Taco Bell to switch to cage-free eggs after 2016, ahead of rivals

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Published: November 16, 2015

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Yum Brands’ Taco Bell chain plans for its U.S. restaurants, such as this site at Mesquite in the Dallas area, to use only “cage-free” eggs by the end of 2016. (HighStreet Net Lease Group via Marketwired)

Los Angeles | Reuters — Taco Bell said on Monday its more than 6,000 U.S. fast-food restaurants would stop using eggs laid by caged hens by Jan. 1, 2017, years ahead of the deadlines set by its bigger rivals.

The announcement came amid mounting pressure on Taco Bell to remove artificial ingredients, to source products from more humanely raised animals and to match Chick-fil-A, McDonald’s, Subway and other rivals’ commitments to sourcing meat raised with fewer antibiotics.

McDonald’s said in September its 16,000 U.S. and Canadian restaurants would switch to cage-free eggs within 10 years.

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McDonald’s uses about two billion eggs each year in the U.S., where it dominates breakfast. Analysts estimate that breakfast accounts for about 25 per cent of McDonald’s domestic sales and roughly 40 per cent of profit.

Taco Bell, which recently said that breakfast accounted for six per cent of the chain’s sales mix, uses the equivalent of 13 million eggs each year.

McDonald’s cage-free commitment demands far greater change in the North American egg industry that is rebuilding flocks after the worst bird flu outbreak in U.S. history. For example, its recently launched all-day breakfast program sent egg prices higher.

Burger King, also a small player in the breakfast category, has committed to going 100 per cent cage-free for its eggs by 2017.

Dunkin’ Donuts in March said that 10 per cent of all eggs sourced for its breakfast sandwiches in the U.S. would be from cage-free hens by the end of 2016.

Elsewhere, Starbucks and Panera Bread each have said they would make the move to cage-free eggs by 2020.

Taco Bell, a division of Yum Brands, said its whole eggs would be certified according to cage-free egg production standards set by the American Humane Association.

The chain also reiterated that it would remove artificial flavours and colours, added trans fat, high-fructose corn syrup and unsustainable palm oil from its core menu items by the beginning of 2016.

Lisa Baertlein is a Reuters correspondent covering the grocery and restaurant sectors from Los Angeles.

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