Tag Archives: Farmers

Elden Ring Players Are At War With AFK Rune Farmers

Image: FromSoftware

Elden Ring has a new rune farming strategy that revolves around hiding in seeminglyunreachable parts of the map until your opponent dies or gets bored and leaves. Now, players who just wanted a good old fashion PVP showdown are finding new ways to fight back. The results are entertaining and brutal, but will they be enough to stem the tide of Elden Ring’s latest exploit?

There are few things gamers love more than not actually playing and still getting rewarded for it. AFK farms remain all the rage, and Elden Ring, it turns out, is not immune. More and more players have recently reported getting dragged into PVP invasions where their opponent is MIA, and it’s pissing them off. Some are hopeful developer FromSoftware will eventually patch out the apparent exploit, but in the meantime players are taking matters into their own hands.

So how does Elden Ring’s latest AFK rune farm work? The most popular version involves heading to the First Step spawn where the game begins, and going over to the nearby cliff. From there, using their mount Torrent, players can double jump down to a lower ledge. They then use Furlcalling Finger Remedy followed by Taunter’s Tongue to lure invaders into their game, and keep their White Cipher Ring turned on to summon hunters to fight on their behalf. The result is that most opponents either 1) leave because they can’t find the AFK famer, 2) die trying to reach them on the side of the cliff, or 3) get killed by one of the allied hunters.

Another version of the exploit involves using Torrent to climb the tallest building at the Site of Grace. Because mounts can’t be summoned once PVP combat begins, it makes them basically unreachable by anyone else. For added security, some AFK rune farmers also like to use Mimic’s Veil to transform into an object that opponents can’t use auto-targeting to lock onto. As you would expect, YouTube is already flush with videos called things like “NEW 100 MILLION RUNE AFK FARM IN ELDEN RING!” and propagators of the technique say they’ve managed to farm over 1 million runes an hour. Others say the rate, even at very high levels, is closer to 100,000. But free runes is free runes, and more and more players are trying to get theirs.

But as the exploit has gotten more popular, so have ways to combat it. The Elden Ring subreddit is currently filling up with short clips of players using creative new strategies to kill the AFK farmers. One involves lunging off the cliff and then using Agheel’s Flame in midair to transform into a dragon and murder them on the way down. It’s also possible to use ballistas to knock them off the ledge or kill them outright. The Hand of Malenia katana has also proven effective. Because of its length and unique swinging animations, players can actually use it to navigate over to the ledge themselves without even needing Torrent.

As GamesRader points out, the result of these new strategies is that now in some cases it’s the AFK farmers who are getting farmed. “With my dragon breath strat and the physick I still keep all the souls and don’t have to go bother picking them up every time I die after killing the host,” wrote one player on the subreddit. “Have 50+ rune arcs just this morning in my invasions lol there’s a looooot of people trying this exploit so you can max out your inventory with arcs if you want to.”

Other players have started thinking even farther outside the box. “I’ve just been AFK’ing alongside them,” wrote another player on the subreddit. “I throw on a good movie or some funny YouTube vids and wait until I hear the sound of my free Rune Arc.” Elden Ring players are nothing if not committed.



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Another virus is soaring through the nation and it could impact many aspects of your life

FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – The resurgence of the bird flu has infected birds in at least 25 states and it could impact farmers, hunters and even your dinner options.

North Dakota just confirmed the first bird flu case within a backyard chicken flock in Kidder County but that doesn’t necessarily mean the virus just arrived.

“I’ve been getting reports for the last 10 days that have been seeing snow geese that have been either dead or exhibiting some kind of characteristics of a possible sickness so you have the test results and then you have what hunters are seeing out there on the landscape,” said Doug Leier, biologist at North Dakota Game and Fish department.

“With the migratory birds that carry this virus continuing to make it’s way across our state, we want to make sure that all of our poultry stays healthy,” said Beth Thompson, Minnesota state veterinarian and executive director at Minnesota Board of Animal Health.

