Okay farmerson and anyone else on here who is a supporter of the ABP/CCA dream.
Why is it that everyone seems to agree that another packer in this province would be beneficial for the industry except for representatives from ABP?
In a meeting of industry groups last spring a question was raised by a group ready to purchase the ranchers beef plant and the "then" minister of agriculture asked for a unanimous show of support to bridge finance the project. At that meeting ---- the ABP blocked the opportunity. The only excuse at that time was that they feared that one of the big packers would pack up and leave the country or the packing industry in Canada.
Is that still the position of the ABP?
Because you still may have a chance to not only redeem yourselves, but turn the corner and do something that would actually change the industry for good. I do not know how much influence ABP or the CCA had in the WTO decision on COOL but I would suspect it is about as much as they have had on opening markets for Cargill and Nillsen Brothers in other continents. Not much!
We have another company ready to have a go at Balzac. Far more marketing homework done than any previous group including the ones who ran the plant for 14 months. Operational management that is already established in the value added sector. An opportunity to purchase the plant for less than 25 cents on the dollar. Enough cattle producers willing and ready to take a chance on value added alternative marketing to put up a $40.00 per head purchase levy to pay off a private OR MAYBE government backed bridge financing loan.
This is not a socialist idea and we are not asking for any more than Cargill and Nillsens other than a loan with interest - or a guarantee from the government for the purchase.
Does everyone realise that this purchase price is less than 20 million dollars.
We already have the rest of the money for operating in place and there is more than one entity ready to pull the pin on the 20 million dollar loan with their not so soft money. A government loan with a little softer interest rate would even make the project more lucrative than it is going to be, but support from groups like ABP might help and actually allow ABP/CCA to do something real and helpful for the entire Canadian beef industry beyond slapping themselves on the back for little victories that may or may not have had anything to do with them.
Why is it that everyone seems to agree that another packer in this province would be beneficial for the industry except for representatives from ABP?
In a meeting of industry groups last spring a question was raised by a group ready to purchase the ranchers beef plant and the "then" minister of agriculture asked for a unanimous show of support to bridge finance the project. At that meeting ---- the ABP blocked the opportunity. The only excuse at that time was that they feared that one of the big packers would pack up and leave the country or the packing industry in Canada.
Is that still the position of the ABP?
Because you still may have a chance to not only redeem yourselves, but turn the corner and do something that would actually change the industry for good. I do not know how much influence ABP or the CCA had in the WTO decision on COOL but I would suspect it is about as much as they have had on opening markets for Cargill and Nillsen Brothers in other continents. Not much!
We have another company ready to have a go at Balzac. Far more marketing homework done than any previous group including the ones who ran the plant for 14 months. Operational management that is already established in the value added sector. An opportunity to purchase the plant for less than 25 cents on the dollar. Enough cattle producers willing and ready to take a chance on value added alternative marketing to put up a $40.00 per head purchase levy to pay off a private OR MAYBE government backed bridge financing loan.
This is not a socialist idea and we are not asking for any more than Cargill and Nillsens other than a loan with interest - or a guarantee from the government for the purchase.
Does everyone realise that this purchase price is less than 20 million dollars.
We already have the rest of the money for operating in place and there is more than one entity ready to pull the pin on the 20 million dollar loan with their not so soft money. A government loan with a little softer interest rate would even make the project more lucrative than it is going to be, but support from groups like ABP might help and actually allow ABP/CCA to do something real and helpful for the entire Canadian beef industry beyond slapping themselves on the back for little victories that may or may not have had anything to do with them.
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