Egg preferences

by The City Wire staff ([email protected]) 63 views 

Americans continue to buy "regular" eggs over cage-free eggs by a margin of 40-to-1, according to data from Information Resources Inc. (IRI).

IRI recently tracked checkout scanner data from 34,000 grocery, drug and mass merchandiser stores across the U.S.

"Regular" eggs produced in traditional cage housing systems continued to be the most popular eggs among supermarket shoppers, accounting for 92% of the 21 billion eggs bought at retail last year, according to IRI. Cage free eggs only account for 2% of all retail eggs bought, and organic/free range eggs accounted for only 1%.

“Our farmers produce all of these types of eggs, and more," Gene Gregory, president of United Egg Producers, a national farmer cooperative and trade association for America’s egg farmers, said in a statement. "We’ve always said that consumers should be free to choose which types of eggs they prefer to buy, based on their own personal opinions and abilities to pay. It’s disturbing to see animal rights activists try to force retailers and restaurant companies take away that consumer choice by making them buy only cage free eggs, especially when regular eggs have similar nutritional content”

OTHER IRI DATA
• Sales of all three types of eggs were relatively flat compared to the previous year, with organic/free range egg sales falling by 1.67%, cage free eggs up slightly by 1.25% and regular eggs down less than 1%, all of which are statistically immaterial changes from the previous year.

• The average advertised price for one dozen Large, Grade A eggs from hens in traditional cage housing is $1.10, according to the latest USDA statistics (April 30, 2010). Cage free eggs are nearly three times more expensive ($2.99 per dozen) and organic/free range eggs are four times more expensive (4.38 per dozen) than eggs from hens in traditional cage housing, according to USDA.

• American consumers pay nearly three times less for eggs than European consumers, according to data compiled from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and Eurostat. On average, U.S. consumers paid $1.63 for one dozen eggs (a weighted average of regular eggs, cage free and free range) in the U.S., compared to $5.81 in Luxembourg, $5.76 in Denmark, $5.54 in Austria, $5.19 in Ireland and $4.89 in the United Kingdom.

• Americans showed that while consumers still overwhelmingly buy "regular" eggs by a margin of 40-to-1 over cage free eggs and 90-to-1 over organic/free range eggs, they also support the use of "enriched colony housing" systems that are being phased in by many European egg farmers. Nearly one-third of Americans would choose that type of egg housing for egg-laying hens in their state if they had a choice, according to the survey conducted by independent research agency Bantam. Enriched colony housing systems provide hens more space and the ability to nest, scratch and perch unlike most of the egg housing systems used today.