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To: Snowshoe who wrote (92877)7/25/2012 6:55:33 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217588
 
Pork and chicken set to join luxury list

“Beef is simply going to be too expensive to eat. Pork is not going to be too far behind. Chicken is catching up fast,” said Larry Pope, chief executive of Smithfield Foods. “Are we going to really take protein away from Americans?”

By Gregory Meyer in New York

Pork and chicken will join beef on the menu of expensive meats as drought and US ethanol policy combine in a corn “disaster”, the head of the world’s largest pork producer has said.

The cost of the main ingredients in animal feed, corn and soyameal, have set records this month as the worst drought in half a century and extreme heat damages crops in the US, the world’s main surplus producer.

“Beef is simply going to be too expensive to eat. Pork is not going to be too far behind. Chicken is catching up fast,” said Larry Pope, chief executive of Smithfield Foods. “Are we going to really take protein away from Americans?”

Analysts inside Smithfield believe the US corn crop will yield less than 140 bushels an acre and possibly 130 bushels, which would sharply reduce harvest expectations at a time of scarce global supplies, Mr Pope said. The US government forecasts average yields of 146 bushels.

“I’ll use the word catastrophe – that’s my definition,” Mr Pope told the Financial Times in an interview. Meat producers feel immediate pressure when feed prices surge. New York-listed Smithfield’s hog production segment, which sold 15.8m head of swine last year, suffered lower gross profit margins as raw materials prices rose in the fiscal year ended in April. Smithfield shares declined 13 per cent in the month to Tuesday.

Are we going to really take protein away from Americans? - Larry Pope, Smithfield CEO

Mr Pope said the company has used futures to lock in feed costs “well into” the spring of 2013, He had to defend the position at a board of directors meeting June 18, before corn had jumped to a record $8 per bushel.

“I thought that $6 corn was end of the world,” said Mr Pope, who has worked at Smithfield more than three decades. “I never could have realised that I would be thankful to be buying it at $7.”

The world is braced for a repeat of the 2007-2008 food crisis as the worst US drought in 50 years pushes up the prices of staple commodities
Most analysts expect the livestock industry will respond to higher feed prices by culling pig herds. Mr Pope warned US meat prices will rise by “significant double digits,” or more than 10 per cent per year.

Like others in the livestock and poultry industry, Mr Pope called for the US Environmental Protection Agency to suspend the Renewable Fuel Standard, a congressional mandate requiring more than 13bn gallons of corn ethanol to be used in transport this year. The US Department of Agriculture estimates almost 40 per cent of the US corn crop is consumed by ethanol refineries.

“It’s almost a government-mandated disaster here, which is distressing,” he said. “The EPA has the administrative authority to waive this mandate. They ought to do it. They ought to do it now,” he said.

US agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack has said he opposes waiving the mandate, which is politically popular in corn-growing states. The Renewable Fuels Association, an ethanol industry group, said: “We firmly believe any official request of EPA to waive the RFS will be met with a swift rejection. The flexibility already provided under the RFS for obligated parties to be compliant is substantial. Taken with the availability of ethanol supplies and current production, there is no need or cause for EPA to act. The market will and already is rationing supply.”

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2012. You may share using our article tools.
Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.



To: Snowshoe who wrote (92877)7/25/2012 7:14:35 PM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Respond to of 217588
 
Star Trek strikes again... but the replicated food always leaves them wanting... I think I am glad to be living now..



To: Snowshoe who wrote (92877)7/25/2012 7:24:12 PM
From: elmatador1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217588
 
Flip flops are worn everywhere, but in Brazil, literally everyone wears Havaianas flip-flops.

Brazil's well-heeled socialites swear by them. Legions of slum-dwellers from the country's hillside "favelas" don them almost every day. Minimum wage earners behind juice bar counters use them, as do newly minted millionaires and, alarmingly, construction workers.

Havaianas now have a way of cropping up where you least expect them, from Paris' rarified haute couture catwalks to the red carpet at the Oscars.

The iconic flip-flops now rival uber-model Gisele Bundchen for the title of Brazil's most famous export. And though the word "havaianas" means Hawaiian in Portuguese, the flip-flops have come to be something of a symbol for Brazil itself.

ELMAT: I think even in Alaska they might wear them

Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/lifestyle/2012/07/25/brazil-half-century-havaianas/#ixzz21gC4klEl