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  1. #1
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    FOOD RATIONING: British supermarkets Asda and Lidl now limiting the number of eggs cu

    FOOD RATIONING: British supermarkets Asda and Lidl now limiting the number of eggs customers can buy

    Monday, November 21, 2022 by: Ramon Tomey
    1,760VIEWS



    (Natural News) Two British supermarket chains have imposed a limit on the number of eggs customers can purchase.
    Asda and Lidl led the way with egg rationing, citing supply chain issues stemming from an outbreak of avian flu. Asda imposed a limit of two boxes of eggs, while Lidl limited customers to three boxes of eggs at a time.
    An Asda spokesman confirmed the rationing measures to the Daily Mail, adding that the company is “working hard with our suppliers to resolve the industry challenges which are currently affecting all supermarkets.”
    Meanwhile, a notice posted at one Lidl location went viral on social media. “Let’s keep enough for everyone,” said the notice, reminding customers of the three-box limit “to ensure that everyone has the essentials they need.”
    Waitrose said it has not introduced any limits on egg purchases, but continued that it is “continuing to monitor customer demand.”
    While Asda and Lidl imposed limits to the number of eggs shoppers can buy, four food retailers – Marks & Spencer, Co-op, Morrisons and Tesco – assured customers that no such rationing will be put in place in their stores. (Related: Tesco, the UK’s largest supermarket, begins cooking oil rationing amid supply disruption.)
    Sainsbury’s – the second-largest supermarket chain in the United Kingdom – imported barn eggs from Italy to solve what it called “some supply challenges.” The grocery has priced itself on using only free-range eggs.
    British Retail Consortium (BRC) Director of Food and Sustainability Andrew Opie acknowledged the rationing measures in an email to the Epoch Times.
    “While avian flu has disrupted the supply of some egg ranges, retailers are experts at managing supply chains and are working hard to minimize impact on customers. Some stores have introduced temporary limits on the number of boxes customers can buy to ensure availability for everyone,” he told the outlet.
    “Supermarkets source the vast majority of their food from the U.K. and know they need to pay a sustainable price to egg farmers, but are constrained by how much additional cost they can pass on to consumers during a cost-of-living crisis,” Opie added.
    Supermarkets – not avian flu – behind looming egg shortage

    Wales-based farmer Ioan Humphreys, meanwhile, told the Epoch Times that there will definitely be an egg shortage. However, he pointed to big grocers as the ones responsible for it.
    “There will be less [eggs], and farmers can’t afford to produce. There was bird flu last year and there wasn’t a shortage of eggs because we could afford to produce,” said Humphreys.
    According to the farmer, the mainstream media was “getting it wrong” by claiming that bird flu is to blame. “It’s the supermarkets not buying for a fair price which is the issue. They are taking things a bit overboard by rationing. It’ll create panic buying.”
    Humphreys explained that supermarkets are not paying farmers enough for the eggs despite increasing the price for the consumer. The price increase is not reaching farmers even though costs for producing feed, electricity and new chickens have gone up.
    Robert Gooch, CEO of the British Free Range Egg Producers Association, put in his two cents on the matter.
    “We have been warning for months that failing to pay farmers a price which allows them to make a profit would result in mass destocking or, worse still, an exodus from the industry.
    “Seeing Italian eggs on the shelves is a wake-up call to all retailers that they can’t expect farmers to work for nothing,” he added, referencing the move by Sainsbury’s to import eggs.
    Head over to FoodPolice.news for more stories about rationing in supermarkets.
    Watch “American Journal” host Harrison Smith discuss product rationing at supermarkets in Spain in the video below.

    This video is from the InfoWars channel on Brighteon.com.
    More related stories:

    Food shortages of meat, eggs, poultry, other commodities worsening in U.S. supermarkets amid new supply chain disruptions.
    ANOTHER fire devastates Minnesota chicken farm, killing tens of thousands of chickens that provide eggs for the food supply.
    Huge increase in food demand due to coronavirus sends wholesale egg prices skyrocketing 180%.
    Egg prices soar 47% year-over-year in July amid inflation and bird flu outbreaks.
    Government says “bird flu” responsible for rising egg prices.
    Sources include:
    TheEpochTimes.com
    DailyMail.co.uk
    Twitter.com
    Brighteon.com

    FOOD RATIONING: British supermarkets Asda and Lidl now limiting the number of eggs customers can buy – NaturalNews.com
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    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    How Europe's Energy Crisis Could Turn Into A Food Crisis

    TUESDAY, NOV 22, 2022 - 03:30 AM
    Authored by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,


    • Runaway energy inflation has taken a toll on European industry, but another threat is looming.
    • Europe’s two biggest fertilizer suppliers, Russia and Belarus have retaliated against European sanctions by cutting off fertilizer exports.
    • The fact remains that the global food chain, especially its European links, is not in a good place right now.

