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This Week's News

Fresh DelMonte - 12 Million shares released

November 1, 2007

A 20 dollar bill which has escaped printing with a Del Monte sticker on it can be seen at the Heritage Galleries and Auctioneers site. The bill, verified to be a genuine print and in nearly perfect condition, was initially sold on eBay for $10,000 before news broke out amongst currency collectors. It has since appeared on the covers of Bank Note Reporter and Numismatic NewsIn a strategic yet surprising move, Fresh del Monte Corp. announced today that they intend to sell 12 million shares of corporate stock.

Del Monte, a familiar U.S. grocery label since 1886, added the division and earth-friendly moniker of “Fresh del Monte” upon the acquisition of West Indies Tropical Fruit Company of Coral Gables, FL in 1968.  The division’s corporate headquarters has enjoyed its sunny southeast Florida location ever since. 

Priding itself upon promoting sustainable agriculture, or “extending environmentally-friendly farming practices through [their] growers and farming operations worldwide,” Fresh del Monte does all of its own  production, canning, packaging and distribution as opposed to outsourcing.  It produces only the finest, most healthful food products from fruits and vegetables to poultry, grains, soybeans, nuts and ice pops, and exports to and from regions as diverse as Argentina, Brazil, Cameroon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Jordan, Kenya, Mexico, Peru, Philippines, South Africa, Spain and the United Kingdom. The corporate website estimates employing as many as 37,500 persons worldwide.  The company leads the branded fresh-cut industry, estimated to be a $15 billion industry at year-end 2005.

Boasting strong third quarter 2007 financials, the immensely successful Fresh del Monte announced the enormous sale of stock as a means of repaying debt outstanding under its credit facility.  The stock opened on the New York Stock Exchange at $31.15 per share.

Lisa Carvin , freelance journalist

 

MRSA and the food chain - What Grocers Can Do

October 24 , 2007

MRSA starts out small but its a killer - what grocers need to know.MRSA starts out looking like a spider bite, less than the size of a quarter, but it's big news. Prior to this week's California fires, reports were coming out that there were more identified cases than AIDs. News like this doesn't just disappear.

Thanks to the news, "MRSA fever" is more of a fear than a disease. But whether the smoke from the fires obscures public fears or not, the newest plague still has the nation checking their skin and visiting their dermatologists. And the problem isn't going to go away.

A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association on October 17, 2007 estimated that close to 19,000 Americans died of MRSA in 2005 and 94,000 Americans could contract the disease every year. The fires will be put out, but the spread of MRSA is going to increase steadily.

But there is good news ...

"MRSA is not the kind of infection that is spread in food or water, nor can it be acquired by ingestion” says Dr. Larry Bush, in an interview with SMGN. Dr. Bush is a local (South Florida-based) infectious disease expert.

Lisa Carvin, of SMGN also asked whether livestock & chickens could contract MRSA-related infections.

“I imagine they can carry the bacteria but I am unaware of any described infections in them with MRSA.”

MRSA starts out looking like a spider bite. Pussy formations and cists then spread as the skin deteriorates uncontrollablyUnsure responses such as these by authorities are not so assuring. People are dying and the disease has mutated to stronger more antibiotic resistant forms. It is no longer confined to recovering patients in sterile hospital environments. Now that it is no longer contained it is a serious public threat.

Even more disturbing news is that the resistance of the strains is increasing. First there was MRSA (Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus). Now there is VRSA (Vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus). Vancomycin resistance is very bad news indeed. We don't have antibiotics that can combat the VRSA form.

The good news for grocers is that it is a primarily blood born disease. The bad news is that it can still be transferred via the skin. If it's an uncontrollable problem in very sterile environments such as hospitals, where formerly 85% of cases originated, what will happen now that the disease is in the market place?

Blood born pathogens arise in hospitals. The public needs to be aware of how. It's not like they are exchanging needles in our hospitals. Mostly it is exposure of wounds, though usually covered, to the air, and to hospital equipment - metal rails, linens and food trays.

Despite many radical measures to control the disease, hospitals have been sued and doctors have been put out of business for failing to do enough. SMGN suggests that grocers need to consider what their employees and their customers come into contact with as well.

One independent food distributor in Florida, Cheney Brothers, offers its customers Instant E.coli and Salmonella test strips. SMGN wonders about the wisdom of putting customers on the alert this way unless they can offer comparisons against their competition or upsell food product to convince the public to shop organic.

