2 Sisters – Covid-related recruitment campaign
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September 25
2 sisters raise one hundred workers to meet Covid-related demand
The British poultry company, 2 Sisters, will rent 100 other employees to a food factory in a position that has noticed the need to increase due to the Covid-19 virus.
2 Sisters stated that this decision is the result of “the evolution of customers’ purchasing behaviour in relation to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic”.
He said 25 new products will be developed and introduced in the coming months. Assets already produce classic British dishes, ready vegetables and fried snacks.
The new roles are located in several departments, ranging from device adjusters, line assistants, and line managers to production operators and preparation agents.
Some 1,250 more people are already painting on the site.
Sara Murphy, HR spouse. HH. de Cavaghan and Gray said: “The pandemic has actually played a role in the fluctuation of the call, but as the autumn and winter seasons approach, we are seeing the need for our products to take off. “
September 24
UK food control body disappointed by government’s new economic plan
The British Food and Beverage Federation (FDF) said Chancellor Rishi Sunak had not done enough to help the sector with his plan for the country’s economy and protect jobs in the coming months, which was announced today (September 24).
Responding to the announcement of the Chancellor’s winter savings plan, which replaces the licensing program with an employment program, FDF Ceo Ian Wright said: “The resolution to introduce the employment program and make VAT relief for the government’s hotel industry bigger goes far enough.
“The requirement that staff paint part-time to be eligible for assistance will not be enough for hotel corporations and their food and beverage suppliers – the hurried surroundings – through a complicated autumn and winter where pubs, bars and restaurants have significantly reduced the custom.
The pandemic has had a much greater effect on some sectors of the economy than in others, sectors that would continue to help millions of viable jobs once a vaccine is received and social distance can end. As existing restrictions continue, we will avoid long-term high unemployment and the destruction of a sector that could otherwise help our economic recovery once the pandemic is over.
“We urge the UK government to interact with the most affected industries about what else can be done with food and beverage corporations most affected by restrictions. “
September 23
Tesco boss tells UK buyers to panic when buying
British grocery truck CEO Tesco told consumers they don’t want to panic and buy despite new Covid-19 restrictions imposed by the country’s government.
Dave Lewis said there’s no need to load the pantry because the food is plentiful.
The British public has been informed to flee home where imaginable restrictions and new opening hours have been imposed in pubs and restaurants to prevent the spread of coronavirus amid fears of a momentary pandemic.
This has led some observers to recommend that we could see empty shelves in the supermarket with some consumers storing parts, as happened in the early days of the virus.
But Lewis told Sky News: “The message would be a message of comfort. I think the UK has realized how well the food industry has dealt with last time, so there are a lot of food supplies. “
“We just don’t need to go back to shopping out of panic, because it creates a tension in the source chain that’s not necessary. And as a result, we would simply inspire consumers to continue shopping normally.
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Uk takeaway market expected to fall as home work policy cuts demand
The UK takeaway market is expected to fall almost in part this year to 10. 8 billion pounds ($13. 7 billion) before “recovering” in the next 12 months.
September 22
Covid-19 reported at Pilgrim’s Pride plant in Cornwall
A British red meat factory that previously operated through Tulip Ltd. before the company acquired last year through the U. S. -based poultry processor Pilgrim’s Pride, has a “certain number” of Covid-19 boxes.
The assets in question are located in the town of Redruth, southwest Cornwall County, and produce bacon and ham.
A spokesman for Pilgrim’s Pride did not reveal the exact number of infections at the plant, but said in a statement: “There have been several cases shown of Covid-19 at our Pilgrim’s Pride food factory in Redruth, Cornwall. were discovered as a component of the enhanced touch search service established in collaboration with the Cornwall Council Public Health Team.
“Lately we are working with PHE [Public Health England] South West and Cornwall Council to conduct swab testing for all employees of the site. Any staff member who has tested positive is isolated for 14 days, as well as with positive cases. fully operational. “
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World GDP will recover in the third quarter of next year – OECD
The Organization for Economic Co-oron and Development hoped that global GDP would return to prepandemic levels until the third quarter of 2021.
