Weekend Times


The Times

Business News

What's causing Australia's egg shortage? A shift to free-range and short winter days

  • Written by Flavio Macau, Associate Dean - School of Business and Law, Edith Cowan University
What's causing Australia's egg shortage? A shift to free-range and short winter days

Australia is experiencing a national egg shortage. Prices are rising and supermarket stocks are patchy. Some cafes are reportedly serving breakfast with one egg instead of two[1]. Supermarket giant Coles has reverted to COVID-19 conditions with a two-carton[2] limit.

We became used to grocery shortages throughout the lockdowns of 2020 and 2021. These were due to changes in buying patterns, stockpiling and panic-buying. Eggs were temporarily part of this[3], along with flour, as people at home got baking.

Read more: Why flour is still missing from supermarket shelves[4]

But with lockdowns long past, what’s causing this egg shortage now?

News reports have quoted eggs producers blaming, at least in part, pandemic restrictions – because they reduced their laying flocks due to lower demand from restaurants and cafes.

That was the case in countries such as India, where misinformation about poultry[5] being a source of COVID-19 led to a sharp decline in demand. But in Australia, an initial 30% drop from hospitality[6] was compensated by a growth in retail sales.

What changed during that time was the way people got their eggs. Food delivery, food boxes and home cooking exploded for a time.

More fundamentally, this shortage reflects a long-term trend in egg-buying preferences, with a shift to free-range eggs, whose production is more affected by the colder, shorter days of winter.

Shifting to free-range eggs

Australians consume about 17 million eggs[7] every day. In the 2020-21 financial year, egg farmers produced about 6.3 billion eggs. Of those, 52% were free-range. This compares to about 38% a decade ago.

This growth, however, has not been consistent. Between 2012 and 2017, free-range eggs’ share of the market grew[8] about 10 percentage points, to about 48%. Growth in the past five years has been half that.

But with more rapid growth predicted, and the promise of higher profits, many egg farmers invested heavily in increasing free-range production. In New South Wales, for example, total flock size peaked in 2017-18[9].

Like many agricultural industries where farmers respond to price signals and predictions, this led to overproduction, leading to lower prices and profits. This in turn led to a 10% drop[10] in egg production the next year.

Compliance costs also increased. In 2018 the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission introduced rules[11] to police the marketing of eggs as “free-range”.

These rules mean hens need to have “meaningful and regular access” to an outdoor range during the daylight hours of their laying cycle (with a maximum density of 10,000 hens per hectare).

Australia's consumer watchdog introduced free-range egg standards in 2018.
Australia’s consumer watchdog introduced free-range egg standards in 2018. Shutterstock

This experience has likely influenced farmers’ reticence to increase their flocks based on predictions of higher demand.

Winter affects free-range production

Producing free-range eggs is more expensive not just because it requires more land. Free-range hens are less consistent layers.

Hens kept in cages or barns are more regular producers because conditions are optimised to stimulate laying. Temperatures are constant, and hens are exposed to 16 hours of light every day.

Hens kept in cages or barns are more regular producers. Yves Logghe/AP

Free-range hens are affected by hot or cold temperatures, wind and rain, and length of daylight. In winter months they have less energy and produce (on average) 20% fewer eggs[12] than a chicken confined indoors in controlled conditions.

Read more: National plan to allow battery cages until 2036 favours cheap eggs over animal welfare[13]

Pressures on farmers

The egg industry is flexible and adaptable – but the confluence of economic and environmental events in 2022 has made things difficult. Farmers will want to meet demand, but face time lags and cost pressures.

Increasing a laying flock takes about four months. An egg takes about three weeks to hatch. Under ideal conditions, chicks need another 17 weeks before they are ready to begin laying.

Any farmer who has begun this process in the past month will be producing more eggs by December. But then it will be summer, when they won’t need 20% more hens to make up for their winter slump.

Feed costs, which typically represent 60-70%[14] of layer production costs, have been increasing along with transport, electricity and interest rates.

So farmers must be cautious if they are to stay in business. It is preferable to undersupply than go bankrupt through oversupply.

Are farmers willing to invest in increasing production in an uncertain economic environment, with interest rates and costs going up and a recession on the horizon? Probably not.