Grocers gone green can use the news on MRSA to their advantage without passing out test kits. The threat of MRSA and now VRSA is magnified by the weakness of the human immune system due to lifetimes of eating meat that's been overly inocculated.

In days of increasing environmental consciousness multiplied by blogging and threats like MRSA the value of organic meats increases dramatically. For instance, a recent post by Terry Singeltary included a letter by the FDA to the Richard Hayes Cattle Company of Hereford, Texas citing violations of Sections
402(a)(2)©(ii), and 402(a)(4) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.

Random tissue samples collected identified the presence of 9.90 ppm of tilmicosin in the liver, and 13.70 ppm tilmicosin in the muscle tissue. A tolerance of 1.2 ppm is established for residues of tilmicosin in the edible tissues of cattle according to Title 21, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 556.7351.

Food Safety is the business of the FDA. The possibility of bioterrorism is also a concern, resulting in increasing efforts under Operation Liberty Shield, which has as its mission "surveillance of the domestic food industry."

OLS proposals cover food stores and food service establishments such as bakeries, bars, cafeterias, commissaries, convenience stores, fairs, grocery stores, food service for airlines and trains, restaurants, and vending machine operators as well as cosmetic establishments. They also identify preventive measures that operators can utilize to minimize the security risks to their products. MRSA is a concern.

But according to statements made recently by the Health on the Net Foundation, a non-government controlled information hub on the web, the FDA is not able to ensure food safety. Doubts about Homeland Security's ability to protect the food chain are fueled by political feelings.

Grocers don't have to just wait for more bad news though. What the FDA can't do buying agents can handle instead. And it doesn't need to mean increasing costs. Testing should be a regular practice. That should make customers feel comfortable shopping with you. Testing for bioterror may sound off-the-wall, but checking for high levels of antibiotics in the food supply is practical.

Use it as a strategy. As an example, in testing meat as it comes in, use tests showing high levels of antibiotics as a bargaining tool not to raise, but lower prices from big suppliers. This strategy can be used even where Federal threshholds are met 100% of the time. The lower the levels the higher the value of the meat to your customers and to you.

It's the proactive grocer that wins in the new day of health consciousness. What goes into meat feed is no longer hidden from smart, very vocal buyers.

Today's grocers create prestige by presenting healthy looking food and a clean image, but days are coming when impressing the public with not just a healthier food supply but an absolutely sterile environment will be the norm. Grocers who fail to meet standards will be shut down not by regulation and fines but by buyer awareness.

Over use of antibiotics and antibiotic resistance is on the minds of today's customer. MRSA is also now known to spread in jails and locker rooms. Supermarket bathrooms need to be cleaned more frequently. But that isn't enough.

Employees should be wearing gloves not just when handling food. Hospital-level sterilization needs to be used not just in Supermarket bathrooms. Employees need to be trained not just for the sake of customers but for their own lives' sake to wash throughly. Providing deeper sinks for scrubbing and disposable gloves not just to those who handle food, will serve as a reminder to clean up. Frequent meetings reminding employees of what these are for is essential.

Other equipment needs to be sterile as well. Meat racks are a huge concern as is other cooking and cutting equipment. It needs to not just be washed. It needs to be sterilized.

Sterilization does not have to mean adding to costs. A simple sterilizing device over a bathroom door handle that makes a door knob "hospital-clean" every time someone opens or shuts it costs much less than hot water running from the tap and requires no special soap.

Uniglobe Cartsafe system for shopping cart washing also sterilizes meat racks and other equipment without violating EPA regulationsSmart grocers will find ways to automate the sterilization process. Consider Uniglobe's Cartsafe's shopping cart sterilizing system, for instance. Grocers are already making the public aware that cart handles are a major source of bacteria simply by supplying sanitary wipes. Arizona even signed shopping cart handle solutions into law. But wipes are not a sterilizing method that would offer true protection against an insidious disease like MRSA.

"If you've got a cut on your hand and it's infected with MRSA and then you go shopping, the next person that uses your cart goes unprotected" states Michael Tranchina, a Uniglobe executive.

Uniglobe's cart washing system was featured in an SMGN article October 13th. The new system increases cart washing productivity sixfold. Cart washing has formerly taken place by cover of night, as grocers are aware that the chemical run off to their parking lots is a violation of the EPA's Clean Water Act. The Uniglobe Cartsafe system recycles the water it uses to sterilize the carts.

