Shortage of baby milk | 31 tons of powdered milk from Germany landed in Indiana

(Washington) A plane from Germany with more than 31 tons of boxes of baby milk powder intended for the American market, affected by a major shortage, landed on Sunday morning in the United States, according to images broadcast on the chains of American television.

Posted at 11:41 a.m.

President Joe Biden had earlier announced on Twitter that a plane “laden with more than 70,000 pounds [plus de 31 tonnes] formula milk […] is about to land in Indiana”.

“A flight left Ramstein Air Force Base in Germany last night, full of baby formula, and will land in Indiana. [dimanche] morning,” White House economic adviser Brian Deese told CNN.

On board, 132 pallets of Nestlé brand infant formula.

Other deliveries of powdered milk “will arrive at the beginning of the week” on other flights, he added.

The United States has been experiencing a months-long shortage of baby milk, caused by supply and labor issues related to COVID-19, then exacerbated by the closure in February of a factory in the manufacturer Abbott in Michigan, after a product recall suspected of causing the deaths of two infants.

“We had a manufacturer who did not follow the rules and who made formula that risked making babies sick,” lamented Brian Deese.

Abbott CEO Robert Ford apologized in the columns of the Washington Post on Saturday for the shortage that affects thousands of American families, for whom finding milk for their baby has become a real obstacle course.

But beyond that, wonders Joe Biden’s main economic adviser, “how did we arrive at a market 90% controlled by three companies? »

He insisted on the need to think about how to “bring more competition into [l’]economy” in the United States, to “have more suppliers of baby milk so that no one company has such control over the production lines. And we’re going to have to work on it.”

Moreover, when asked about the probability that the United States will experience a recession in the coming months, Brian Deese contented himself with stressing that “there are always risks”, but wanted to be reassuring as to the solidity of the American economy.

“There is no doubt that the difficulties are great,” he acknowledged, citing in particular inflation, which slowed down a little in April, to 8.3%, after reaching in March 8, 5%, its record for 40 years.


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