Minnesota found five cases of bird flu just this last week, which means poultry producers have had to kill almost 350,000 of their birds to keep the virus from spreading.

Thompson says the federal government has financial protections in place for producers, but they’re not all the virus affects.

“In 2015, I think there was an impact to the grocery store to consumers both here in Minnesota and across the United States, I think that remains to be seen,” said Thompson.

But that hasn’t happened this time yet. There aren’t any known human cases yet either.

“From hunters and domestic poultry producers, it’s taking those proper precautions and remaining vigilant, it’s happened in the past and we’ll see what happens, we don’t know what the future holds,” said Leier.

Copyright 2022 KVLY. All rights reserved.

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Bird flu case forces killing of 5.3 million chickens in Iowa

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) – State agriculture officials say the confirmation of bird flu at another Iowa egg-laying farm will force the killing of more than 5 million chickens.

It’s the second case of avian influenza in Buena Vista County, about 160 miles northwest of Des Moines, but the outbreak confirmed Friday is at an operation with 5.3 million chickens.

The earlier case was at a farm with about 50,000 turkeys.

The latest case means nearly 12.6 million chickens and turkeys in at least eight states have been killed or will be destroyed soon.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the cases in birds do not present an immediate public health concern.

Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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2022 Farmers Insurance Open leaderboard: Will Zalatoris tied for Round 3 lead, aims for first Tour win

Saturday’s final round of the Farmers Insurance Open will put one of the game’s young stars squarely in the spotlight, as 25-year-old Will Zalatoris will play in the final group while seeking his first PGA Tour victory. The 2021 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year inserted himself into contention for Saturday’s final round by going 7 under on Friday to surge past names such as Jon Rahm and Justin Thomas.

Rahm and Thomas were tied for the lead at -13 with Adam Schenk entering Friday’s action. The trio played together in the final pairing, but ran into hiccups that opened the door Zalatoris and Jason Day to creep up the leaderboard to tie for first at -14. Rahm shot an even-par 72, but was +2 on his back nine after making the turn with the lead. He double-bogeyed the 10th hole and never generated momentum after that, finishing the day at -13 and one shot off the lead. Thomas fired a 1-over 73, while Schenk shot a 75.

In addition to Zalatoris, Day and Maverick McNealy both shot 65 to stand out during Friday’s action. McNealy’s 65 was highlighted by an ace and put him at -11 for the event — among a group of 12 players within three shots of the lead. Cameron Young had the day’s best round with a 64, but he remains on the outskirts of contention at just -8 for the event. Dustin Johnson is among a group of six players at -10 that could also produce a contender in Saturday’s final round. He recovered nicely from a double bogey on the 14th by birdieing two of his final four holes.

But the day truly belonged to Zalatoris, who finished tied for sixth at The American Express just two weeks ago. He holed out from 39 yards away for eagle on the second hole and never looked back as he completed a bogey-free day with four straight pars while the others around him scuffled. In the end, he was left in a tie for the lead as the final group walked off the 18th.

Rick Gehman and Greg DuCharme react to Friday’s third round action at the 2022 Farmers Insurance Open. Follow & listen to The First Cut on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

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Deadly avian flu found in NC; zoo closes aviary, poultry farmers on alert :: WRAL.com

— The North Carolina Zoo announced Tuesday it’s closing its aviary to visitors after wildlife officials reported a highly dangerous strain of bird flu has been found in the state.

A “highly pathogenic” and deadly strain of bird flu, carried from Europe by migrating waterfowl, has been found in 40 birds shot by hunters in North Carolina.

This strain of H5N1 bird flu is the same one that caused the biggest bird flu epidemic in history in Europe.

Wildlife officials have been ramping up testing of birds shot by hunters – and they found the virus in Hyde County late last month.

A major potential threat to North Carolina’s poultry

One major concern is the state’s poultry industry – and wild bird populations are also at risk. This deadly strain kills about 75% of birds exposed to it.

