Britain faces delivery delays, meat shortages

Published Tue, Oct 5, 2021 · 09:50 PM

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Bungay, England

TO UNDERSTAND the deep sense of anxiety Britons feel about the supply shortages afflicting the nation - and threatening disruptions to the Christmas dinner table - one need only travel to Simon Watchorn's pig farm, about two hours north-east of London.

In 2014, he was England's pig farmer of the year, with a thriving business. But this year, he said, the outlook for the fall is bleak.

Slaughter houses are under-staffed and are processing a smaller-than-usual number of pigs. There is a shortage of drivers to move pork to grocery stores and butcher shops. And there are fewer butchers to prepare the meat for consumers.

If the problems persist, Mr Watchorn, 66, may have to start culling some of his 7,500 pigs by the end of next month. Pigs grow about 15 pounds each week, and after a certain point, they are too big for slaughterhouses to process.

He said the last time he can remember things being this bad was during an outbreak of mad cow disease in the late 1990s. "It's a muddle," he said. "It's worse than a muddle, it's a disaster, and I don't know when it's going to finish."

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He is one of many producers of food and other goods warning of a daunting winter ahead for Britons. Shortages continued to bedevil the British economy on Monday as gas stations in London and in south-eastern England reported trouble getting fuel, and the government began deploying military personnel to help ease the lack of drivers.

Supermarket consortiums say pressures from rising transport costs, labour shortages and commodity costs are already pushing prices higher and will likely continue to do so.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, acknowledged on BBC Radio that there will shortages at Christmastime. He said the government was doing "everything we can" to mitigate the supply chain issues but admitted there was no "magic wand".

Mr Watchorn, who prides himself on running a farm where all adult stock live outside, is convinced that Brexit is responsible for the current distress, saying that the exodus of European workers from Britain had led to damaging labour shortages. The British people voted to break with the European Union to reduce immigration, he believes, without realising how damaging a cliff-edge exit from the bloc would be for businesses.

"They didn't vote for supermarket shortages," he said Sunday as dozens of pigs gathered around him to be fed. "They didn't understand that was going to be a probable, likely outcome."

Mr Sunak and other Conservative leaders say supply problems are a global issue largely attributable to the pandemic and not limited to Britain.

Indeed, businesses around the world are facing rising energy prices, product shortages, and labour shortages, but the challenges in Britain are acute, with many industries facing a shortage of workers - in part because of the pandemic, but also, many business owners say, because of stricter immigration laws that came into effect after Britain's exit from the European Union on Jan 1.

"We are desperately trying to find workers," said Jon Hare, a spokesman for the British Meat Processors Association, which estimates that Britain is short of about 25,000 butchers and processing plant workers. He called on the government to issue more short-term visas to foreign workers to help the industry with the transition outside the European Union.

The spectre of disruptions to the holiday season is particularly resonant in Britain, where Christmas isn't Christmas without traditional foods. And yet British meat producers say the dinner table could be lacking some of the seasonal specialities that people count on every December.

That includes pigs in a blanket (bacon-wrapped sausages that are different from the American version), glazed ham and Yorkshire pudding, which require additional labour to prepare, Mr Hare said.

A lack of truck drivers has also caused sporadic shortages for staples including eggs, milk and baked goods. One in six people in Britain said that in recent weeks they had not been able to buy certain essential food items because they were unavailable, according to a report by the Office for National Statistics, which surveyed about 3,500 households.

Over the weekend, the government said that it had extended thousands of temporary visas for foreign workers to work in Britain until the first few months of next year.

But economists said the temporary visas were unlikely to be enough to make much of a difference, since there are shortages at every link in the supply chain. NYTIMES

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