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{{Short description|American global conglomerate corporation}}
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{{overly detailed|date=March 2021}}
{{more citations needed|date=March 2021}}
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{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = Seaboard Corporation
| name = Seaboard Corporation
| type = Public
| type = Public
| traded_as = {{amex|SEB}}<br>[[Russell 1000 Index|Russell 1000 Component]]
| traded_as = {{amex|SEB}}<br />[[Russell 1000 Index|Russell 1000 Component]]
| logo = [[Image:Seaboard logo.png]]
| logo = Seaboard logo.png
| industry = [[Agriculture]] and [[Shipping]] [[Conglomerate (company)|Conglomerate]]
| industry = [[Agriculture]] and [[shipping]]
| founder = Otto Bresky
| founder = Otto Bresky
| location_city = [[Merriam, Kansas|Merriam]], [[Kansas]]
| location_city = [[Merriam, Kansas|Merriam]], [[Kansas]]
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| key_people = Robert L. Steer (Director and Chairman of the Board, President and CEO)
| key_people = Robert L. Steer (Director and Chairman of the Board, President and CEO)
| products = [[pork]], [[commodities]], [[poultry]], [[sugar]], [[produce]] and [[electrical power]]
| products = [[pork]], [[commodities]], [[poultry]], [[sugar]], [[produce]] and [[electrical power]]
| num_employees = 11,800<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://fortune.com/fortune500/seaboard/|title=Seaboard|website=Fortune|access-date=2018-12-31}}</ref>
| num_employees = 11,800<ref>{{Cite web |title=Seaboard |url=http://fortune.com/fortune500/seaboard/ |access-date=2018-12-31 |website=Fortune}}</ref>
| num_employees_year = 2017
| num_employees_year = 2017
| parent =
| parent =
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'''Seaboard Corporation''' is a diverse [[multinational corporation|multinational]] [[agribusiness]] and [[transportation]] [[conglomerate (company)|conglomerate]] with integrated operations in several industries. In the [[United States]], the company mainly engages in [[pork]] production and processing and ocean transportation. Internationally, Seaboard is primarily engaged in [[commodity]] [[merchandising]], [[grain]] processing, [[sugar]] production and [[electrical power]] generation.
'''Seaboard Corporation''' is a diverse [[multinational corporation|multinational]] [[agribusiness]] and [[transportation]] [[conglomerate (company)|conglomerate]] with integrated operations in several industries. In the [[United States]], the company mainly engages in [[pork]] production and processing and ocean transportation. Internationally, Seaboard is primarily engaged in [[commodity]] [[merchandising]], [[grain]] processing, [[sugar]] production and [[electrical power]] generation.
The parent company, Seaboard Corporation based in [[Merriam, Kansas]], operates Seaboard Foods, Seaboard Marine, Seaboard Overseas & Trading Group (SOTG), Tabacal Agroindustria, Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd. (TCCB), and Mount Dora Farms and additionally has 50% non-controlling interest in [[Butterball]], LLC. Its principal operating divisions are Pork, Commodity Trading and Milling, Marine, Sugar and Power.
The parent company, Seaboard Corporation is based in the [[Kansas City]] suburb of [[Merriam, Kansas]]. Its subsidiaries include Seaboard Foods, Seaboard Marine, Seaboard Overseas & Trading Group (SOTG), Tabacal Agroindustria, Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd. (TCCB), and Mount Dora Farms. It has 50% non-controlling interest in [[Butterball]], LLC. Its principal operating divisions are pork, commodity trading and milling, marine, sugar, and power. More than 50% of the corporation is owned by members of its founding family, the Breskys.<ref>[https://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/print-edition/2016/03/18/cover-story-who-in-the-world-is-seaboard.html Cover story: Who in the world is Seaboard?] Kansas City Business Journal (subscription required)</ref>