State veterinarian Dr. Michael Martin says the poultry industry learned a lot from the last US outbreak in 2015, when millions of birds had to be killed. He’s hopeful for a better outcome this time.

“We worked collaboratively with our industry partners on biosecurity plans, even before this virus came into our state. So we are much better prepared right now than we had been back in 2015,” he said.

State agriculture officials are urging anyone who keeps chicken or other birds to keep them indoors as much as possible for the next month, and to try to keep them away from wild waterfowl.

State wildlife biologist Joe Fuller says backyard songbirds are not at high risk – but rather scavenger birds like crows, buzzards and some hawks.

For now, he says, it’s safe to leave your birdfeeders out.

Should humans be concerned about transmission?

Martin says the virus is not of human concern at this time.

“There are no humans that have been identified in the United States that have gotten infected or sick,” he said. “And your food is safe. This is not something that is transmitted through food.”

When will the North Carolina Zoo reopen its aviary?

The zoo’s director of animal health Dr. Jb Minter says closing the aviary is a precautionary measure. Currently, none of the birds at the Zoo are showing any clinical signs of the disease.

“Closing the Aviary is a preventive, precautionary measure to protect all our bird species at the Zoo as the disease can spread very quickly and is often fatal to them,” he said. “The disease has so far only been found in a very few wild birds in North and South Carolina.”

The zoo will work with the N.C. Department of Agriculture and the USDA to determine when it can safely reopen the Aviary habitat.

The zoo will immediately test its birds that show any clinical signs of illness, which includes sneezing, coughing, lack of energy and poor appetite.

In addition, to protect all its bird species onsite, the Zoo has increased biosecurity for its staff, such as restricting only certain teams to work with the Zoo’s birds.

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India’s Farmers Call Off Yearlong Protest Against Hated Farm Laws

NEW DELHI — Harminder Singh said he was going home.

“This is proof of unity,” said Mr. Singh, 23, overlooking a group of farmers dancing to Punjabi tunes and others helping themselves to spoonfuls of milky rice pudding as the news came in.

After a sustained protest that forced one of the country’s most powerful leaders into a rare retreat, India’s farmers said on Thursday that they were ending their action, more than a year after they laid siege outside New Delhi in response to farm laws that they feared would destroy their livelihoods.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi stunned the nation last month when he announced that his government would repeal three laws that had been passed in September 2020 in an effort to overhaul the country’s struggling agricultural sector. At the time, he urged the farmers to go home, but they did not immediately do so, vowing to wait until the laws were formally done away with. Last week, Parliament made that happen, signing off on the repeal without debate.

The protesting farmers had other demands, and on Thursday they said Mr. Modi’s government had agreed, at least in principle, to discuss and resolve the major ones, including a countrywide law guaranteeing minimum prices for crops and a withdrawal of tens of thousands of charges filed against demonstrating farmers.

They were also seeking compensation for the families of people who lost their lives during the difficult conditions of a year of protests, such as from exposure to extreme temperatures, heart attacks and Covid-19.

“It’s a complete victory,” said Ramandeep Singh Mann, an engineer-turned farmers’ rights activist, wearing a pink turban. Yet he acknowledged that questions remained about whether the government would meet the additional demands, and who would be part of the government committee to discuss the guaranteed minimum prices. “In every movement, you don’t get everything,” he conceded.

Mr. Mann added that the fight for farmers’ rights was far from over, though the protest had been called off by farming unions and a majority of those involved would start returning to their villages as of Saturday. Mr. Mann said that some would continue to camp at the site until Jan. 15, when farmer organizations would gather once again to deliberate on the future of the movement. For now, he said, 85 percent of the people would start packing up and leaving.

“This is a long struggle, and we are capable of renewing our protest once again if needed,” he said.

The movement may have succeeded in calling attention to the desperation unfolding on India’s farms, but the battle is half won, experts say. Serious problems remain with India’s agriculture system, which incentivizes farmers to grow too much of the wrong kind of crops. Both sides recognize that something has to be done.