So a short-term fix seems unlikely. Weather forecasts are not favourable. The Bureau of Meterology expects a wetter August to October[15], with “more than double the normal chance of unusually high rainfall”. That means less daylight and more cold. Blame the negative Indian Ocean dipole, not the chickens.

Come spring, with longer days and milder temperatures, along with an agricultural visa program, things should return to “normal”.

Read more: Eight cracking facts about eggs[16]

Unless consumers are willing to pay more to ensure a constant supply in winter months, our shift to free-range eggs carries a higher likelihood of winter shortages.

We must do what we have done through every disruption in recent times: endure, adapt and prepare for the next crisis.

References

  1. ^ one egg instead of two (www.smh.com.au)
  2. ^ two-carton (www.canstarblue.com.au)
  3. ^ temporarily part of this (www.9news.com.au)
  4. ^ Why flour is still missing from supermarket shelves (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ misinformation about poultry (www.rvo.nl)
  6. ^ 30% drop from hospitality (www.abc.net.au)
  7. ^ 17 million eggs (www.australianeggs.org.au)
  8. ^ grew (www.researchgate.net)
  9. ^ peaked in 2017-18 (www.dpi.nsw.gov.au)
  10. ^ 10% drop (www.dpi.nsw.gov.au)
  11. ^ introduced rules (www.accc.gov.au)
  12. ^ 20% fewer eggs (www.theguardian.com)
  13. ^ National plan to allow battery cages until 2036 favours cheap eggs over animal welfare (theconversation.com)
  14. ^ 60-70% (www.dpi.nsw.gov.au)
  15. ^ wetter August to October (www.bom.gov.au)
  16. ^ Eight cracking facts about eggs (theconversation.com)

Authors: Flavio Macau, Associate Dean - School of Business and Law, Edith Cowan University

Read more https://theconversation.com/whats-causing-australias-egg-shortage-a-shift-to-free-range-and-short-winter-days-188433

The Weekend Times Magazine

Why You Should Hire a Professional for Kitchen Designs

The design of a kitchen tells a lot about the residents of a house and that is why some homeowners take it seriously. If you are thinking about giving your...

Understanding the Power of Smart Home Automation in Modern Living

Technology is no longer confined to our pockets and workplaces—it has made a confident entrance into our homes. Among the most impactful technological trends reshaping domestic life is smart home...

Do we really want our kids drinking alcohol — when we’re told no amount is safe?

For generations, alcohol has occupied a strange, almost sacred place in Australian culture. It marks celebrations, lubricates social gatherings, and — whether we admit it or not — often serves...

What To Look For In a Robot Pool Cleaner

Robotic pool cleaners are a stunning feat of modern technology, allowing you to keep your pools clean with minimal effort on your part. Pool cleaning and maintenance has always remained...

Catch a Flight to Broome for a Tropical Adventure

If you’re dreaming of a getaway that combines tropical beauty, rich culture, and a sense of adventure, look no further than Broome. Tucked away in Western Australia’s Kimberley region, Broome...

When AEC IT breaks, It Rarely Looks Like IT

AEC businesses rarely lose time to one dramatic outage. What hurts more are the small, repeat delays that show up right when pressure is highest. The drawing set stalls, the...

Box Mixers launches at home cocktail mixers

Box Mixers has announced its new range of zero alcohol cocktail mixers, made from all natural flavours, crafted to make drinking cocktails at home simple and convenient. Designed to appeal to...

Why Car Sharing is dominating Car Renting

Sustainability, budget, urban living, lack of parking – these are just a few of the reasons that many people are choosing not to buy cars in today’s environment. ...

Heating and Cooling Services That Keep Your Home Comfortable Year-Round

Australia’s climate is unpredictable. Sweltering summers and chilly winters can make indoor life uncomfortable without the right temperature control. That’s why professional heating and cooling services are no longer a luxury...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink testpadişahbetgalabetNon GAMSTOP Casinosbeste online casinonon GamStop casinos UKNon GamStop Sitesjojobetonline casinos australiaonline casinosonline casino australiacasinos not on GamStopzlybrarypadişahbet günceljojobetjojobetbetgarantijojobetjojobetbetpark