Seaboard Corporation's subsidiaries and affiliates employ more than 23,000 people in more than 45 different countries, mostly in the U.S., [[Latin America]] and [[Africa]]. With net sales of approximately $5.6 billion annually, Seaboard Corporation is #481 on the 2018 [[Fortune 500]] list.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://fortune.com/fortune500/seaboard/|title=Seaboard|website=Fortune|access-date=2018-12-31}}</ref> Stock is traded on the [[NYSE MKT]] under the symbol SEB.
Seaboard Corporation's subsidiaries and affiliates employ more than 23,000 people in more than 45 different countries, mostly in the U.S., [[Latin America]] and [[Africa]]. With net sales of approximately $6.8 billion annually, Seaboard Corporation is #444 on the 2020 [[Fortune 500]] list, having risen almost 40 spots in 2 years.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Seaboard |url=https://fortune.com/company/seaboard/fortune500/ |access-date=2018-12-31 |website=Fortune}}</ref> Stock is traded on the [[NYSE MKT]] under the symbol SEB.
{{TOC left}}
{{TOC left}}


==History==
==History==
Seaboard's history and roots are deeply tied to grain, dating back over 100 years. Otto Bresky purchased his first flour mill in [[Atchison, Kansas]], in 1918. During the next 40 years he would purchase additional flour mills, mostly in [[Kansas]], under the name Rodney Milling.
Seaboard's history is deeply tied to grain. Otto Bresky purchased his first flour mill in [[Atchison, Kansas]], in 1918. During the next 40 years he would purchase additional flour mills, mostly in [[Kansas]], under the name Rodney Milling.


In 1959 the company went public through a merger with Hathaway Industries, Inc., a [[publicly traded]] company. The name changed to Seaboard Allied Milling Corporation, and stock was traded under the symbol SEB.
In 1959 the company went public through a merger with Hathaway Industries, Inc., a [[publicly traded]] company. The name changed to Seaboard Allied Milling Corporation, and stock was traded under the symbol SEB.
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The newly formed company began concentrating on milling operations closer to major metropolitan areas along the East Coast and in the Southeast. Beginning in the early 1960s Seaboard built five U.S. mills over the course of a 14-year period. The company's first investment outside the U.S. was the joint acquisition of a flour mill in [[Ecuador]]. Seaboard later constructed mills in [[Sierra Leone]], [[Guyana]], [[Liberia]] and [[Nigeria]].
The newly formed company began concentrating on milling operations closer to major metropolitan areas along the East Coast and in the Southeast. Beginning in the early 1960s Seaboard built five U.S. mills over the course of a 14-year period. The company's first investment outside the U.S. was the joint acquisition of a flour mill in [[Ecuador]]. Seaboard later constructed mills in [[Sierra Leone]], [[Guyana]], [[Liberia]] and [[Nigeria]].


When Otto Bresky retired as Seaboard's Chairman and member of the Board of Directors in 1973, his son H. Harry Bresky took his place. After serving in WWII, Harry joined his father in the milling business and assumed the title of President in 1967, then later CEO. Seaboard built its current corporate headquarters in Merriam, Kansas in 1980.
When Otto Bresky retired as Seaboard's chairman and member of the board of directors in 1973, his son H. Harry Bresky took his place. After serving in WWII, Harry joined his father in the milling business and assumed the title of president in 1967, then later CEO. Seaboard built its current corporate headquarters in Merriam, Kansas in 1980.


In 1982 Seaboard sold its domestic flour milling division to [[Cargill, Inc.]] and changed its name to Seaboard Corporation, while continuing its milling operations outside the U.S. Harry and Seaboard took noticeable steps to diversify the company, initially by entering the poultry industry and by further international investments. Even though Seaboard eventually sold these original poultry interests to [[ConAgra]] in 2000 for $375 million,<ref>{{cite web|title=International Directory of Company Histories, Volume 85| url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Seaboard_Corp.aspx#1-1G2:2690100084-full}}</ref> the poultry business proved the efficiency of a [[vertically integrated]] business model. This model of integration would continue to be successful in Seaboard's expansion and growth.<ref>{{cite news|title=Harry Bresky, retired chairman of Seaboard Corp., dies|url=http://www.foodbusinessnews.net/News/News%20Home/Business%20News/2007/03/Harry%20Bresky%20retired%20chairman%20of%20Seaboard%20Corp%20dies.aspx?cck=1|publisher=Food Business News|date=March 13, 2007|first1=Josh|last1=Sosland}}</ref>
In 1982 Seaboard sold its domestic flour milling division to [[Cargill, Inc.]] and changed its name to Seaboard Corporation, while continuing its milling operations outside the U.S. Harry Bresky and Seaboard took noticeable steps to diversify the company, initially by entering the poultry industry and by further international investments. Even though Seaboard eventually sold these original poultry interests to [[ConAgra]] in 2000 for $375 million,<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences-and-law/economics-business-and-labor/businesses-and-occupations/seaboard-corp|title=Seaboard Corp &#124; Encyclopedia.com|website=www.encyclopedia.com|accessdate=27 May 2023}}</ref> the poultry business proved the efficiency of a [[vertically integrated]] business model. This model of integration would continue to be successful in Seaboard's expansion and growth.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Sosland |first=Josh |date=March 13, 2007 |title=Harry Bresky, retired chairman of Seaboard Corp., dies |publisher=Food Business News |url=http://www.foodbusinessnews.net/News/News%20Home/Business%20News/2007/03/Harry%20Bresky%20retired%20chairman%20of%20Seaboard%20Corp%20dies.aspx?cck=1}}</ref>

