EU How many eggs can you send? U.S. asks countries to help lower soaring prices - I guess the US does need Europe for something after all…

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COPENHAGEN, March 14 (Reuters) - The United States has reached out to Denmark and other European nations asking if they can export eggs as Americans face surging egg prices, the Nordic country's egg association said on Friday.

The request from the U.S. Department of Agriculture coincides with a raft of new U.S. tariffs on countries, including in Europe, and the threat of more. President Donald Trump has also threatened economic sanctions unless Denmark hands over control of Greenland to the United States.

U.S. wholesale egg prices are shattering records as an accelerating outbreak of bird flu in laying hens slashes supplies. Trump promised to lower egg prices on his first day in office but prices increased 59% on a year-on-year basis in February, the first full month of his administration.

A letter reviewed by Reuters showed that a representative of U.S. Department of Agriculture in Europe had sent formal inquiries to egg producing countries in late February seeking information on their ability and willingness to export eggs to the American market.

"We're still waiting to get more guidance from Washington on next steps, but do you have an estimate of the number of eggs that could be supplied to the United States (assuming they meet all the import requirements)," a follow-up letter to the Danish egg association in early March said.

"Washington is trying to get an estimate of the amount they could feasibly source," said the letter, received last week.

The Danish Egg Association said they would look into it but that there is no surplus of eggs in Europe.

"There is a shortage of eggs everywhere on a global scale because consumption is increasing and many are affected by bird flu," he added.

The spokesperson said they had requested more details on the conditions of such an agreement, highlighting that egg exports to the U.S. were challenging due to regulations related to hygiene and other factors.

Turkey said in February it had started exporting around 15,000 tonnes of eggs to the United States.

U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins last month announced the plan to seek imported eggs as part of a $1 billion effort to combat the bird flu. The U.S. embassy in Copenhagen did not immediately reply to a request for comment. Reuters has also requested comment from the Department of Agriculture.

Reporting by Stine Jacobsen and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen; editing by Philippa Fletcher
 
Never forget that egg prices are high all because the Biden Admin went scorched earth over Avian Flu scares and decided the final solution was a Poultrycaust where 6 gorillion chickens were slaughtered and burned in ovens.
If they would have been burned in ovens they would at least served some niggers. Instead they put them in landfills.
 
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My question has always been who uses so many eggs where 8 bucks for a dozen is even that bad? Maybe if I made cakes and dainties at the pace of a British lady-pensioner I'd be pissed but a carton lasts my family 2 weeks unless I'm cooking something crazy.
 
A dozen eggs where I am have cost between 4-5 dollars for as long as I have been buying my own groceries (10 years). Not really sure where these sky rocketing prices have been occuring. I don't live near a bunch of farms either.
 
If Canada didn't have STUPID FUCKING commie Supply Management and strict quotas of Poultry and Eggs (as well as dairy but that's a whole other thing), we could help the USA out about this problem.
 
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Never forget that egg prices are high all because the Biden Admin went scorched earth over Avian Flu scares and decided the final solution was a Poultrycaust where 6 gorillion chickens were slaughtered and burned in ovens.
Mass killing the entire chicken population because one guy might have djed from avian flu has made me wonder about the Mooacaust in the 90s when they killed the European cattle industry because 200 people developed Creutzfeldt–Jakobs disease from 1980 to 2017

Wonder how many farmers killed themselves because their entire lifestock got put to the torch
 
Mass killing the entire chicken population because one guy might have djed from avian flu has made me wonder about the Mooacaust in the 90s when they killed the European cattle industry because 200 people developed Creutzfeldt–Jakobs disease from 1980 to 2017

Wonder how many farmers killed themselves because their entire lifestock got put to the torch
To be fair, vCJD is a horrifying wasting disease that has a high fatality rate. Bird flu is pretty much nothing unless you have no immune system.
 
Mass killing the entire chicken population because one guy might have djed from avian flu has made me wonder about the Mooacaust in the 90s when they killed the European cattle industry because 200 people developed Creutzfeldt–Jakobs disease from 1980 to 2017

Wonder how many farmers killed themselves because their entire lifestock got put to the torch
hell, back then the Canadian Government ordered a farm family (the Archers) to slaughter their entire herd of water buffalo around this time, even though there was no evidence of Mad Cow disease in ANY of them. Somehow they managed to negotiate being able to keep the calves, IIRC. Haven't heard anything about them since, though, so maybe they went under.
 
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Mass killing the entire chicken population because one guy might have djed from avian flu has made me wonder about the Mooacaust in the 90s when they killed the European cattle industry because 200 people developed Creutzfeldt–Jakobs disease from 1980 to 2017

Wonder how many farmers killed themselves because their entire lifestock got put to the torch
100% there is some lobbying from Big Chicken to try and bleed out the smaller chicken farms. All our nations need a look into the Big Agriculture lobbies and how they are fucking over small farmers in an attempt to increase their own profits and acquire more land.
 
My store sells organic cage free eggs for like $7.99. They rose like a dollar (Were $6.99 prior). That's a bit pricy, but nowehre near the "soaring" or "exorbitant" prices I constantly hear sperging about. Where is it coming from?

Eggs are going to go down as the supply increases, there was a culling of chickens and it takes about 2-3 eggs for egg laying chickens to reach the age to lay eggs.
 
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