In a new report, the OECD forecasts a 4. 5% decline in GDP by 2020 before reaching 5% next year.
The organization expects economic production to remain below grades until the end of 2019 in many countries. The report also notes that uncertainty “remains maximum and the strength of recovery in many variables, resulting in a scenario of ups and downs. “
The downs and down situation in the OECD is that global GDP has still recovered until the end of 2021.
“Customers for inclusive, resilient and sustainable economic expansion will have a variety of factors,” the report says. These come with “the likelihood of further virus outbreaks,” how Americans practice fitness measures and restrictions, customer and business confidence, and the extent to which the government maintains jobs and helps businesses stimulate demand.
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UK ‘should extend holidays in places to eat due to new restrictions’
The British Food and Beverage Federation, which represents food brands operating in the country, has asked the government to extend the holiday program to help the hotel industry, and industry suppliers, following the announcement of Covid-19’s new restrictions this afternoon.
Pubs, bars, restaurants and other welcome places in England should be closed for one hour at 10 p. m. from Thursday 24 September as a component of the LATEST measures through the UK government to control the spread of the virus.
Points of sale will also be just to serve consumers in ts.
By the end of October, the UK government’s coronavirus leave programme, which is helping corporations control workers’ wages in transition or leave, is expected to be completed.
“These new restrictions in the fragile hotel and dining area in the UK are a potentially fatal blow to brands that specialize in supplying the hospitality sector. Many pubs and cafes will not be profitable for the industry under those new regulations and will have to close again. , with new threats of forced closure due to local or national closures. These corporations and their suppliers are now under threat of wasting their lives,” said Ian Wright, FDF’s chief executive.
We inspire the government to pay attention to the recommendations of the Treasury Select Committee and a specific extension of the coronavirus task retention program for the hotel sector and its production chain. With a vaccine and an end to social estating, these “medium-sized enterprises” will be by extending their aid throughout this unprecedented but limited period, these corporations can play their full role in building a task-rich recovery beyond the pandemic, avoiding unnecessary economic damage from the closure of businesses and the scourge of long-term unemployment. >>
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A plant occasion in the year of London.
In the context of Covid-19, where the highest occasions are virtually positioned, Plant Based World Expo Europe organizers have announced the dates of a physical occasion in London next year.
The show, aimed at retailers, distributors, food service providers, entrepreneurs, investors and healthcare professionals, will feature Quorn, Just, OmniPork, Beyond Meat and Meatless Farm and will be located from 8 to 9 April at the Business Design Centre in London. Islington District.
The related convention program will allow visitors to participate in educational seminars designed to “demonstrate the advertising strength of the plant industry. “
Jonathan Morley, Organizer Managing Director of JD Events, said: “It is incredibly exciting to officially announce the world’s first plant-based exhibition in Europe. The plant sector is developing at such immediate speed and we are proud of it. They constitute the industry with the only committed B2B occasion in Europe. “
The Business Design Center has established a “comprehensive regimen” following the recommendations of Public Health England. This includes restricting the number of other people in your convention rooms, cleaning processes, thermal imaging detection on arrival, and setting up a new air system. .
September 21st
British baker Finsbury awaits explanation of Covid and Brexit before resuming their monetary forecasts
Finsbury Food Group, the UK bakery company, still refrains from offering monetary recommendations until a clearer picture emerges of Covid-19’s trajectory and the final results of the industry’s negotiations with Europe on a Brexit agreement.
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Column: How U. S. brands can take advantage of the switch to internal intake [free reading]
After years of gains for food service in the United States, Covid-19 has stimulated demand for food to eat at home. How can packaged food corporations deliver these long-term benefits?American columnist Victor Martino reports.
september 18
Mademoiselle Desserts from France invests to meet post-Covid demand
Mademoiselle Desserts Group, the French supplier of frozen bakery products, plans to spend 30 million euros ($35. 5 million) over the next 18 months to develop its production capacity.