[[File:Seaboard-Marine-Vessel-2.jpg|thumb|right|Seaboard Marine Vessel]]


Seaboard Marine, Ltd. was formed in 1983 to provide [[containerization]] services between the U.S. and other international ports. In 1986 Mount Dora Farms, Inc. was established in Latin America to produce fruits and vegetables. The company utilized its [[marine transportation]] division to ship its produce from South America to [[Miami]]. Today Mount Dora Farms, Seaboard's produce division, specializes in processing [[jalapeño]]s in [[Honduras]] to ship to the U.S. and European markets.
Seaboard Marine, Ltd. was formed in 1983 to provide [[containerization]] services between the U.S. and other international ports. In 1986 Mount Dora Farms, Inc. was established in Latin America to produce fruits and vegetables. The company utilized its [[marine transportation]] division to ship its produce from South America to [[Miami]]. Today Mount Dora Farms, Seaboard's produce division, specializes in processing [[jalapeño]]s in [[Honduras]] to ship to the U.S. and European markets.
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Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd. formed in 1989 with the purpose of supplying electrical power to the [[Dominican Republic]]. The new [[subsidiary]] was the first independent power producer in the Dominican Republic.
Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd. formed in 1989 with the purpose of supplying electrical power to the [[Dominican Republic]]. The new [[subsidiary]] was the first independent power producer in the Dominican Republic.


1990 marked Seaboard Corporation's entry into pork production and processing. The company's pork division, Seaboard Foods, acquired a pork processing plant in [[Albert Lea, Minnesota]]. As it had done with poultry, Seaboard quickly began to invest in processing pork, constructing its first feeder pig facility and feed mill in Northeast [[Colorado]] in 1991. In 1992 Seaboard began construction on a state of the art pork processing facility in [[Guymon, Oklahoma]]. To support the Guymon facility, Seaboard constructed feed mills in [[Oklahoma]], [[Texas]] and [[Kansas]]. Guymon eventually opened in 1996. The $110 million plant had the capacity to process over four million hogs annually, employing more than 1,000 workers, utilizing two shifts. The Minnesota pork processing plant closed in 1994.<ref>{{cite web|title=International Directory of Company Histories, Volume 85| url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Seaboard_Corp.aspx#1-1G2:2690100084-full}}</ref>
In 1990, Seaboard Corporation began pork production and processing. The company's pork division, Seaboard Foods, acquired a pork processing plant in [[Albert Lea, Minnesota]]. As it had done with poultry, Seaboard quickly began to invest in processing pork, constructing its first feeder pig facility and feed mill in Northeast [[Colorado]] in 1991. In 1992 Seaboard began construction on a state of the art pork processing facility in [[Guymon, Oklahoma]]. To support the Guymon facility, Seaboard constructed feed mills in [[Oklahoma]], [[Texas]] and [[Kansas]]. Guymon eventually opened in 1996. The $110 million plant had the capacity to process over four million hogs annually, employing more than 1,000 workers, utilizing two shifts. The Minnesota pork processing plant closed in 1994.<ref name="auto"/>