Devinder Sharma, an independent scientist and agricultural expert based in the northern city of Chandigarh, said the market-friendly laws brought in by Mr. Modi last year were described as an “agricultural revolution.” But, he said “the markets have never given farmers a rightful income. The market edifice we have created as an answer hasn’t worked anywhere in the world.”

At Singhu village, the main protest site in New Delhi, where farmers have camped through winter rains and sweltering summer heat, the mood was both triumphant and cautious.

Tractors fitted with loudspeakers blared songs of victory as a small section of farmers sat on the ground holding posters demanding guaranteed prices and justice for those who were mowed down in a horrific incident in the state of Uttar Pradesh.

Satnam Singh, a farmer wearing chains and locks across his chest in a display of protest, said he was going nowhere until the government decided to bring forth the law guaranteeing crop prices. “The protest is not over,” said Mr. Singh, 28, who said he had given up food for the last few days along with five others. “We will take this protest forward even if others return.”

Mr. Singh and his group of farmers pointed to the locks holding their chains. “MSP is the key to this protest’s end,” they said, using an abbreviation for minimum support prices.

Muhammad Jahangir, a 26-year-old student, appeared deeply suspicious of the government’s promises, saying committees were a way for Mr. Modi and farming unions to lead the protest movement astray. “Committees have never benefited farmers,” he said. “The farmer leaders want to move on to fight elections. Who cares about the farmers?”

Harminder Singh, the 23-year-old farmer, said he was proud that the movement had achieved what it set out to do in the first place: getting the laws repealed. “We will come back if we are asked to return,” he said.

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France detects ‘highly pathogenic’ bird flu outbreak – POLITICO

France has detected a “highly pathogenic” strain of bird flu at a poultry farm close to the Belgian border, the government said today.

It’s the first time since an serious outbreak last winter that the avian flu has been found in a French farm, the agriculture ministry said in a statement, although four cases have been found among wildlife and three in backyard poultry.

The virus is being analysed by the French Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety. All birds at the affected farm in the northwestern town of Warhem will be killed and a 10-kilometer surveillance perimeter has been set up, with all movement of poultry prohibited in the area.

Part of the circumscribed area is in the Belgian province of West Flanders. Belgium’s Federal Agency for the Safety of the Food Chain today adopted additional measures for the towns of De Panne, Veurne, Alveringem and Poperinge. Poultry farmers and private owners must keep birds caged, and poultry shows and markets are prohibited.

Consumption of poultry and eggs presents no risks to humans, the French ministry said.

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Inflation, farmers and the cost of Thanksgiving dinner

On top of spiking labor costs, the prices of fertilizer and fuel have been climbing for months, with no ceiling in sight. He says his profits are down 10% to 15% this year, and 2022 could be worse.

“It comes right off the bottom line,” Jones said. “If you double the cost of something, you can’t just double the crop.”

The US Department of Agriculture says the average dinner cost is up 5%, while the American Farm Bureau Federation claims that the increase may be as high as 14%. The AFBF’s annual survey shows price hikes on most Thanksgiving food, from potatoes to cranberries, as well as turkeys, which are nearing a record high cost.
While USDA data shows some farmers have seen the price they receive for their crops — like wheat — increase in recent months, it’s not consistent across the agriculture world. The USDA says many farmers aren’t currently making more money for their crops. And almost all are dealing with rising costs.

“My price is staying the same, or lower,” Jones said about his sweet potatoes.

The toll on farmers

“Farmers are price takers, not price makers,” said Patty Edelburg, vice president of the National Farmers Union. “People are paying a lot more in the stores, but what the farmers are getting has pretty much stayed the same or gone much more volatile … The middleman is really the one making the profit on this.”

In many cases, Edelburg said, processors and distributors who get food from the farm to store shelves are the ones currently passing along their surging costs to consumers. The USDA confirmed this as well. Many of those companies are dealing with their own supply chain problems, with materials and ingredients still stuck on cargo ships and a shortage of labor and truckers driving up wages and costs.

