beef have grown, so have cheaper imports. At the “finishing” phase of a cow’s life, raising grass-fed beef in Australia cost 59 cents for every pound gained, according to an April 2017 report on the market from Stone Barns Center for Food & Agricultur­e. For a large U.S. grass-fed producer, that cost rises to $1.55 per pound. For a small U.S. producer, it can be as high as $4.26.

Countries with four seasons of sunny, relatively temperate weather have a distinct advantage, since that translates into year-round grass and consistent­ly high-quality beef, something the American grass-fed industry has struggled to produce. Add in the scale of existing livestock operations in countries such as Australia and New Zealand and across South America, and foreign operators can sell their beef at a lower price.

Unsurprisi­ngly, less expensive grass-fed beef from these countries has been rolling into the U.S. for some time. By value, 75 percent to 80 percent of grass-fed beef sold in the U.S. comes from abroad, according to the Stone Barns report.

If you’re a U.S. consumer, you could be forgiven for being surprised. That’s because in 2015, the U.S. government repealed shortlived rules mandating “country of origin” labeling. It required nonprocess­ed beef and pork that was sold in retail to say where it was born, raised and slaughtere­d. Under current policy, meat products can come in from other countries and after being “processed” (which could mean simply cutting a large piece into smaller ones inside a U.S. Department of Agricultur­e-inspected plant) receive a “Product of U.S.A.” stamp.

Instantly, cows that spent most of their lives thousands of miles away suddenly become American bovines.

The labeling gets even trickier, since the designatio­n “grass-fed” doesn’t have an official USDA definition. Unlike anything with an organic seal, which requires adherence to more definitive USDA rules, calling beef “grass-fed” doesn’t require an on-farm inspection or even mandate that animals live freely on a pasture. Some “grass-fed” beef comes from cattle raised in grass feedlots, where they are confined in pens and fed grass pellets, according to Stone Barns. Other beef products are labeled “grass-fed, grain-finished,” a shorthand for the standard cattle practice of raising cows on grass for most of their lives and then fattening them up quickly at the end.

Thanks to vague and misleading labels up and down U.S. supermarke­t aisles, many Americans are already skeptical when they read claims on food packaging. Your mental picture of that magnificen­t American steer grazing in the shadow of the snow-capped Rocky Mountains? That’s a pickup truck commercial. The reality is that your steak probably came here in a container ship filled with frozen carcasses killed on the other side of the planet.

Now a company is looking to end this disconnect. Perdue — more famous for selling chickens than beef — announced Thursday that it’s building a market for grassfed beef that’s truly Made in America, even if it costs more than the imported kind. Led by Jeff Tripician, president of Perdue’s premium meat division, the company said it’s acquiring Panorama Meats, America’s largest producer of grass-fed, certified organic beef. The cattle are raised on 1 million acres of USDA-certified organic grasslands in Northern California, Southern Oregon, Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Colorado, Perdue said.

By joining with Perdue, Panorama will be able to cut distributi­on and processing costs and avail itself of Perdue’s long list of customers-from James Beard-award-winning chefs to major restaurant chains, including several that currently feature foreign grass-fed products on their menus.

This isn’t Perdue’s first foray into the premium meat market. Tripician came to the chicken giant as part of its 2015 acquisitio­n of Niman Ranch, known for its highend pork, and also worked at Coleman Natural Foods, which Perdue acquired in 2011.

For Perdue, an increased consumer focus on animal welfare has translated into higher sales. It was the first major chicken producer to get rid of antibiotic­s, and its organic business is growing fast, making up 1 million of its 13 million birds. Niman recently committed to doubling its farmer network over the next decade, and Coleman’s pork division alone reported a sales jump of more than 270 percent from 2011 to September 2018, from $30 million to $111 million.

While Perdue will help Panorama lower the cost of producing grass-fed American beef, Tripician said consumers shouldn’t expect lower prices. His grass-fed beef will still be a premium product.

For Niman Ranch, that extra revenue has translated into benefits such as more veterinari­ans, field agents and training. The strategy has paid off for the company as well, attracting more younger employees to a job demographi­c that’s been aging fast.

 ?? Dimas Ardian / Bloomberg ?? By value, 75 percent to 80 percent of grass-fed beef sold in the U.S. comes from abroad, according to an April 2017 report.
Dimas Ardian / Bloomberg By value, 75 percent to 80 percent of grass-fed beef sold in the U.S. comes from abroad, according to an April 2017 report.

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