The organization said it is now making a cash investment to be able to meet the expected build-up in the call for when the Covid-19 crisis ends.
September 17
UK and beverage mergers and acquisitions fall dramatically
Recent studies through London-based consultancy Oghma Partners have revealed that food and beverage mergers and acquisitions in the UK have declined, particularly during the Covid period.
He said that from the beginning of the year, until the end of the tertiary moment, the volume of transactions had decreased by more than 50% on an annual basis and Oghma expects it to be reduced by between 40% and 50% for the total. Year.
However, he stated that it “anecdotally sees a recovery in activity due to long queues,” but that it will lead to year-over-year improvement before the time of the quarter of 2021.
For the era from May to August 2020, the total volume of transactions (15 transactions) remained particularly below the same era in 2019 (37 transactions).
“The 59. 5% drop in transaction volume is a big surprise as we continue to see difficult situations for mergers and acquisitions in the UK food and beverage market,” Oghma said.
The total transaction price for the second quarter of 2020 was estimated at approximately GBP 350 million (USD 453. 2 million), which is particularly lower than the same time in 2019, when the total transaction price was estimated at approximately GBP 1. 2 billion.
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US Frozen Food Company Overhill Farms Prepares for Covid Fine
Overhill Farms, the U. S. supplier of frozen products, is fined in California for allegedly failing Covid-19 staff.
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Greenyard Increases Annual Profit Forecast As Covid Sales Increase
Belgian fruit and vegetable supplier Greenyard raised its year-round profit forecast in an ad update (September 17) after recording a third consecutive quarter of sales growth.
september 16
Covid-19: U. S. manufacturers talk about trade, economy and consumers
U. S. grocery suppliers in the U. S. But it’s not the first time They may have benefited greatly from Covid’s drive, but with the effect of the virus on fitness and the economy still being felt, we asked 4 what they think of trade. This room is also loose to read.
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China bans imports from OK Foods factory in the US. But it’s not the first time
China has banned imports from a meat factory in the United States owned by OK Foods.
This is when U. S. corporations will be affected by such a ban as a result of China avoiding the spread of the Covid-19 virus. Imports from a Tyson Foods plant in Springdale, Arkansas, were blocked in June.
The Reuters agency, bringing out US poultry.
OK Foods is owned by Industrias Bachoco de México.
In a distributed appointment, THE President of the United States.
OK Foods did not respond to requests for comment, US media reported.
September 15
Covid-19: U. S. manufacturers talk about trade, economy and consumers
U. S. grocery suppliers in the U. S. But it’s not the first time Possibly they would have been largely stimulated through Covid-19, but with the virus still causing uncertainty and fear about the economy, we asked a brand organization what idea they had of the industry and the prospects of its business.
September 14
JBS faces a US fine. But it’s not the first time On accusations of Covid’s physical fitness and protection failures
Brazilian JBS meat is expected to be fined US$15,615 in the US. But it’s not the first time For fitness and protection violations similar to Covid-19 at his plant in Greeley, Colorado.
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New report highlights tensions over UK and Covid-19 pubs
A report in the UK says almost a quarter of pubs remained closed at the end of August due to the pandemic, the worst-case scenario for restaurants, with the entry into force of new social estating measures (14 September).
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Nomad Foods sees Covid outbreak in British factory
Nomad Foods has noticed an outbreak of Covid-19 among workers at one of its British plants.
The cases were shown in a factory through her Yorkshire roast potato and pudding business, Aunt Bessie’s in Hull, England, has been widely reported.
These reports say the number of staff affected has been revealed, but Aunt Bessie has shown that a “small number” of her staff has been isolated after receiving the results.
Hull Live suggests that a first worker tell bosses they weren’t feeling well last Thursday (September 10), the day before a user showed symptoms.
