Lawmakers Want Investigation of Lamb Processing Plant Acquisition by JBS

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At the 11th hour Senators and Representatives from Western States are calling on the Department of Justice to open an investigation into the acquisition of the Mountain States Rosen lamb processing plant by JBS USA. Montana Senator Steve Daines and Congressman Greg Gianforte said in the letter that, “This acquisition could have a major impact on sheep ranchers in Montana and their ability to get lamb to market, as well as result in an increase in lamb imports.”

The purchase of the Greeley, CO facility, that’s owned by 145 sheep producers from 11 states, was announced last week and could have significant long-term impacts on the nation’s sheep industry. Mountain States Rosen (MSR) is the second largest lamb packing plant in the country processing 350,000 lambs annually. MSR accounts for about 20% of the entire U.S. lamb market.

Mountain States Rosen filed for bankruptcy earlier this year, forcing the plant to be sold. JBS, a Brazilian owned meat packing company, has said they plan to use the facility as a value-added beef plant. Removing that processing capacity from the supply chain will leave the sheep industry with more lambs than there is ability to process them.

The purchase and potential conversion to a beef facility has created a lot of concern amongst sheep producers. The industry has already been hit hard by the recent trade disputes and the fallout from COVID-19. Lamb prices have fallen well over 30% in 2020 alone and many producers are dealing with drought conditions on top of all the challenges.

At this point the chief concern of the industry is that JBS may be attempting to buy market share and shift from processing domestic lambs to importing lamb. JBS is already the largest importer of lamb into the United States.

That fear has led many sheep producers to call upon lawmakers and the Justice Department to halt the sale of the plant. Set to be finalized on Friday, July 31st, sheep producers say the long term affects to the nation’s sheep industry must be examined.

Lawmakers from Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota and Utah joined together to send a letter to the Department of Justice to at least temporarily halt the sale. The Senators and Representatives commented in the letter that the DOJ must “demand that JBS cease from any irreversible actions that might harm the ability of American sheep ranchers to get their products to market until the Department can determine how best to protect competition in this significant part of America’s food supply.”

The letter says that “In addition to eliminating hundreds of jobs, JBS will eliminate a major domestic competitor in the region and could replace significant quantities of the American-raised lamb with imported products. Industry experts tell us that the lamb processing market does not have the capacity to absorb the lambs currently going to MSR.”

“Approximately 15-20% of the US Supply may not find a processor when they are ready for market. We are told that many of these family operated sheep ranches in the Western states may go out of business after this deal, costing the lamb industry potentially hundreds of millions of dollars per year.”

The letter was signed by Senators Steve Daines (R-MT), Mike Lee (R-UT), Mitt Romney (R-UT), Mike Rounds (R-SD), John Barrasso (R-WY) and John Thune (R-SD). From the House, Congressmen Greg Gianforte (R-MT), Dusty Johnson (R-SD), Liz Cheney (R-WY), Christ Stewart (R-UT), Rob Bishop (R-UT), and Devin Nunes (R-CA) signed the letter. To read the full letter click here.

JBS USA responded to Northern Ag Network with the statement below on the decision to acquire Mountain States Rosen:

“As a part of our continued commitment to invest in the city of Greeley, JBS USA made the decision to acquire the facility previously owned and operated by Mountain States Rosen out of bankruptcy through an auction process. Mountain States Rosen recently filed for bankruptcy in April and liquidated its assets, including the facility in Greeley.”

“We successfully bid for the facility during a bankruptcy auction on July 16 and anticipate closing in the coming days. While we acquired the facility and certain assets, we did not acquire the business. During this process, we proactively worked with Mountain States Rosen to ensure there would be no disruption to U.S. lamb producers as operations were discontinued. JBS USA offered to continue processing lamb for up to 90 days on behalf of producers, however we were informed by Mountain States Rosen this was unnecessary given the opening of a new lamb processing plant in the region this fall.”

“We intend to further invest in the Greeley facility and reopen as a value-added beef operation. This action does not eliminate hundreds of jobs, but preserves existing jobs while creating the opportunity for new jobs in our hometown of Greeley. In addition, all former Mountain States Rosen employees have been given the opportunity to apply for jobs with JBS USA.”

“The acquisition presents an exciting opportunity to provide value-added and premium, retail ready beef products to consumers in Colorado and across the United States.”

 

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Northern Ag Network

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Dan Simpson

Like it or not folks this is the way the free market system works. When a business fails to provide a product that consumers can stand to eat due to taste or smell they are free to go broke.

Government intervention will only make things worse.

Let jbs or anyone else bring all the fowl smelling and tasting fine wool lamb into America they want for they also are free to go broke.

Those producers that determine what their customers want and produce it will do well in our capitalistic free economy.

It is the job of government to keep the bureaucratic wolves from eating them with regulation and taxation.

Larry Olsen

There is a veal and lamb plant for sale in south holland Illinois that could harvest 1200-1500 lambs per day if you need information on the plant I can get you in touch with the owner my number 708-699-7889 email lamber28@aol.com

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