RELATED: Here’s why groceries keep getting more expensive

Most turkey farmers, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation, signed sales contracts for this Thanksgiving in the spring but are now getting squeezed by the same input costs as other farmers.

“The increase that we’ve seen in feed costs, fertilizer costs, transportation and gasoline — the farmer is paying all those increased costs, but they locked in the price they’re receiving for their turkeys,” said Veronica Nigh, senior economist at the American Farm Bureau Federation.

Rising operating costs

“To some extent, we’re also trying to pay for the uncertainty in the marketplace right now,” said Trey Malone, an agricultural economist at Michigan State University. “We’re in the middle of a perfect storm of unique events in agricultural production.”

Malone says farmers should prepare for several more months of higher costs on a huge range of inputs, including pesticides, seed, fertilizer, fuel and labor. Even farmers now receiving a higher price for their crops, he said, are being stretched by the rising operating costs.

In early November, Purdue University’s Ag Economy Barometer, which surveys American farmers, found farmer sentiment weakened for a third straight month, hitting its lowest level since the early months of the pandemic, driven largely by the rising input prices.

Some farmers are stocking up on expensive materials in case suppliers run out. Others are waiting, hoping the prices drop.

RELATED: Here’s when high inflation will come to an end

The supply chain price hikes, on top of already rising labor prices in recent years, are threatening Matt Alvernaz’s California sweet potato farm. He says the family farm typically profits more than $100,000 annually, but this year it could lose between $80,000 and $120,000. And the costs are only getting higher.

“We could potentially lose a quarter million dollars next year,” Alvernaz said. “We would not have enough cash to take into the following year, in order to get our operating loan to operate.”

Farmers are used to volatility, and both Alvernaz and Jones are now looking for ways to adapt, like downsizing or shifting to other crops.

“It’s going to worry you, but I’m not going to let it get me down. We will survive,” Jones said. “We just need to get a fair price for what we’re growing.”

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Indian farmers in no mood to forgive despite Modi’s U-turn on reforms

MOHRANIYA, India, Nov 19 (Reuters) – Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi may have caved in to farmers’ demands that he scraps laws they say threaten their livelihoods.

But reaction to the shock U-turn in India’s rural north, where Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) faces key elections next year, has been less than positive, a worrying sign for a leader seeking to maintain his grip on national politics.

In the village of Mohraniya, some 500 km by road east of the capital New Delhi and located in India’s most populous state of Uttar Pradesh, farmer Guru Sevak Singh said that he and others like him lost faith in Modi and his party.

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“Today Prime Minister Modi realised that he was committing blunder, but it took him a year to recognise this and only because he now knows farmers will not vote for his party ever again,” said Singh.

For the young farmer, the matter is deeply personal.

Singh’s 19-year-old brother Guruvinder was killed in October when a car ploughed into a crowd protesting against the farm legislation, one of eight people who died in a spate of violence related to the farmers’ uprising.

Thousands of agricultural workers have protested outside the capital New Delhi and beyond for more than a year, shrugging off the pandemic to disrupt traffic and pile pressure on Modi and the BJP who say the new laws were key to modernising the sector.

“Today I can announce that my brother is a martyr,” Singh told Reuters, weeping as he held a picture of his dead brother.

“My brother is among those brave farmers who sacrificed their lives to prove that the government was implementing laws to destroy the agrarian economy,” he added.

Around him were several police officers, who Singh said were provided after his brother and three others were killed by the car. Ashish Mishra, son of junior home minister Ajay, is in police custody in relation to the incident.

Ajay Mishra Teni said at the time that his son was not at the site and that a car driven by “our driver” had lost control and hit the farmers after “miscreants” pelted it with stones and attacked it with sticks and swords.

‘HOW CAN WE FORGET?’

In 2020, Modi’s government passed three farm laws in a bid to overhaul the agriculture sector that employs about 60% of India’s workforce but is deeply inefficient, in debt and prone to pricing wars.

