Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Tainted-meat scandal leaves shortage of chicken

Brazil supplies nearly 40 percent of exports

- By TATIANA FREITAS, SHRUTI DATE SINGH and JONATHAN GILBERT

Where’s the chicken? That’s the question a number of the world’s biggest poultry importers could find themselves asking after slapping bans on shipments from Brazil, the world’s No. 1 supplier.

A food safety probe against some of the biggest Brazilian meat companies has prompted countries from China to South Africa to Mexico to place restrictio­ns on shipments from the South American nation. That might leave a major hole in the world chicken trade since Brazil accounts for about 40 percent of global exports.

What’s worse, Brazil’s meat scandal is coming at a time when avian influenza has surfaced in the United States, the second-biggest exporter of broiler chicken-meat. With nations including South Korea placing limits on American imports, the world could be left hungry for chicken if competitor­s can’t fill the void.

“It’s hard to say which country could fully replace a giant as Brazil in the world chicken market with the U.S. affected by bird flu,” Jose Vicente Ferraz, a director at Informa Economics Group-FNP in Brazil, said in a telephone interview from Sao Paulo. “I would venture to say there’s no country able to do that at the moment.”

Brazil was expected to increase its share of the global trade this year. Untouched by bird flu, demand for its products surged after outbreaks of the virus in Asia, Europe and the United States. China was expected to be the leading growth market, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e said in October. Instead, the tainted-meat scandal could mean damage to the country’s image as a premier meat supplier, Brazil’s Trade Minister Marcos Pereira said.

MEAT EXPORTS PLUNGE

The Weak Flesh probe launched by Brazilian police last week to investigat­e possible bribing of federal inspection agents to approve sales and exports even when the meat was spoiled has embroiled food giants BRF SA and JBS SA, the world’s largest meat producer. Both companies have denied the accusation­s.

The investigat­ion triggered importing nations to set limits on supplies. China, which combined with Hong Kong is the biggest destinatio­n for Brazilian chicken, has suspended meat purchases from the South American country. Saudi Arabia, the No. 2 buyer, ordered new inspection­s of meat shipments, while the European Union and Japan have also set restrictio­ns. Brazil’s meat exports plunged to $74,000 on Tuesday, compared with the daily average of $63 million, according to trade ministry data, a drop of 99.9 percent.

“The government is trying to show importers that this is an isolated episode, which affects a few plants,” Pereira said. “But, it’s possible that Brazilian meat loses value in world trade. We will work to make it as small as possible.”

In the United States, several cases of bird flu have been reported this month including in Tennessee and Alabama, one of the largest chicken-producing states. The outbreak has prompted nations including Japan, the world’s No. 1 broiler-meat importer, to place restrictio­ns on shipments from some areas. Together, Brazil and the United States make up two-thirds of the global chicken trade. The USDA had forecast exports would reach a record 11.4 million metric tons in 2017, with shipments from Brazil projected to reach 4.4 million tons.

Competing producers are hoping to help fill the void. Argentinea­n chicken producer Cresta Roja expects Brazil’s woes to help increase its shipments to export markets in Asia, Chief Executive Officer Santiago Perea said in a telephone interview. The boost could help the company reach its target of exporting 25 percent of production by June, up from 15 percent now, he said.

But smaller exporters might have difficulty competing from a price and volume standpoint, according to Will Sawyer, an Atlanta-based vice president of animal protein at Rabobank Internatio­nal. Cresta Roja produces 260,000 chickens a day. By comparison, BRF slaughters 7 million chickens a day in Brazil. JBS has a processing capacity of 5.7 million chickens a day, according to a presentati­on on the company’s website.

SUPPLY GAP COULD AID BRAZIL

The huge supply gap could force importers to lift some of their restrictio­ns on Brazil, said Ferraz of Informa. That’s especially true for buyers where domestic production has dropped amid bird-flu infections, such as China, he said. South Korea has already lifted its restrictio­ns on Brazil’s chicken imports after clarifying that allegation­s of tainted meat don’t affect the companies which export chicken to the Asian country.

Some importers “may be forced to regionaliz­e bans because their options are narrowing considerab­ly” to assure supplies, Heather Jones, an analyst at Vertical Group in Richmond, Virginia, said in a telephone interview. Countries such as China that imposed bans on all chicken from Brazil and the United States might have to create a patchwork of smaller exporters, she said.

There could be a similar squeeze in the global beef market, where Brazil is also the biggest exporter. Production in Australia, another major supplier, has been constraine­d by drought, and ranchers in the country are still working to rebuild herds.

 ?? SILVIA IZQUIERDO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A government worker shows a package of chicken in bad condition during an inspection March 20 at a supermarke­t in Rio de Janeiro. An investigat­ion is taking place into a scheme of meat adulterati­on, which involved some of the country’s largest producers.
SILVIA IZQUIERDO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A government worker shows a package of chicken in bad condition during an inspection March 20 at a supermarke­t in Rio de Janeiro. An investigat­ion is taking place into a scheme of meat adulterati­on, which involved some of the country’s largest producers.

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