This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Egg prices soar as outdated supply chains crack under pressure

Experts predict that egg prices will keep climbing in 2025. Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Jack Buffington, University of Denver

There may be no kitchen table issue in America more critical than the price of food.

So when the price of eggs rose over 40% from 2024 to 2025, it became a headline news story in Colorado and across the nation.

Public officials and the media blamed high egg prices on bird flu outbreaks and said containing the outbreak in supply chains would lower prices. In early March 2025, egg prices fell in the U.S., but these trends are likely to reverse due to higher seasonal demand during Easter and Passover.

Rising prices and market volatility have led to food costs climbing to 11.4% of American’s disposable income, the largest percentage since 1991.

Arresting these rising costs, as I argue in my 2023 book, means reinventing supply chains to address the growing supply, demand and price volatility that has created uncertainty for consumers since the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020.

I have described global supply chains, and supply chains in the U.S. in particular, as “efficiently broken.” By this I mean that they aspire to offer low prices from economies of scale but lack sufficient resiliency to create stability.

Without addressing the systemic weaknesses in supply chains, I believe major health and economic disruptions will continue to happen in Colorado, nationally and around the world.

Cage-free eggs

Colorado faces a double whammy where egg prices are concerned.

It’s one of nine states with a cage-free egg mandate, which requires all eggs sold in the state to come from cage-free facilities. The regulation has been shown to increase the price of eggs by as much as 50%.

Over the past two decades, cage-free egg laws have been passed in states as consumers have grown more concerned with the welfare of farm animals. What that means varies from state to state because the term cage-free isn’t regulated by a federal agency. In Colorado, egg-laying hens must be housed in a cage-free system and must have a minimum of 1 square foot of usable floor space per hen.

Colorado is the 28th largest egg producer in the U.S., far behind Midwestern states such as Iowa, Indiana and Ohio, but it has a few large producers such as Morning Fresh Farms, as well as smaller ones such as the Colorado Egg Producers Association, a collection of seven family-owned farms.

Colorado’s cage-free egg law went into effect in January 2025 – around the same time that consumers noticed bare egg shelves at their supermarkets. Many consumers and some elected Republicans in Colorado blamed the cage-free law.

Nevada is pulling back on its cage-free egg mandate to deal with the challenge of unaffordable egg prices.

But cage-free laws are not the main driver of increasing egg prices, as I’ve noted in my research. Like many others, the egg supply chain needs to be reinvented to balance price, scale, resiliency and stability.

Supply chain issues

What is driving up the prices of eggs and other consumer goods is the concentration of producers. The COVID-19 pandemic revealed just how vulnerable prices and supply chains are.

Five years ago this month, when the pandemic started, many products became unavailable and more expensive.

In 2022, a major product recall of Similac led to a baby formula shortage in the U.S. The baby formula market is highly concentrated, with four companies responsible for approximately 90% of the domestic market. A large-scale facility that produced the baby formula was found to have unsanitary conditions and contaminated products. Pulling this one facility offline at the same time the nation was coping with pandemic-related supply chain issues led to the shortage.

Two containers of baby formula seen on otherwise empty store shelves

Supply chain issues led to a U.S. shortage of baby formula in 2022. Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Then at the beginning of 2024, supplies of insulin ran short due to production issues at Eli Lilly, one of the three companies responsible for over 90% of the U.S. insulin market.

And in the second half of 2024, hospitals couldn’t get enough IV fluid due to damage caused by Hurricane Helene to a Baxter factory in North Carolina that manufactures approximately 60% of IV fluids in the U.S. This factory had been relocated to North Carolina from Puerto Rico due to the supply impact from Hurricane Maria that damaged the island in 2017.

In all of these cases, the supply chain was easily interrupted due to a reliance on a few large producers. In 2025, bird flu and eggs are just another example of America’s “efficiently broken” supply chain.

Bird flu and cost of eggs

In the U.S., the top five egg producers are responsible for 40% of hens, with Mississippi-based Cal-Maine Foods alone responsible for 13% of total U.S. production.

An average-sized production facility in the U.S. can house 75,000 to 500,000 hens. Large facilities can house over 4 million. The mass production of eggs from these facilities means eggs are, in stable times, cost effective for the American consumer. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, eggs in the U.S. never surpassed $3 a dozen, and it was an affordable food solution compared with processed foods.