Angry farmers took to the streets, saying the reforms put their jobs at risk and handed control over crops and prices to private corporations.

The resulting protest movement became one of the country’s biggest and most protracted.

Leaders of six farmer unions who spearheaded the movement in Uttar Pradesh and Punjab states said they would not forgive a government that labelled protesting farmers as terrorists and anti-nationals.

“Farmers were beaten with sticks, rods and detained for demanding legitimate rights … farmers were mowed down by a speeding car belonging to a minister’s family … tell me how can we forget it all?” said Sudhakar Rai, a senior member of a farmers’ union in Uttar Pradesh.

Rai said at least 170 farmers were killed during anti-farm law protests across the country. There are no official data to verify his claims.

A senior BJP member who declined to be named said the decision to repeal the laws was taken by Modi after he consulted a top farmers’ association affiliated to his party.

The politician, who was at the meeting when the party agreed to back down, said those present conceded the BJP had failed to communicate the benefits of the new laws clearly enough.

Leaders of the opposition and some analysts said Modi’s move was linked to state elections next year in Uttar Pradesh – which accounts for more parliamentary seats than any other state – and Punjab.

“What cannot be achieved by democratic protests can be achieved by the fear of impending elections!” wrote P. Chidambaram, a senior figure in the opposition Congress party, on Twitter.

But farmers like Singh warned that the government could pay a price for its treatment of farmers.

“We are the backbone of the country and Modi has today accepted that his policies were against farmers,” said Singh. “I lost my brother in this mess and no one can bring him back.”

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Additional reporting and writing by Rupam Jain in Mumbai; Editing by Mike Collett-White

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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For Britain’s chicken farmers, Brexit and COVID brew a perfect storm

DRIFFIELD, England, Oct 18 (Reuters) – When Nigel Upson checks the plucked chicken carcasses dangling from a rotating line at his poultry plant in England, he sees cash haemorrhaging out of his business from a collision of events that has distressed every part of the farm-to-fork supply chain.

Like food manufacturers across Britain, Upson was hit this year by an exodus of eastern European workers who, deterred by Brexit paperwork, left en masse when COVID restrictions lifted, compounding his already soaring cost of feed and fuel.

Such is the scale of the hit, he cut output by 10% and hiked wages by 11%, a rise that was immediately matched or bettered by neighbouring employers in the northeast of England.

Increases in the cost of food will surely follow.

“We’re being hit from all sides,” Upson told Reuters in front of four vast, spotless sheds that house 33,000 chickens apiece. “It is, to use the phrase, a perfect storm. Something will have to give.”

The deepening problems at Upson’s Soanes Poultry plant in east Yorkshire are a microcosm of the pressures building on businesses across the world’s fifth largest economy as they emerge from COVID to confront the post-Brexit trade barriers erected with Europe.

In the broader food sector, operators have increased wages by as much as 30% in some cases just to retain staff, likely forcing an end to an economic model that led supermarkets such as Tesco (TSCO.L) to offer some of the lowest prices in Europe.

Following the departure of European workers who often did the jobs that British workers didn’t want, retailers may have to import more.

While all major economies have been hit by supply chain problems and a labour shortage after the pandemic, Britain’s tough new immigration rules have made it harder to recover, businesses say.

Already a driver shortage has led to a lack of fuel at gas stations and gaps on supermarket shelves, while chicken restaurant chain Nandos ran out of chicken.

The Bank of England is weighing up how much of a recent jump in inflation will prove long-lasting, requiring it to push up interest rates from their all-time low.

MOUNTING PRESSURE

For the rural businesses situated near the flat, open fields of Yorkshire, Upson says the situation is dire.

Although he says he needs 138 workers for his plant, he recently had to operate with under 100. Staff turnover is high.

Richard Griffiths, head of the British Poultry Council, says that with Europeans making up about 60% of the sector, the industry has lost more than 15% of its staff.

