Burnbrae
Farms is building a huge egg-laying complex barely over the border into Quebec,
reportedly to save money on electricity.
It’s Randy
Hillier, outspoken leader of the Ontario Landowners Association and a Tory
member of the Ontario legislature who says electricity rates are the reason for
the location.
But with
Burnbrae, my experience is that most of its major decisions are rooted in
marketing board politics.
Reporter
Ian Cumming writes that “just a kilometre or two east of the Glengarry County
border, and about a 10-minute drive north of Hwy 401, down a Quebec gravel
road, a massive cage-free egg barn complex is being constructed.
The
location . . . is not only based on the proximity to the freeway corridor
linking the Montreal and Toronto markets, but is also based on a far cheaper
Hydro rate in Quebec.
Hillier is
claiming that Ontario electricity rates are about double Quebec’s.
Burnbrae’s
barns have no cages, so they qualify to meet upcoming standards announced by
McDonald’s, Burger King and other major retail chains.
Meanwhile
the Ontario marketing board and its parent, the national agency, are relying on
“enhanced cages” to retain markets. It’s not clear that the retailers will be
satisfied and, if not, Burnbrae will be in a strong competitive position.
Burnbrae is
the nation’s largest egg-producing, egg-grading and egg-processing conglomerate
in Canada and L.H. Gray and Sons Ltd. and Gray Ridge Eggs are second in all of
those same categories.
Gray Ridge
has also been investing in cage-free housing.