In Wisconsin and Ohio, farmers are dumping thousands of gallons of fresh
milk into lagoons and manure pits. An Idaho farmer has dug huge ditches
to bury 1 million pounds of onions. And in South Florida, a region that
supplies much of the Eastern half of the United States with produce,
tractors are crisscrossing bean and cabbage fields, plowing perfectly
ripe vegetables back into the soil.
After weeks of concern about
shortages in grocery stores and mad scrambles to find the last box of
pasta or toilet paper roll, many of the nation’s largest farms are
struggling with another ghastly effect of the pandemic. They are being
forced to destroy tens of millions of pounds of fresh food that they can
no longer sell.
The closing of restaurants, hotels and
schools has left some farmers with no buyers for more than half their
crops. And even as retailers see spikes in food sales to Americans who
are now eating nearly every meal at home, the increases are not enough
to absorb all of the perishable food that was planted weeks ago and
intended for schools and businesses.
The amount of waste is
staggering. The nation’s largest dairy cooperative, Dairy Farmers of
America, estimates that farmers are dumping as many as 3.7 million
gallons of milk each day. A single chicken processor is smashing 750,000
unhatched eggs every week.
Many farmers say they have donated
part of the surplus to food banks and Meals on Wheels programs, which
have been overwhelmed with demand. But there is only so much perishable
food that charities with limited numbers of refrigerators and volunteers
can absorb.
And the costs of harvesting, processing and then
transporting produce and milk to food banks or other areas of need would
put further financial strain on farms that have seen half their paying
customers disappear. Exporting much of the excess food is not feasible
either, farmers say, because many international customers are also
struggling through the pandemic and recent currency fluctuations make
exports unprofitable.
“It’s heartbreaking,” said Paul Allen,
co-owner of R.C. Hatton, who has had to destroy millions of pounds of
beans and cabbage at his farms in South Florida and Georgia.
The
widespread destruction of fresh food — at a time when many Americans are
hurting financially and millions are suddenly out of work — is an
especially dystopian turn of events, even by the standards of a global
pandemic. It reflects the profound economic uncertainty wrought by the
virus and how difficult it has been for huge sectors of the economy,
like agriculture, to adjust to such a sudden change in how they must
operate.
Even as Allen and other farmers have been plowing fresh
vegetables into the soil, they have had to plant the same crop again,
hoping the economy will have restarted by the time the next batch of
vegetables is ready to harvest. But if the food service industry remains
closed, then those crops, too, may have to be destroyed.
Farmers are also learning in real time about the nation’s consumption habits.
The
quarantines have shown just how many more vegetables Americans eat when
meals are prepared for them in restaurants than when they have to cook
for themselves.
“People don’t make onion rings at home,” said
Shay Myers, a third-generation onion farmer whose fields straddle the
border of Oregon and Idaho.
Myers said there were no good
solutions to the fresh food glut. After his largest customer — the
restaurant industry — shut down in California and New York, his farm
started redistributing onions from 50-pound sacks into smaller bags that
could be sold in grocery stores. He also started freezing some onions,
but he has limited cold-storage capacity.
With few other options, Myers has begun burying tens of thousands of pounds of onions and leaving them to decompose in trenches.
“There is no way to redistribute the quantities that we are talking about,” he said.
Over
the decades, the nation’s food banks have tried to shift from offering
mostly processed meals to serving fresh produce, as well. But the
pandemic has caused a shortage of volunteers, making it more difficult
to serve fruits and vegetables, which are time-consuming and expensive
to transport.
“To purchase from a whole new set of farmers and
suppliers — it takes time, it takes knowledge, you have to find the
people, develop the contracts,” said Janet Poppendieck, an expert on
poverty and food assistance.
The waste has become especially
severe in the dairy industry, where cows need to be milked multiple
times a day, regardless of whether there are buyers.
Major
consumers of dairy, like public schools and coffee shops, have all but
vanished, leaving milk processing plants with fewer customers at a time
of year when cows produce milk at their fastest rate. About 5% of the
country’s milk supply is currently being dumped and that amount is
expected to double if the closings are extended over the next few
months, according to the International Dairy Foods Association.
Before
the pandemic, the Dairymens processing plant in Cleveland would produce
three loads of milk, or around 13,500 gallons, for Starbucks every day.
Now the Starbucks order is down to one load every three days.
For
a while after the pandemic took hold, the plant collected twice as much
milk from farmers as it could process, keeping the excess supply in
refrigerated trailers, said Brian Funk, who works for Dairymens as a
liaison to farmers.
But eventually the plant ran out of storage.
One night last week, Funk worked until 11 p.m., fighting back tears as
he called farmers who supply the plant to explain the predicament.
“We’re not going to pick your milk up tomorrow,” he told them. “We don’t have any place to put it.”
One of the farms that got the call was the Hartschuh Dairy Farm, which has nearly 200 cows on a plot of land in northern Ohio.
A
week ago, Rose Hartschuh, who runs the farm with her family, watched
her father-in-law flush 31,000 pounds of milk into a lagoon. It took
more than an hour for the milk to flow out of its refrigerated tank and
down the drain pipe.
For years, dairy farmers have struggled with
low prices and bankruptcies. “This is one more blow below the belt,”
Hartschuh said.
To prevent further dumping, farming groups are
trying everything to find places to send the excess milk — even lobbying
pizza chains to increase the amount of cheese on every slice.
But
there are logistical obstacles that prevent dairy products from being
shifted neatly from food service customers to retailers.
At many
dairy processors, for example, the machinery is designed to package
shredded cheese in large bags for restaurants or place milk in small
cartons for schools, rather than arrange the products in retail-friendly
containers.
To repurpose those plants to put cheese in the 8 oz.
bags that sell in grocery stores or bottle milk in gallon jugs would
require millions of dollars in investment. For now, some processors have
concluded that spending the money isn’t worth it.
“It isn’t like
restaurant demand has disappeared forever,” said Matt Gould, a dairy
industry analyst. “Even if it were possible to re-format to make it an
8-ounce package rather than a 20-pound bag, the dollars and cents may
not pan out.”
Those same logistical challenges are bedeviling
poultry plants that were set up to distribute chicken to restaurants
rather than stores. Each week, the chicken processor Sanderson Farms
destroys 750,000 unhatched eggs, or 5.5% of its total production,
sending them to a rendering plant to be turned into pet food.
Last
week, the chief executive of Sanderson Farms, Joe Sanderson, told
analysts that company officials had even considered euthanizing chickens
to avoid selling them at unprofitable rates, though the company
ultimately did not take that step.
In recent days, Sanderson
Farms has donated some of its chicken to food banks and organizations
that cook meals for emergency medical workers. But hatching hundreds of
thousands of eggs for the purpose of charity is not a viable option,
said Mike Cockrell, the company’s chief financial officer.
“We’re set up to sell that chicken,” Cockrell said. “That would be an expensive proposition.”
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