Current Operation
- Closed
Location
Owner
- Kimberley Meats (1960’s)
- Green co5
- Jack Burton – Yeeda Pastoral company2
Operation
- Establishment – Private abattoir with government funding1
History
- During WWII, live export was difficult, this abattoir was set up, other cattle were walked to Katherine to be slaughted1
1942
- Broome abattoir established1
1959
- Improved to meet stringent USDA (United States Department of agriculture) hygiene regulations1
1960
- Kimberley Meats – bargained with Emanual Exports – collective bargaining including Broome, Derby and Wyndham3
1970
- Couldn’t meet USDA standards – lost export licence, so did Derby, Wyndham,
- Darwin and Katherine also shut down for a period of times due to being unable to also meet USDA standards1
1983
- Export beef plant closed October 19831
1986
- Meat supply closed May 19861 (Not sure what this actually refers to in article)
1993
- Closed4.
“Broome is the preferred location for an abattoir to service the Kimberley and Pilbara, according to consultant’s report prepared for the Dept. Ag WA (SD&D Meateng 2010)4
2010
- Feasibility study conducted to consider establishment of an abattoir in WA5
- For greatest efficency a new abattoir should be capable of processing a minimum 400 head a day.5
- would not be commercially viable in competition with strong live export trade, without tangible government support and without significant producer committment to a processing alternative.5
- Note – the feasibility study worked on average carcase weight of 250kg, at approximately 52% this equates to a minimum 480kg live animal processed. The table on Page 50 talks of yield off the animal of 70%. This is unclear if it includes offal – estimated at 20.14kg (Calculated from total render co products on page 33). Not listed is weight of hide, tallow, bone products.5
- Input cost of abattoir establishment $33.3M. Pg 515
- Employment estimate, 53 slaughter, 69 boners, 10 engineers, 28 admin – 160 people.Pg 545
- Process 100,000 head a year. Pg 555
- Cost per kg – Abattoir expects to pay for meat (assume Overhooks) to producers. Pg 535
- Year 1 – $1.64 – start up year5
- Year 2 – $2.21 – start up year5
- Year 3 – $1.49 – start up year5
- Year 4 – $2.16 – allows for poor season5
- Year 5 – $1.66 – allows for poor season5
Sources
- ‘Sailing ahead’ Annabelle Coppin 2009
- ‘New lamb abattoir for Jack Burton’ Meat trade daily 27.05.12
- ‘The Australian Livestock export trade’ Nigel Austin 2011
- Northern Australian Beef Industry – Assessment of risk and opportunities’ ABARE 2012
- ‘Feasibility of establishing a Northern western Australia Beef abattoir’ RIRDC.2010.
Tagged: Broome abattoir, government funded abattoirs, USDA standards, Western Australian abattoirs
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