Tyson Repurposing Idled South Carolina Plant for Case-Ready Meats

A $42 million investment will convert a factory in Columbia, SC into a meat-cutting facility that will produce retail-ready products.

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AP File

SPRINGDALE, AR โ€” As part of its strategy to increase production of consumer-ready products, Tyson Foods, Inc. is expanding its case-ready meats business by repurposing plant capacity in South Carolina.

The company plans to reopen an idle Tyson-owned facility in Columbia and convert it into a meat-cutting facility that will produce retail-ready, portioned packages of sliced, fresh beef and pork, as well as ground beef, for grocery and club stores in the eastern U.S.

โ€œWeโ€™re pleased to bring operations back to Columbia and are very grateful for the strong state and local support weโ€™ve received for this project,โ€ said Nate Hodne, senior vice president and general manager of the Portioned Protein Innovations team for Tyson Fresh Meats, the beef and pork subsidiary of Tyson Foods. โ€œOnce operational, this new facility will help us meet growing demand from our retail customers with high quality, pre-cut, pre-packaged fresh beef and pork.โ€

Initially Tyson will invest approximately $42 million to transform the facility into a meat portioning and packaging operation that is currently expected to begin production in May 2021.โ€ฏOver the next three to five years the company plans to invest in additional improvements and production equipment at the facility with a total investment estimated at $55 million.โ€ฏThe new operation will employ 330 people, more than double the number of team members who worked at the facility when it closed in August 2020.

โ€œTyson Foodsโ€™ initial $42 million investment, and the 330 jobs that will result from it, will help continue South Carolinaโ€™s tremendous economic growth,โ€ said Governor Henry McMaster. โ€œWe look forward to continuing our stateโ€™s fruitful partnership with Tyson and to their continued commitment to South Carolina and our people.โ€

โ€œTyson Foodsโ€™ reinvestment in the Columbia plant highlights South Carolinaโ€™s strategic and geographic importance to agribusiness,โ€ said South Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture Hugh Weathers. โ€œAs we continue to grow the agribusiness industry in the Palmetto State, weโ€™re happy to have Tyson as our partner.โ€

Tyson Foodsโ€™ case-ready beef and pork business currently operates plants in Iowa, Tennessee and Texas and plans to open a new facility in Utah later this year. The operations are called case-ready, because the packaged meat produced by the Tyson facilities are ready to be placed directly in the refrigerated meat case at grocery and club stores.

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