But this scale and efficiency comes at the price of resiliency during something like a bird flu outbreak. Larger farms create a higher risk of viral outbreak, which leads to the need for culling millions of birds and a heightened risk of viral replication and mutation.

The solution may increase prices

Policymakers want to reduce the spread of disease at American egg factories to mitigate the spread of bird flu. But these measures are expensive.

Factory farms increase the potential for viruses to spread rapidly and even mutate. Therefore, bird flu is a more serious precursor of supply chain disruption than a hurricane or product recall because it has the potential to create a public health crisis.

One solution to limit the spread of bird flu is to regulate the number of hens allowed in a single facility. This would lead to smaller and more farms across the U.S., but also higher consumer prices.

This solution would mirror other countries such as Canada, where the average facility size is much smaller than in the U.S. and eggs and poultry cost significantly more. That’s why – under the terms of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement – Canada has quota and tariff protection from American companies flooding its market with eggs and poultry that would cost consumers two to three times less.

Yet in March 2025, the price of eggs in Canada is 50% cheaper than eggs in the U.S. because the country has not suffered the same damages from bird flu.

Following Canada’s lead wouldn’t result in egg prices as low as giant factory farms, but it would protect American consumers from the periodic price shocks caused by disease or localized weather events that disrupt supplies.

Despite the threat of a public health crisis, American consumers don’t want to pay more for eggs – and their leaders have promised they won’t have to.

Read more of our stories about Colorado.The Conversation

Jack Buffington, Associate Professor of Practice in Supply Chain Management, University of Denver

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    This article calls it “outdated” supply chains? Call a spade a spade, for goodness sake. The problem is not the age of it but the consolidation of producer firms. Call out US anti-trust enforcement that has been as effective as a wet piece of paper.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Not surprised … it’s corporations reporting on corporations … the same corporations that own and manage the egg producers also own or partly own the news corporations that are reporting on all this

  • Nomecks@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    *Factory farm system starts spreading a disease like wildfire*

    “Fuckin free range eggs!!!”

    • blakenong@lemmings.world
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      2 days ago

      That and more local producers. We need farming to go back to the farmers and away from the corporations.

  • MyOpinion@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    I am sure the Orange Turd will solve this right away. Right after he gets done destroying the post office and social security.

  • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Just gotta say, that Colorado law is ridiculous. I’m all for good conditions for farm animals, but 1 sq ft per chicken isn’t helping. A single square foot is about the size of a chicken. The thing is still in “a cage”, that cage is just formed of other chickens now.

    I wonder if lobbyists got to them to water down the law.

    • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Yup I laughed when I read what they mean by “Cage Free”, legalized bribing in the form of lobbying ruined any chance of an actual democracy happening in the US, at least in other countries they have to be hush hush about bribing and they do get caught every now and then. Here they do it openly and a large segment of the population is focused on fighting agaisnt pronouns and DEI and other bullshit instead of focusing on the real enemy

  • Coreidan@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Best thing to do is to stop eating eggs full stop.

    Let the price gouging cunts go out of business.

    If they can’t sell me eggs at a reasonable price then the businesses doing this deserve to collapse, go bankrupt, and be forced to sell their assets at a discount.

    Fuck em. Only after prices return will I buy eggs again and if they don’t then they won’t get my money.

    • paultimate14@lemmy.world
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      That’s easy for someone who can afford more expensive protein sources to say.

      Eggs used to be one of the best protein per dollar values available. You still have flour (and flour products), lentils, and pinto beans as options. Maybe oats and peanut butter, although that’s starting to transition from “protein per dollar” to “calories per dollar” to make sense. And those other sources will start to get more expensive as people move to them.

      It hasn’t gotten as much press, but the cost of chicken meat rises with the prices of eggs too. That has historically been the cheapest available meat, so I would expect people moving to alternatives to drive up the costs of pork, lentils and beans. Maybe beef and seafood too.

      It’s a significant blow, especially to people who do a lot of physical labor and need that protein. This isn’t just as simple as “don’t buy the videogame that’s overpriced” or “don’t watch the movie with the problematic actor” or “don’t buy the low-quality fast fashion products made by slave labor”. This is messing with people’s food. Go look up all of the long-term ramifications to populations after famines.

      Society is never more than a few hungry days from collapse. This could very well push America closer to that.

  • Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Billions of individuals suffocated and thrown in the garbage, disease cutting through the food supply, and all people can talk about is the fucking price of eggs.