Interviews conducted by staff reporter, Lisa Carvin
Contact Lisa at editor @ supermarketgreennews.com

Our News

Oct 16, 2007
Glenn Adams of AP News contacted Supermarket Green News for an interview Monday. AP was running a story on a new green building in Augusta, Maine. Hannaford Brothers, Inc. won the LEED Platinum Award, which was a first for grocers. (See our article here. See Glenn's article here.) The AP item also mentions Uniglobe's Cartsafe system. Uniglobe is one of SMGN's supporting partners. The AP spotted an article from October 13th on the SMGN site. (See SMGN Archives. See the Uniglobe article.) SMGN keeps articles on supporting partners on front page for up to a week and places breaking stories for the remainder of the week in the headline column. Getting national attention as an innovator in green could be a big boost to Uniglobe. We're sure Uniglobe is getting a great ROI from SMGN. For information about becoming an SMGN supporting partner click on the partner tab above.

Sept 27 , 2007
Supermarket Green News went from the drawing board to live publication today. James Carvin, founding editor, has taken on the project. Carvin has developed search portals and online communities since 1997. Among other projects he developed the Ghostsurfers.com search portal in 1999. Ghostsurfers was one of the 500 most visited sites on the web in July, 2000. Most recently he designed the Creative Realty Network search engine for real estate investment properties and will be taking on Supermarket Green News as a special interest for business green.

"I think that business green is going to get bigger with time. It's also fascinating as can be. Supermarkets are at the heart of green because they involve what we eat. But there is also a business side to it. It involves everything from energy and water usage and savings to reduction of liabilities and risks. Plus, let's face it. There is the profiteering stand point. American ingenuity will bring in new ways to save, new ways to protect people and the environment. So to a certain extent it's about introducing new products."

The news format is new for Carvin. It will involve hiring reporters and soliciting advertising, which is a full time project.

"I see myself as starting the project and then handing it on to others more qualified than myself. We will begin recruiting talented journalists once we prove the model is profitable. There are enough green related businesses to support the advertsing side at this time. Supermarket executives and investors will want to get all their news in one place. So we'll syndicate it and that should provide a lot of links back to us, along with great newswriters and new advertisers. My guess is we should grow fairly quickly, even though we don't plan to be a consumer oriented site. Consumer driven, yes. Oriented, no."

Publisher info

Supermarket Green News welcomes freelance journalists to contribute articles on the business side of supermarket green. SMGN will feature new articles every week and syndicate by RSS and press release. Articles submitted for publication must be timely and demonstrate various ways business is interested in environmental causes. Emphasis should be on analytics, law, innovation in some aspect of operations or supply and be of interest to supermarket executives, investors, contractors or suppliers.

Articles can be submitted by email. Photographs should be reduced to 1 MB or less prior to submission. Send to
editor @ supermarketgreennews.com .

 


Other Headlines

10/29/2007
Winn Dixie and the Beauty of Fall

10/23/2007
Global Warming Increases Rice Yield in China: IRRI

10/19/2007
Refrigerator Disposal Next on EPA Hit List

10/18/2007
Biofuels Use Transforming Commodities Markets: CME Chief

10/18/2007
Supermarkets Lag Behind in Building Green

10/17/2007
SMGN Proposes Grocer Taplines to Reduce Recycling Lag on Plastic Water Bottles

10/16/2007
Study Finds iPhone Emits Toxic Chemicals

10/16/2007
NCC Reports Green Grocers Still Need Improvements

10/13/2007
Uniglobe Cartsafe Prototype to Replace EPA Violating Powerwashers

10/12/2007
Lead in over half of Lip Stick Brands All Over the News - What Retailers Should Do

10/11/2007
Check Out in the Aisle Vamps Shopping Cart Health Calculators

10/10/2007
Analysis: Heart Disease Study Means Job Stress is an Environmental Factor Retailers Should Consider

10/09/2007
Analysis: How EPA's Largest Settlement in History Effects Grocers

10/05/2007
Topps Folds After Beef Recall

10/03/2007
Food Marketing Institute Reports Rise to Conservation Challenge by Grocery Industry

9/27/2007
An "Historic" Event in "Green": First-Ever Publix Greenwise Market Opens in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida

Editorial: Am I Living Green?

 

 

 


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