Company cites drought constrained cattle supply, processing overcapacity.

September 14, 2015

1 Min Read
Cargill to sell Plainview, Texas beef plant site idled in 2013

Cargill has officially placed its idled Plainview, Texas, plant property up for sale. Dallas office of Commercial real estate broker CBRE has been retained by Cargill to market the site and evaluate potential offers. 

“For the past two-and-a-half-years we’ve closely monitored the cattle supply in the U.S., hoping for a faster recovery from the drought,” said John Keating, president of Cargill’s Wichita, Kansas-based beef business.  “We don’t see conditions in the Texas panhandle improving to the point where it would make sense to reopen our Plainview beef plant, especially with excess processing capacity remaining in the region.” 

The company said the plant was idled on Feb. 1, 2013, as the result of beef processing overcapacity in the region brought about by the area’s drought-diminished cattle herd, the impact of federally mandated Country of Origin Labeling on cattle supplies and the effects of the prior year uproar over finely textured beef (“pink slime”).

Beef processing overcapacity persists today and plant closures continue even as conditions have improved in some regions and rebuilding of the nation’s herd by cattle ranchers has started, the company noted.

A few years ago, the nation’s beef cattle herd dropped to the lowest number since 1951.  While U.S. cow herd expansion is underway, Cargill said rebuilding the nation’s herd is a slow process.

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