Locations of Large US Beef Processing Plants Cargill is the largest U S beef packer, processing 30,000 cattle daily across 8 plants, and owns feedlots through Caprock Industries Tyson is the second largest processor with 29,000 daily cattle capacity across 7 plants
Approved Immediate Slaughter Facilities - Animal and Plant . . . Below is a listing of U S facilities inspected and approved by APHIS to process specific imported livestock for immediate slaughter from Canada At this time, there are no approved facilities to process immediate slaughter bovines from Mexico APHIS does not permit the import of any other livestock from Mexico for this purpose
Meat, Poultry and Egg Product Inspection Directory The Meat, Poultry and Egg Product Inspection (MPI) Directory is a listing of establishments that produce meat, poultry, and or egg products regulated by FSIS
Viewing a thread - Cull cow slaughter plants? - AgTalk They talk about five or six facilities scattered around that territory back in their day, but the only one I know of now is in Omaha Not sure of the name of it, though Subject: RE: Cull cow slaughter plants? There is also Gibbon Packing in Gibbon NE that kills cows Not a lot of cow killers left Know of 3 that have closed in last 3-4 years
The Largest Meatpacking Plants in the U. S. - IndustrySelect® Are you looking for industrial sales leads in the meatpacking, food processing or any other type of industry? IndustrySelect provides comprehensive profiles of 500,000 industrial companies and one million executives, including meatpacking companies
Beef Business - Cargill Each of our North American processing plants have government employed veterinarians and inspection staff, and they, along with our PAACO-certified auditors and trained employees, oversee the onsite health, quality and handling of the animals we process
The Beef Slaughterhouse Industry in the United States: A . . . According to the North American Meat Institute, there are a total of 659 federally inspected beef slaughterhouses across the United States as of 2022 So why do the Big Four control 85% of production if there are so many plants? The answer comes down to capacity and throughput