    Runaway energy price inflation has wreaked havoc on European industrial activity, with the heaviest consumers taking the brunt. Aluminum and steel smelters are shutting down because of energy costs. Chemical producers are moving to the United States. BASF is planning a permanent downsizing.


    There is, however, a bigger problem than all these would constitute for their respective industries. Fertilizer makers are also shutting down their plants. And fertilizer imports are down because the biggest suppliers of fertilizers for Europe were Russia and Belarus, both currently under sanctions.
    Both countries have retaliated against the sanctions by cutting off exports of fertilizers to Europe, and European officials repeating that fertilizer exports are not sanctioned is not really helping.
    Russia accounts for 45 percent of the global ammonia nitrate supply, according to figures from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy cited by the FT. But it also accounts for 18 percent of the supply of potash—potassium-containing salts that are one of the main gradients of fertilizers—and 14 percent of phosphate exports.
    Belarus is a major exporter of fertilizers, too, especially potash. But Belarus has been under EU sanctions since 2021 on human rights allegations, and unlike Russia, it has seen its fertilizer industry targeted by these sanctions. This has made for an unfortunate coincidence for Europe and its food security.
    “The value chains were incredibly integrated,” the chief executive of Norway’s Yara International, a fertilizer major, told the FT this week.
    “When you look at the map — where Europe is, where Russia is, where the locations for natural resources are — these chains have been created over decades. Even during the coldest parts of the cold war, these products kept flowing so business was running. And that all changed radically in the course of a few days.”
    Like with gas, although prone to acting before thinking, the EU has started looking for alternative fertilizer supplies. Morocco is one option, Euractiv reported earlier this month, as the country already supplies some 40 percent of Europe’s phosphate. This figure could even increase substantially.
    Central Asia is another option, and more specifically, Uzbekistan. Uzbekistan exports fertilizers mostly to Asia and some Middle Eastern countries at the moment, but this may well change after an EU-Central Asia ministerial get-together, which is taking place right now in Uzbekistan.
    So, on the one hand, local fertilizer production has been decimated by sky-high energy costs. On the other hand, sanctions have elicited a response from Russia that was probably not expected, although it should have been: exports have been slashed, leaving import-dependent Europe vulnerable to food shocks, and exposing yet another dangerous dependency.
    There does not seem to be an immediate solution to the problem, and there may not be for a while. Even if Europe finds sufficient replacements for all Russian and Belarusian fertilizer imports, its bill will swell in a way similar to its gas bill when it switched from Russian pipeline gas to LNG. And this will feed inflation
    The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, a sustainable farming advocacy, warned in a recent report that the world is “addicted” to chemical fertilizers. Advocacy aside, however, the report said that fertilizers are getting quite expensive.
    “G20 nations paid almost twice as much for key fertiliser imports in 2021 compared to 2020 and are on course to spend three times as much in 2022 — an additional cost of at least US$ 21.8 billion. For example, the UK paid an extra US$ 144 million for fertiliser imports in 2021 and 2022, and Brazil paid an extra US$ 3.5 billion,” it said.
    Of course, a big part of this inflation is due to energy cost inflation since fertilizer production is an energy-intensive process. The fact remains that the global food chain, especially its European links, is not in a good place right now.
    Russia continues supplying fertilizers to African countries, for example, but African countries haven’t imposed sanctions on Moscow. And Europe can’t really do a U-turn and remove sanctions because that will be the end of any reputation the EU has left.
    Someone who subscribes to the IATP’s argument that the world is dangerously addicted to chemicals might see an opportunity in this fertilizer crisis. The Dutch government may actually embrace it as it pushes for a 70-percent reduction of nitrogen emissions from farming—a push that ignited mass farmer protests in the country.
    Yet the recent events in Sri Lanka suggest that shaking off the fertilizer dependence might be unwise, especially if done suddenly. In this sense, the fertilizer addiction is as strong as the fossil fuel addiction some say humankind is suffering from. The silver lining is that a crisis prompted by overwhelming dependence on external suppliers could result in becoming less dependent on these suppliers, one way or another.

    How Europe's Energy Crisis Could Turn Into A Food Crisis | ZeroHedge

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  3. #3
    Senior Member Airbornesapper07's Avatar
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    if you haven't gotten it by now; the sociopaths in charge plan on starving humanity into submission

    so·ci·o·path
    [ˈsōsēōˌpaTH]

    NOUN

    • a person with a personality disorder manifesting itself in extreme antisocial attitudes and behavior and a lack of conscience.

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