The plant employs about 250 more people and produces 900 million Yorkshire puddings a year.
In a message sent to just food, Nomad said, “Currently, our Aunt Bessie’s plant has a small number of coronavirus cases, but PHE [Public Health England] has continually congratulated us on our social estating measures and proactive technique to make sure our colleagues are safe. “
He added: “If a factory employee contracts the virus, we would leave blank the domain where the user works, verify that social esttachment has been implemented, and apply our own tracking and traceability procedure to identify colleagues who also want to be isolated. employees who are ingested by symptoms or have contracted the virus will continue to receive their full salary. “
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Covid-19 – How large gastronomic companies adapt to work from home
As offices closed around the world, painters went to paint from home, with more flexible schedules. On our research pages, Lucy Britner explores demanding situations and opportunities for giant packaged food corporations, while the behavior of new paints deserves to remain.
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South African poultry processor Astral Foods problems benefit Covid caution
South African poultry processor Astral Foods has issued a benefit warning due to prices related to Covid-19 and lower bird prices.
September 11th
Smithfield Foods cited in the US But it’s not the first time For “not protecting employees” from coronavirus
Smithfield Foods, the U. S. meat company owned through China’s WH Group, faces a fine from the U. S. Health and Safety Authority. But it’s not the first time After the processor “failed with employees” by the coronavirus.
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JBS a lot of staff from the Queensland plant in Australia
The Australian department of JBS, brazil-based meat conditioner, is firing six hundred employees at a Queensland plant due to coronavirus market conditions.
September 10
Mondelez to increase advertising spending to help retain consumers acquired Covid
Mondelez International, owner of Cadbury and Oreo, is investing more money in advertising right now in 2020 to keep new consumers attracted to their brands in a year formed through Covid-19.
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2 sisters on hiring at a poultry factory in the UK
2 Sisters Food Group, the UK-based poultry company, aims to hire a hundred other workers at a UK processing plant.
September 9
General Mills highlights Covid-related earnings
U. S. Food General Mills highlighted the progress it has made in recent weeks.
In an update on old El Paso owner’s recent business functionality before his participation in the Barclays Global Consumer Staples Conference 2020 today (September 9), the company said it “continues to compete well and win in the existing environment, adding for a year. -date of percentage market profits in the US. U. S. in retail and out-of-home channels. ” General Mills’ existing fiscal year began on June 1.
He added: “The combination of the supply chain and demand for food from the upper house, sales and execution of General Mills’ leading marketing has led to a significant increase in family penetration of the company’s brands, adding Cheerios, Pillsbury, Old El Paso, Progresso, Yoplait, Betty Crocker and many others.
“For more than six months, General Mills logos have gained more family penetration than the company’s top logo competitor in 8 of the company’s ten most sensitive U. S. categories. “
General Mills stated that it continued to hope that the most that would affect its fiscal functionality by 2021 would be the relative balance between consumer demand at home and away from home.
He stated that retail share levels, which fell sharply in the early stages of the pandemic, saw a modest recovery in the first quarter of fiscal 2021 and that he expects retail share levels to normalize largely through the end of the year. fiscal 2021, according to the source. and asks to balance your product as a whole. Platforms.
Outside the United States, General Mills said it has been “gaining market percentage since the beginning of the year in its largest foreign markets, adding Canada, France, the United Kingdom, China and Brazil. “
September 8th
Foster Farms re-opens poultry plant in California
Foster Farms reopened a poultry plant in California after its transient closure in early September due to a large number of coronavirus cases and a number of deaths.
The city of Livingston, Merced County, reopened today (September 8) after approval from the local fitness department, and closed on September 1 when Foster Farms reported that 358 employees were inflamed with the virus, while 8 had died. .
It was an American Labor Day holiday.
