Business World

Tyson Foods will drop antibiotic­s in chicken

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TYSON FOODS will no longer use human antibiotic­s in chickens. The Arkansas-based company, the nation’s largest seller of chicken, is announcing today that it plans to eliminate the use of medically important antibiotic­s in its flocks by September 2017.

Antibiotic­s defined as “medically important” are those taken by people. The drugs are also used by livestock producers to treat and prevent disease in crowded pens and were extensivel­y used for many years to promote growth in farm animals.

Donnie Smith, Tyson’s chief executive officer, said in a press release that the company has already reduced its use of medically important antibiotic­s in broiler chickens by more than 80% since 2011. He said it is now “realistic to shoot for zero,” but added in an interview that the company would continue using those antibiotic­s as a last resort to treat sick chickens. “We are better off,” Mr. Smith says. “We have found that not only have we been able to reduce the need for antibiotic­s, we have better performanc­e along the way.”

Tyson’s announceme­nt comes amid growing concerns about antibiotic-resistant superbugs in people, a problem partially blamed on widespread use of the drugs in farm animals. That concern is leading more fastfood chains and consumers to opt for meat from animals raised without antibiotic­s.

Last September, for instance, Tyson competitor Perdue Foods announced that 95% of its chickens were reared without medically important antibiotic­s. In March, McDonald’s — a Tyson customer — became the latest chain to announce that it would serve chicken raised without antibiotic­s, playing catch- up with such rivals as Chick- fil- A and Chipotle.

Sales of antibiotic-free chicken increased by 25%, in dollars, during the 52 weeks ending Jan. 25, according to IRI, a Chicago-based market research firm. That represents about 11% of overall chicken sales. (Sales of organic chicken, which is, by definition, antibiotic-free, increased 33% during that period, according to IRI.)

But the latest data on antibiotic sales for food- producing animals, released annually by the FDA, continues to show increased use. Domestic sales and distributi­on of medically important antimicrob­ials — mostly antibiotic­s but also such drugs as antivirals and antifungal­s — increased by 20% from 2009 to 2013.

“All of these guys are making commitment­s, and that is fantastic,” says Avinash Kar, senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “In the next couple of years, we might see a reduction. But how much of one is an uncertain thing.” —

 ??  ?? CHICKEN PRODUCTS from Tyson Foods
CHICKEN PRODUCTS from Tyson Foods

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