  • Tempus Fugit@midwest.social
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    Huh interesting. Well I’m not affected because I stopped buying eggs when they went over $.30 per egg. Been egg free for 3 months and I don’t even miss them anymore.

    • enkers@sh.itjust.works
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      I’m just about to make some scrambled tofu. It hits similar macros, flavour and texture to scrambled eggs:

      • 1-2 tbsp cooking oil
      • One onion, sliced
      • Generous pinch of black salt (kalak nama) or just whatever cooking salt you use
      • 2-3 cloves garlic, minced
      • 1 lb medium-firm tofu
      • 0.5 tsp tumeric
      • 1 tsp ground cumin
      • 1 tsp Italian spice, or thyme, or both
      • 0.5 tsp chipotle powder, or other spicy capsicum powder
      • 1-2 tsp nutritional yeast (optional)
      • 1 tsp soy sauce
      • 1 scallion to garnish
      1. Cook the onion for a few minutes in the a skillet or large pan, then add the garlic and cook until starting to brown.
      2. Crumble in the tofu, add the spices and cook on medium for ~10 mins, scraping off the pan bottom and flipping occasionally.
      3. Deglaze with soy sauce and/or water. Serve (on toast) topped with scallions.

      Notes:

      • Most Western people probably don’t have kalak nama, but it really gives a nice sulphurous eggy flavour. Worth getting some if you like that and intended to make this regularly. It’ll also keep forever.
      • if you prep the scallion before you start cooking, toss the whites in with the garlic, and save the green for garnish. I don’t because it saves time to prep the scallion during step 2
      • you can go with a less firm or more firm tofu depending on how you like your scramble
  • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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    Decided to check eggprices.org as well as my local grocer because that press secretary dick said prices were dropping. Local grocery store still has them at the same $7/dz along with a disclaimer that they may not have any. Fair enough. The eggprices.org site seems to be out of step with their own data for the nationwide average price of eggs. It shows an average price of $3.27/dz but if you look at the per state data, the lowest (with a data point of 1) is South Dakota at $6.79/dz. Where are they finding eggs that cheap?

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    If I keep posting this every time there are egg related political news stories, maybe it’ll come true?

    I put together a little short story about how I would like to see Donald Trump meet his demise. Drowning in eggs:

    The Eggsecution.

    The once-proud leader, now stripped of title and dignity, stands in the center of the barren, concrete abyss. The abandoned Olympic swimming pool—thirty feet deep, dry as bone—has become their final stage. Above, the gathered masses stretch in every direction, a writhing sea of anticipation.

    They do not jeer. They do not boo.

    They simply chant.

    “Eggs. Eggs. Eggs.”

    It starts as a murmur, a low thrum of human voices vibrating in unison. Then it grows, swelling into a deafening roar that rattles windows, that shudders in the bones of every person present. A chant as ancient as it is absurd, a single-minded invocation of punishment.

    The first egg arcs high overhead, tracing a lazy curve before splattering against the fallen leader’s shoulder. The yolk bursts, oozing down his baggy, ugly, now-useless suit. A streak of yellow, the first of many.

    Another egg. Then another.

    Then dozens.

    The first impacts make them flinch, stagger—hands raised in a futile shield. But soon there are too many to dodge, too many to deflect. They curl inward as the sky rains viscous judgment. The chant never stops.

    “Eggs. Eggs. Eggs.”

    Shells crack. Yolk drips. The scent of sulfur and shame thickens in the stagnant air. It coats their skin, their hair, their pride, turning them into something less than human. Something… egg-like.

    At the top of the pit, a child—no older than seven—steps forward. They hold their egg with both hands, cradling it like something precious. Reverent. With a deliberate motion, they lob it downward. It strikes the leader square on the forehead, exploding with an almost musical plap. The crowd erupts into a fresh crescendo of cheers, but the chant never falters.

    “Eggs. Eggs. Eggs.”

    No escape. No reprieve. The pit is smooth concrete, slick now with raw egg and humiliation. They can do nothing but stand there, endure, become part of the ritual.

    Somewhere in the throng, a vendor hawks boiled eggs. Another sells cartons to the unprepared. A man in a chicken suit waves encouragingly at the crowd.

    The night wears on, but the spectacle does not end.

    It cannot end.

    Not until the last egg is thrown. Not until the last voice is hoarse.

    Not until the world is rid of this one, failed leader, broken not by swords or exile, but by the inescapable weight of public yolk and scorn.

    “Eggs. Eggs. Eggs.”