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Packers Eyeing Cheaper Beef

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    Packers Eyeing Cheaper Beef

    U.S. team to inspect Brazilian meat plants



    by Pete Hisey on 8/16/2006 for Meatingplace.com



    A U.S. veterinary mission will visit Brazilian meat plants starting Wednesday and spend a month determining whether Brazil meets U.S. standards in slaughter and meat processing.



    The team will also visit a microbiology laboratory, along with the eight meat plants nationwide. At present, those eight are authorized to export meat to the United States, generally in the form of cooked, canned products. Fresh meat is banned because of the incidences of foot-and-mouth disease in Brazil's main livestock-producing states.



    The team plans to announce the results of its inspection on Sept. 12.

    #2
    Trading BSE for FMD eh?...Good job.

    Comment


      #3
      15444 quote "trading BSE for FMD eh?...Good job."

      Remember with NAFTA, everything that comes into the US has a straight shot north too...Once the packers get it in the US, and are allowed to slap on the USDA inspected label, it can head to Canada as US beef....

      You're probably already getting a good share of the processed beef if you have Campbells Soups or products in Canada- all their beef already comes from Brazil...

      Canada was only a little sidetrail on these multinational packers big road- and they're looking for bigger and better (cheaper) expanses...

      Comment


        #4
        Never said anything about doubting it is coming this way. Was just thanking your country for their wonderful progress in the future destruction of the North American beef industry. I'll just sit quietly in my chair until I hear the R-CALF alarm go off.

        Comment


          #5
          I don't think you can blame it all on the US...It appears to me that the Canadians sold out even bigger to the multinationals...At least in the states there are a few still fighting them and not giving them completely free rein.. It appears as tho most the Canadians not only just bend over, but buy the the vaseline...

          Comment


            #6
            The sad thing is the US and Canadian consumers are some of the last in the world that are forced to eat generic "Guess where it came from beef"!!!!

            _______________

            Brazil Beef Exports To US May Grow, 1 Plant Suspended-Reports



            Agriculture Online

            August 16, 2006



            SAO PAULO (Dow Jones)--In coming weeks, Brazil is likely to issue export

            licenses to three more meatpackers to ship processed Brazilian beef to the U.S.

            - a step which could boost Brazilian beef sales to the country as much as 15%

            to 20%, according to a press report in local Agencia Estado wire on Wednesday.



            Currently 20 plants have authorization to sell meat to the U.S., said Nelmon

            Oliveira da Costa, the director of the animal products inspection department at

            Brazil's Agricultural Ministry, according to the report.



            However, three more plants could be granted export licenses, pending the

            approval of a U.S. team of agricultural inspectors that arrived in Brazil on

            Wednesday to evaluate sanitary conditions at several of the country's

            meatpacking plants. They will be in the country until Sept. 12.



            In other news, however, the Agricultural Ministry on Friday temporarily

            suspended the export license of a Sao Paulo plant of the country's No. 2 beef

            exporter Bertin last Friday due to a complaint from the U.S. about the

            specifications of one shipment, according to local Valor Economico newspaper.



            The plant, which is located in the municipality of Lins in the interior of

            Sao Paulo state, will be visited by the U.S. team on Monday and Tuesday. If it

            passes inspection, the plant could return to exporting beef within 90 days.



            If the plant is excluded from the approved U.S. list of beef exporters,

            however, it may not be allowed to ship meat for a full year.



            However, Agricultural Ministry officials have said that the problem occurred

            during the shipment of the cargo, as opposed to at the factory.



            "It wasn't a loss of control of the factory process, but just a problem of

            logistics," said Nelmon Oliveira, according to the Valor report.



            Sanitary conditions at Brazilian meatpacking plants have been a trade issue

            between Brazil and the U.S. in recent months. Last year, the U.S. inspection

            team banned meat from plants of some of the country's major meatpackers,

            including a Sao Paulo plant owned by Friboi, a plant in Rio Grande do Sul owned

            by Pampeano, and a plant in Minas Gerais state owned by Kerry.



            After that, the suspension was extended to 28 Brazilian meatpackers, as the

            U.S. asked Brazil to revise its technical procedures as well as control systems

            for meat-processing.



            In 2005, the U.S. bought roughly $205.7 million of processed beef from

            Brazil. In the first seven months of this year, the U.S. has purchased $167.5

            million of the product.



            Brazil is the world's leading beef exporter.





            -By Grace Fan; Dow Jones Newswires



            agriculture.com

            Comment


              #7
              Good on ya - Willowcreek. What goes around comes around, the chickens always come home to roost"

              The only reason the US packers want ofshore beef is to gain stronger control of the home beef industry.

              Comment

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