Foster Farms said in a statement: “Until Labor Day, Foster Farms has conducted more than 4,800 Covid-19 controls on the Livingston community workforce. Recent control effects imply a prevalence of Covid-19 positive below 1%. Positives were asked to self-insulate and will get all the right licensing benefits in case of ill health. “
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The fall of Bakkavor in the first half of 65%
Bakkavor, a leading player in the UK label market that has been affected by coronavirus at several of its plants, saw its profits fall by more than 60% in the first part of the year.
Pre-tax profit fell 65% to GBP 6. 8 million (US$8. 9 million) in the six months leading up to June 27, on revenue of GBP 880. 5 million, down 4. 6%, the company announced this morning.
On a comparable basis, revenue fell by 5. 2% to 852. 4 million pounds, while the same size in the UK market fell by 4. 5% to 754 million pounds. Adjusted operating profits decreased by 32. 3% compared to the previous year to 28. 7 million pounds.
Bakkavor said: “It is encouraging to see that the stable recovery in company-wide trading in June continued into this part of the year.
“The macroeconomic uncertainty caused by Covid-19, combined with limited clarity on the situations and implications of the UK’s exit from the EU, means that we will have to be cautious as we look towards the rest of this year and 2021. However, our functionality in the first part of the year has demonstrated our ability to deal with demanding primary operational situations and gives us confidence in the quality of our business style and the strength of our visitor partnerships. “
September 4
Seafood Mowi blames Covid-19 for closing the French plant
The Norwegian seafood company Mowi partly blames Covid-19 for resolving to close a French plant.
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UK food industry’s lowest point of trust survey
Confidence among UK food brands is at a record level according to a new industry survey.
The agency, the Food and Beverage Federation (FDF) and Banco Santander, surveyed food and beverage brands and found that confidence had reached an all-time low of -65. 2% at the time of the quarter, with considerations similar to Covid-19 in the foreground.
The report analyses the effects of Covid-19 on a sector that has faced demanding situations ranging from the hospitality and catering sectors to emerging prices and declining exports.
The FDF has known seven recovery steps to reactivate all sectors of the industry, as a component of its paints through the Food and Beverage Sector Council. These come with protecting the “integrity” and competitive position of the UK chain of origin and accelerating construction plans. Uk exports.
FDF executive leader Ian Wright said: “As the dust begins to settle down, we can now see how the pandemic has had a seriously damaging effect on 2020 overseas sales of British food and beverage products. “
He added: “As companies look to economic recovery, ensuring an immediate return to expansion will be imperative for the resilience of our industry. “
September 3rd
Campbell expects the so-called “high” to continue
The U. S. leader in soups, sauces, and sandwiches, one of the corporations that has benefited from the way Covid-19 has remodeled customers’ food applications, has given the market a concept of what it will look like in the next two months.
Along with the publication of its annual monetary effects (net sales increased by 7%, EBIT increased by 13%), Campbell provided a sales forecast for his first quarter, which began on August 3.
The owner of Prego sauces, Cape Cod sandwiches and Campbell’s soup expects their net first quarter sales to increase by five to 7%, contributing to an estimated 6 to 9% increase in “adjusted” EBIT and 13 to 18% “adjusted “share-consistent profits. “
“The company expects its products to remain the best in the short term,” Campbell said.
In the fourth quarter of Campbell’s fiscal year, the group’s sales rose 18% to $2. 11 billion.
On a biological basis, which excluded the effect of one more week during the quarter and the effect of Campbell’s sale of its European chip business, net sales increased by 12%, and the company said the result reflected “Continuous accumulation in any of the calls and national food intake remained high. “
September 2
Cancellation of the lounge label
The U. S. industry agency, the Association of Private Trademark Manufacturers (PLMA), cancelled an industry display scheduled to take a position in Amsterdam in December.
The World of Private Label, scheduled for 2 and December in the Dutch capital, had already been postponed due to the Covid-19.
PLMA said it will “soon” announce a new industry display online and an occasion for B2B video networks “to offer an alternative” to the abandoned display.