When numbers are particularly tight Upson gets his sales, marketing and finance staff to don the long white coats and hairnets that are needed on the processing line.

“Three weeks ago the offices were empty, everyone was in the factory,” he said, of a business that supplies high-end birds for butchers, farm shops and restaurants. For the run-up to Christmas, he may look to students.

On difficult days Soanes can only deliver the absolute basics – chickens piled into boxes. They do not have time to truss the birds for retail or put them into separate, Soanes-labelled packaging that commands a higher selling price.

Around 3 tonnes of offal that is normally sold each week is going in the skip due to the lack of staff to process it.

The sudden rise in wages and the drop in output also come on top of spikes in the cost of animal feed, energy and fuel, carbon dioxide, cardboard and plastic packaging.

A worker processes chickens on the production line at the Soanes Poultry factory near Driffield, Britain, October 12, 2021. REUTERS/Phil Noble

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“We’ve just had to say to our customers, sorry, the price is going up,” Upson said, shaking his head. “We’re losing money, big style.” The poorest consumers would be hardest hit, he said.

Business owners have urged the government to temporarily ease visa rules while they do the staff training and automation of processes needed to help close Britain’s 20-year, 20% productivity gap with the United States, Germany and France.

But far from changing course, Prime Minister Boris Johnson says businesses need to cut their addiction to cheap foreign labour now, invest in technology and offer well-paid jobs to some of the 1.5 million unemployed people in Britain.

Upson says there is a shortage of workers in rural communities and with some 1.1 million job vacancies in the country, people can be choosy about which they pick. “Working in a chicken factory isn’t everybody’s idea of a career,” he said.

While 5,500 foreign poultry workers will be allowed to work in Britain before Christmas, and the UK will offer emergency visas to 800 foreign butchers to avoid a mass pig cull sparked by a shortage in abattoirs, the industry says it needs more.

As for automation, the production of whole birds is already highly mechanised, and while it could be used more for boneless meat and convenience cuts, the cost is prohibitive for a small operator.

The National Farmers’ Union and other food bodies said in a recent report that parts of the UK’s food and drink supply chain were “precariously close to market failure”, limiting the ability to invest in automation.

Soanes has an annual turnover of around 25 million pounds ($34 million). In the last three years its owners have spent 5 million on expansion. Now output must fit the size of the workforce.

TOO CHEAP

According to “Chicken King” Ranjit Singh Boparan, founder of the UK’s biggest producer, 2 Sisters, food prices must now rise.

“Food is too cheap,” he said. “In relative terms, a chicken today is cheaper to buy than it was 20 years ago. How can it be right that a whole chicken costs less than a pint of beer?”

Upson says he can get a higher price selling bones for pet food than he can for a leg of chicken.

For major producers, the main barrier to higher prices is often the purchasing power of the biggest supermarkets, which have since the 2008 financial crash battled to keep prices down for key items such as fruit, vegetables, bread, meat, fish and poultry.

Sentinel Management Consultants’ CEO David Sables, who coaches suppliers on how to negotiate with British supermarkets, said desperate food producers had already pushed through some price rises, and he expects another round to come in early next year.

With chicken a so-called “known value item”, of which shoppers instinctively know the cost, he said supermarkets would likely push the price rises on to other goods. He described the chicken sector as an “absolute horror show”.

One senior executive at a major supermarket group, who asked not to be named, said retailers were under pressure to “hold the line” on key prices, and that they all watch each other.

“If you see one of the big six move (on price), you can bet your damnedest others will take about 12 hours to follow,” he said.

Back in Yorkshire, Upson and others are praying they do. While he acknowledges Johnson’s desire to move to a “high-wage, high-skills” economy, he said not all jobs fit that bill.

“What skill do you need to put chicken in a box?” he asks. “We can put wages up, but prices will go up.” He is starting to despair. “Normally you can just be pragmatic and say, it will sort itself out. But I’m not sure where this one ends.”

($1 = 0.7277 pounds)

Writing by Kate Holton; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge and Jan Harvey

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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