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Manitoba

'Worst scenario I've seen in decades' for Manitoba producers as demand disappears: Pork Council GM

Manitoba hog producers are reelingfromclosed slaughterhouses and empty restaurants, and losing money on everyanimalthey sell.

Closure of meat-processing plants hits pocketbooks of Manitoba pork, beef producers

A group of pigs stand in a shed behind a metal fence.
Pork prices are plummeting after the closures of both restaurants and meat-processing plants. (Nati Harnik/Associated Press)

Manitoba hog producers are reeling from closed slaughterhouses and empty restaurants, and losing money on every animal they sell, says a spokesperson forthe province's industry association.

"This is the worst scenario I've seen since probably 1998," said Andrew Dickson, general manager with theManitoba Pork Council.

Cases of COVID-19 at American pork-processing plants, including in South Dakota and Iowa,have temporarily closed facilities and slashed the number of hogs being processed every day by an estimated 60,000, Dickson said.

Thegrowing backlog has a rippling effectacross the industry.

Although there are more pigs, theremainingslaughterhouses facestunted demand because sales from restaurants and hotelsare drying up which, in turn, lowers the price on every hog.

A finishingpig thatcommanded$180 in January is now worth around $130, Dickson said.

It's even worse for theweanling pigs sold to producers in the United States.

"Today, we've got producers in Manitoba getting zero for the price of those pigs going into the United States."

Selling opportunities drying up

Dickson said some hog producers may pullback on production going forward, but that doesn't help them make money today.

"They're going to be losing significant amounts of money for every hog they sell."

Steinbach-area hog farmer Rick Bergmanntold a national news conference Thursdaythe stories from individual producers are bleak.

A grocer sorts his Canadian pork products at a grocery store in Cremona, Alta. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

And so is his own.It costs Bergmann $40 to feed each of the 800 piglets he sells to the United States weekly, but those hogs are suddenly worthless to the supply chain.

"This week, we had somebody call and say, 'Well, if you give them to us for nothing, we'll take them,'" he said in an interview.

Bergmannloses $32,000 on the transaction. He cannot sustain blows like that for much longer, likening the situation to calling for help while his boat takeson water.

The Canadian Pork Council, which he chairs, is pushing for an immediate stimulus for producers of $20 per pig.He said existing federal aid programs are inadequate.

In Manitoba, fully grown hogs are sold locally to HyLife Foods and Maple Leaf Foods, two processing companies still running, but adhering to physical-distancing protocols.

The union that represents more than 4,000 employees at the two companies isimpressed by their response to COVID-19.

"There are temperature checks, masks for each employee, expanded lunchroom spaces and staggered breaks at each facility," said Jeff Traeger, president of the United Food and Commercial WorkersLocal 832, notingneither company has reported a case of COVID-19 in Manitoba.

"They have been very proactive. As soon as there is an idea out there aboutways that they can protect their workers, our members, they've been very, very keen to implement those whenever they can."

Plexiglasdividers needed: UFCW

He saidthe companies areconsidering Plexiglas dividers, which Traegerexplained are difficult to install on the processing lines.They're needed, though, because workers are no more than a foot apart on the killing floor.

In the long run, a processing backlog in North Americamay result in less pork on store shelves, which may spike prices, he said.

The Retail Council of Canada said existing shortages of any meats are because of changing buying patterns, not supply problems.

"Grocery stores are dealing with all of the business that used to, in part, go to restaurants and hotels," said spokesperson John Graham.

"Individual stores are sometimes challenged to have the right amount of product on the shelves at the right time."

Beef producers are also in trouble. The closure of the Cargill plant in Alberta which processesroughly 40 per cent of Canada's beef due to aCOVID-19 outbreak has had achilling effect onlivestock producers.

"If they can't market their animals, they need to hold on to them, and that's an added cost to have to feed that animal on a daily basis," saidCarson Callum, general manager with the Manitoba Beef Producers.

Two beef cattle are seen in a pasture.
The closure of slaughterhouses has disrupted the supply chain for beef producers and it's brought prices downward, says Birtle, Man., producer Tyler Fulton. (Katerina Georgieva/CBC)

Manitoba Beef Producers is asking the federal government to reinstate theset-aside program, which compensates producers for feeding the cattle they hold back amaintenance diet. The program was first implemented during the BSE crisis.

The group says that would help people likeTyler Fulton, who raises cattlein Birtle, Man.

He recently sold heifers for 20 per cent less than the price he would have got a month earlier.

"That has direct impact on the cash flow," he said.

"It's going to impact the decisions we make on the farm."

With files from Laissa Pamou