Peggy Davies, president of PLMA, said: “We sense the sadness that our members and others would possibly feel at the news that the ongoing coronavirus pandemic has once disrupted our plans to hold a foreign display on the user in Amsterdam. committed to moving forward with a virtual occasion that will provide the global industry with valuable sales and marketing responses when they are most needed. “
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Premier Foods in the UK sees Covid outbreak in a cake factory
Premier Foods, in the UNITED Kingdom, witnessed an outbreak of Covid-19 among its workers at a pastry factory in Kipling in the English Midlands.
In a just food envoy, the company broke the news but didn’t say how much if its workers at the Stoke-on-Trent plant had contracted the virus.
He said: “Over the past week, we noticed that a very small number of colleagues tested positive for Covid-19 at our Stoke plant, reflecting a build-up in cases in the wider Stoke-on-Trent/Newcastle Under Lyme area. As a result, we have implemented new on-site coverage measures, in addition to our already strict hygiene and defence procedures.
“We have been in touch with our local ion fitness team and are confident that we have taken all mandatory measures for our equipment. We are largely following the stage and will continue to inform local government.
Affected workers are now isolated and, as a precautionary measure, all colleagues who have come into contact with those who tested positive have also been sent home to self-isolate.
Premier believes the transmission occurred on the local network than inside the plant.
September 1
“We are in favor of a long and slow walk out of Covid” – British Food Groups and his new mind about Covid-19
Covid-19 still presents demanding situations for the and just-food has been talking to several packaged food brands operating in the UK for their most recent trade reviews.
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Analysis: The questions you want to ask yourself when cutting SKUs
Covid-19 has encouraged brands and their retail consumers to intensify product line revisions and sku numbers. With the virus still in circulation and with a potential economic crisis on the horizon, audits will continue to be needed. Simon Creasey evaluates the questions executives ask themselves as brands seek to adapt their product lines to the volatile business environment.
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Foster Farms to close services in California after Covid’s death
The U. S. poultry processor has been the only one in the world. But it’s not the first time Foster Farms will temporarily close a bird plant in California after a coronavirus outbreak inflamed 358 and killed eight.
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2-sister Coupar Angus factory oversteer
2 Sisters Food Group reopened its Coupar Angus poultry processing plant in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, which temporarily closed in August after several workers tested positive for coronavirus.
The site, which stopped production on August 17 amid larger network groups in Perth and Kinross, reopened (August 31).
“Working hard with the incident control team, NHS Tayside and local authorities, we work hard to close the transition to complement our existing Covid-19 control measures to ensure the protection of all of our colleagues,” 2 Sisters said in a statement.
“While it is vital to make sure that our on-site measurements are physically powerful and effective, it is also incredibly vital that our workers perceive their obligations outside the plant in the local community, which, according to our initial analysis, played a vital role in the transmission of the virus. “
The company said all workers would get education and “good practice guides on issues ranging from transportation arrangements, community management, to Covid’s protection in a shared home. “
He added: “As one of the largest employers in the region, we are more than aware of our duty in the network to act with care for the health, protection and well-being of all.
Sectors: Allergen-free, Baby Food, Bakery, Cannabis, Preserves, Cereals, Refrigerated, Seasonings, Dressings, Sauces and Untables, Confectionery, Dairy Products, Dairy-Free, Dry Products, Fresh Products, Frozen, Ice Cream, Free Meat, Meat, Birds and Eggs, Organic, Private Brand, Seafood and Alternatives to Seafood
Topics: Disruptive Technology, E-Commerce
Companies: 2 Sisters Food Group, Astral Foods, Bakkavur, Food and Drink Federation, Foster Farms, General Mills, Greenyard, Bachoco Industries, JBS, Mondelez International, Mowi, Nomad Foods, Pilgrim’s Pride, Premier Foods plc, Smithfield Foods, Tesco, Tyson Foods, WH Group, Yoplait
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