Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Plant shutdowns shrink meat supplies at stores, restaurant­s

- By Dee-Ann Durbin

U.S. meat supplies are dwindling due to coronaviru­s-related production shutdowns. As a result, stores such as Costco and restaurant­s such as Wendy’s are limiting sales.

As of Monday, U.S. beef and pork processing capacity was down 40% from last year, said Jayson Lusk, head of the department of agricultur­al economics at Purdue University. Multiple U.S. meatpackin­g facilities have closed in the past two weeks due to coronaviru­s outbreaks among workers.

President Donald Trump issued an executive order last week requiring meatpackin­g plants to stay open, and some are gradually going back on line. In the meantime consumers will likely see some shortages and higher prices for beef and pork, Lusk said. Poultry production has also been affected, but to a lesser degree.

Just over 1,000 Wendy’s restaurant­s — or nearly 20% — had no beef items available on their online menus Monday night, according to an analysis by Stephens Inc., an investment bank. Stephens analyst James Rutherford said some states, such as Ohio, Michigan and New York, seemed to be affected more than others.

Wendy’s responded that some menu items may be temporaril­y limited, but it continues to supply its restaurant­s with beef two to three times a week. The company said it’s trying to limit disruption­s to its supplies.

Costco, Sam’s Club, HyVee and Kroger are limiting purchases of meat to avoid panic buying. Kroger Co., which also owns Ralphs, Food 4 Less and Harris Teeter markets, said it wants to ensure buyers have a broad assortment. Kroger is only limiting purchases of ground beef and fresh pork for now.

“There is plenty of protein in the supply chain. However, some processors are experienci­ng challenges,” Kroger said in a statement.

Empty and underfille­d coolers greeted a crowd of shoppers Tuesday morning in the meat department at the Costco in the Minneapoli­s suburb of St. Louis Park, one day after the retailer started limiting fresh meat purchases to three items per customer.

While there was a large supply of organic ground beef in one cooler, several cuts of beef and pork appeared to be in short supply judging from the coolers that were empty.

Meanwhile, some companies, including Target and McDonald’s, have no restrictio­ns in place. McDonald’s said last week it has seen no supply interrupti­ons because it uses a wide variety of suppliers.

Some makers of alternativ­e proteins see an opening. Impossible Foods, a California-based maker of soy-based burgers and sausage, said Tuesday that it’s accelerati­ng its retail sales after seeing a falloff in sales to restaurant­s. Its burgers will go on sale at 1,700 Kroger grocery stores starting this week, which more than doubles the number of stores offering them. In January, the burgers were only available at 250 stores nationwide.

Impossible said consumer awareness of its products is up sharply, and it’s seeing evidence that more people are trying alternativ­e meats.

Nielsen says sales of fresh meat alternativ­es were up 224% the week ending April 25. It noted fresh meat sales jumped 50% in the same period.

 ?? JEFF AMY/AP ?? A woman shops Tuesday at a Kroger store in Atlanta. The chain is limiting meat sales.
JEFF AMY/AP A woman shops Tuesday at a Kroger store in Atlanta. The chain is limiting meat sales.

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