That same year, in 1996, Seaboard acquired an interest in Tabacal Agroindustria, an [[Argentine]] company engaged in sugar cane production and refining and [[citrus]] production. Two years later, in 1998, Seaboard Corporation purchased a controlling interest in a winery in [[Bulgaria]].
That same year, in 1996, Seaboard acquired an interest in Tabacal Agroindustria, an [[Argentine]] company engaged in sugar cane production and refining and [[citrus]] production. Two years later, in 1998, Seaboard Corporation purchased a controlling interest in a winery in [[Bulgaria]].
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Seaboard added Daily's® Premium Meats, a bacon processor with two processing plants in [[Salt Lake City, Utah]] and [[Missoula, Montana]] to its integrated operations in 2005. Seaboard also has an exclusive agreement to market Triumph Foods pork products utilizing a processing plant in [[St. Joseph, Missouri]].
Seaboard added Daily's® Premium Meats, a bacon processor with two processing plants in [[Salt Lake City, Utah]] and [[Missoula, Montana]] to its integrated operations in 2005. Seaboard also has an exclusive agreement to market Triumph Foods pork products utilizing a processing plant in [[St. Joseph, Missouri]].


H. Harry Bresky retired in July 2006, but remained Chairman of the Board until his death in March 2007. Steven J. Bresky, his son, then served as Seaboard Corporation's President and CEO and its Director and Chairman of the Board until his death in 2020.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard Chairman Bresky Passes Away|url=http://www.seaboardmarine.com/seaboard-chairman-bresky-passes-away/}}</ref>
H. Harry Bresky retired in July 2006, but remained chairman of the board until his death in March 2007. Steven J. Bresky, his son, then served as Seaboard Corporation's president and CEO and its director and chairman of the board until his death in 2020.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Seaboard Chairman Bresky Passes Away |url=http://www.seaboardmarine.com/seaboard-chairman-bresky-passes-away/}}</ref>


Seaboard once again entered the poultry business with the acquisition of half ownership in Butterball, LLC in 2010.
Seaboard once again entered the poultry business with the acquisition of half ownership in Butterball, LLC in 2010.
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With continued expansion in commodities trading, alcohol [[distillery]] operations and specialty crops processing abroad, Seaboard exceeded $4 billion in revenue by 2010. In 2011 Seaboard Corporation made the Fortune 500 for the first time in company history.
With continued expansion in commodities trading, alcohol [[distillery]] operations and specialty crops processing abroad, Seaboard exceeded $4 billion in revenue by 2010. In 2011 Seaboard Corporation made the Fortune 500 for the first time in company history.


In 2018, Seaboard acquired the West-African agri-food group Mimran, increasing its flour and feed milling capacity with approximately 15 percent to over 24,000 metric tons per day.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.millermagazine.com/english/seaboard-to-acquire-west-african-group-mimran/.html|title=Seaboard to acquire West African Group Mimran|website=Miller Magazine|language=en-US|access-date=2019-11-04}}</ref>
In 2018, Seaboard acquired the West-African agri-food group Mimran, increasing its flour and feed milling capacity with approximately 15 percent to over 24,000 metric tons per day.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Seaboard to acquire West African Group Mimran |url=https://www.millermagazine.com/english/seaboard-to-acquire-west-african-group-mimran/.html |access-date=2019-11-04 |website=Miller Magazine |language=en-US}}</ref>


==Divisions==
==Divisions==
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Since 2008 Seaboard Foods has been producing [[biodiesel]] from the [[animal by-products]] of Guymon's processing plant. High Plains Bioenergy, a wholly owned subsidiary of Seaboard Foods, produces more than 30 million gallons annually. High Plains Bioenergy is located next to the Guymon, Oklahoma, processing plant and also has the capabilities to produce vegetable oil.
Since 2008 Seaboard Foods has been producing [[biodiesel]] from the [[animal by-products]] of Guymon's processing plant. High Plains Bioenergy, a wholly owned subsidiary of Seaboard Foods, produces more than 30 million gallons annually. High Plains Bioenergy is located next to the Guymon, Oklahoma, processing plant and also has the capabilities to produce vegetable oil.

Seaboard bought a defunct ethanol plant in Hugoton Kansas and converted it to a renewable diesel plant.

Other ventures include renewable natural gas made from [[biogas]].


In 2009 Seaboard Foods opened, Seaboard Foods de México, to produce fresh boneless hams, using mostly bone-in hams from Guymon's U.S. facility.
In 2009 Seaboard Foods opened, Seaboard Foods de México, to produce fresh boneless hams, using mostly bone-in hams from Guymon's U.S. facility.


