Mexico City - Arabstoday
A drastic shortage has sparked a desperate egg hunt in Mexico, after a bird flu outbreak forced farmers to cull some 11mn hens, a disaster in the world’s leading per capita egg consumer. Mexico City residents are waiting in long lines to buy subsidised eggs, while in the north some are crossing the border to get cheaper cartons in US supermarkets. As part of emergency measures, the government has lifted egg tariffs, importing 906 tonnes from the US since the crisis erupted last month. More may come from Costa Rica, Colombia and Chile. Some Mexican stores are even rationing sales, barring people from buying more than two cartons of eggs per person. In many places, the price of a kilo of eggs has doubled from 20 pesos ($1.50) to 40 pesos ($3), or even tripled. The average Mexican eats 22.4kg of eggs per year, according to the National Poultry Farmer Union. Given that a one-kilo carton contains 16 to 18 eggs, this means each Mexican gobbles up 350 to 400 “huevos” per year. “It is an essential food,” Bertha Padilla Ramirez, a 53-year-old grandmother, said after she bought a 30-egg carton at a mobile egg distribution drive in a poor neighbourhood of the capital. “We eat eggs because meat is too expensive.” Eggs are a cheap source of protein in Mexico, where almost half of the population of 112mn lives under the poverty line. Here they are served with other staples, like beans and rice, or mixed in “salsa verde” (green sauce). Prices jumped last month after a bird flu outbreak forced farmers to cull 11mn hens in the western state of Jalisco in June. The government has vowed to punish price gougers. “It is a psychological crisis for a homemaker because we can’t feed our children,” Padilla Ramirez said, as she and dozens of other people stood in line to get their 2-kg carton of eggs. For the past four weeks, she has mostly cooked rice and beans for her household of seven people. Usually, she cooks around 10 eggs per day for her husband, three children and two grandchildren. “Come back quickly,” she told the co-ordinator of the weekly egg distribution drive set up in Mexico City’s Coyoacan district. Authorities are now allowing residents of border states to pass through customs with eggs they buy in US stores. While the price of 30 eggs has jumped to 60 pesos in the border city of Nuevo Laredo, residents say they can buy a dozen Grade-A large eggs for $1.38 (19 pesos) in Texas. Some doubt that liberalising imports will lower prices, since bringing eggs from abroad is expensive. “While it may help a little, it will never lower prices and it will not be a better product than what we produce in Mexico,” said Homero Villarreal Cerda, adviser of the Nuevo Laredo Chamber of Commerce. From gulf times.