It's been happening EVERYWHERE and thanks to a friend in the UK I know the reason at least there.
Electricity
It costs a lot of electricity to raise chickens and farm eggs, as the price for electricity goes up they have to pass on the price. In the UK this led to a dispute between the farmers and supermarkets where the farmers started to refuse the supermarkets demands to lower their price so it led to egg shortages while smaller wholesalers just raised the price, told consumers the reason and had no shortages at all.
It costs a lot of electricity to raise chickens and farm eggs
In bulk, sure. But I've been raising hens on and off for over a decade now and the number of times all those birds needed electricity could probably be counted on one hand, after hand feeding a hippo.
Only reason this is happening is because it's related to large scale egg production from factory farming where farms try and literally squeeze as many eggs out of a hen as possible while also limiting the costs of movement and environmental factors affecting things. So that means small, inside spaces that are heated so all the hens do is eat and lay eggs without having to worry about whatever weather might be present.
Of course raising hens requires some degree of land and more and more that is being denied and taken away from the general population because the plebs can't be moderately self sufficient in the NWO.
Well of course on macro scale EVERYTHING takes more resources and with supermarkets existing those are required.
If we could all be more self sustainable then we'd all have our own chickens, small veg/herb Gardens even if it's one of those small rectangular planters and even compost so farms only have to deal with cattle and large scale grain farming.
But to do that one thing that would need to be done is reassess and re imagine how cities are designed as current cities naturally oppose this self sustainability.
In bulk, sure. But I've been raising hens on and off for over a decade now and the number of times all those birds needed electricity could probably be counted on one hand, after hand feeding a hippo
The catch is that overall it's more efficient to centralise production. Less resilient but definitely more efficient.
Unfortunately there's no real way to price lack of resiliency into a product.
It's been happening EVERYWHERE and thanks to a friend in the UK I know the reason at least there.
Electricity
It costs a lot of electricity to raise chickens and farm eggs, as the price for electricity goes up they have to pass on the price. In the UK this led to a dispute between the farmers and supermarkets where the farmers started to refuse the supermarkets demands to lower their price so it led to egg shortages while smaller wholesalers just raised the price, told consumers the reason and had no shortages at all.
Simple reason
In bulk, sure. But I've been raising hens on and off for over a decade now and the number of times all those birds needed electricity could probably be counted on one hand, after hand feeding a hippo.
Only reason this is happening is because it's related to large scale egg production from factory farming where farms try and literally squeeze as many eggs out of a hen as possible while also limiting the costs of movement and environmental factors affecting things. So that means small, inside spaces that are heated so all the hens do is eat and lay eggs without having to worry about whatever weather might be present.
Of course raising hens requires some degree of land and more and more that is being denied and taken away from the general population because the plebs can't be moderately self sufficient in the NWO.
Well of course on macro scale EVERYTHING takes more resources and with supermarkets existing those are required.
If we could all be more self sustainable then we'd all have our own chickens, small veg/herb Gardens even if it's one of those small rectangular planters and even compost so farms only have to deal with cattle and large scale grain farming.
But to do that one thing that would need to be done is reassess and re imagine how cities are designed as current cities naturally oppose this self sustainability.
The catch is that overall it's more efficient to centralise production. Less resilient but definitely more efficient. Unfortunately there's no real way to price lack of resiliency into a product.