===Commodity Trading & Milling===
===Commodity trading and milling===
Managed under the name Seaboard Overseas and Trading Group (SOTG), the Commodity Trading and Milling segment sources, transports, and markets [[wheat]], [[corn]], [[soybean meal]], and other commodities. These commodities are purchased worldwide, with primary destinations in Africa, South America and the Caribbean.
Managed under the name Seaboard Overseas and Trading Group (SOTG), the Commodity Trading and Milling segment sources, transports, and markets [[wheat]], [[corn]], [[soybean meal]], and other commodities. These commodities are purchased worldwide, with primary destinations in Africa, South America and the Caribbean.


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===Marine===
===Marine===


[[File:Seaboard-Marine-Refrigerated-Container.jpg|thumb|right|Seaboard Marine refrigerated container]]
The Marine segment provides [[cargo]] shipping services mostly between the United States and 26 countries in the [[Caribbean Basin]], Central and South America. Seaboard Marine's primary office is in Miami, but also operates out of the Port of Houston, Brooklyn, New York and New Orleans. The division's fleet consists of 30 vessels and over 60,000 dry, refrigerated, specialized containers and related equipment. It uses a network of offices and agents with full service capabilities to allow truck or rail transport to and from various U.S. ports.

The Marine segment provides [[cargo]] shipping services mostly between the United States and 26 countries in the [[Caribbean Basin]], Central and South America. Seaboard Marine's primary office is in Miami, but also operates out of the Port of Houston, Brooklyn, New York and New Orleans. The Division's fleet consists of 30 vessels and over 60,000 dry, refrigerated, specialized containers and related equipment. It uses a network of offices and agents with full service capabilities to allow truck or rail transport to and from various U.S. ports.


===Sugar===
===Sugar===
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===Other===
===Other===
With a 50% acquisition of Butterball, LLC, Seaboard added a Turkey segment to its portfolio in 2010. Butterball is the largest vertically integrated producer, processor and marketer of branded and non-branded turkey and other products. Butterball produces approximately one billion pounds of turkey each year.
With a 50% acquisition of Butterball, LLC, Seaboard added a turkey segment to its portfolio in 2010.<ref>{{Cite news |last=La Monica |first=Paul R. |date=November 26, 2014 |title=The $3500 Butterball turkey stock |publisher=CNN Money |url=https://money.cnn.com/2014/11/26/investing/butterball-turkey-cost/index.html}}</ref> Butterball is the largest vertically integrated producer, processor and marketer of branded and non-branded turkey and other products. Butterball produces approximately one billion pounds of turkey each year.


Through Mount Dora Farms, Seaboard processes jalapeño peppers at its plant in Honduras.
Through Mount Dora Farms, Seaboard processes jalapeño peppers at its plant in Honduras.


==Corporate Affairs==
==Corporate==
Each of Seaboard Corporation's segments is separately managed, and each was started or acquired independent of the other segments. Most of the sales and costs of Seaboard's segments are significantly influenced by worldwide fluctuations in commodity prices and changes in foreign and political conditions.
Each of Seaboard Corporation's segments is separately managed, and each was started or acquired independent of the other segments. Most of the sales and costs of Seaboard's segments are significantly influenced by worldwide fluctuations in commodity prices and changes in foreign and political conditions.


In its most recent 3rd Quarter 2014 Earnings Report, Seaboard Corporation posted net sales of over $4.9 million. Net earnings per [[common share]] were $107.09. Average number of shares outstanding was 1,195.006.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard Earnings Report: 3rd Quarter 2014|url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/earnings-report-3rd-quarter-2014/}}</ref>
As of September 27, 2014, Seaboard Foods Pork segment sold to Triumph Foods LLC a 50% interest in Daily's Premium Meats, its processed meats division.<ref>{{Cite web |date=26 September 2014 |title=Triumph Foods Purchased A 50 Percent Ownership in Daily's Premium Meats |url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-corporation-announced-today-triumph-foods-purchased-a-50-percent-ownership-in-dailys-premium-meats-2/}}</ref>

As of September 27, 2014, Seaboard Foods Pork segment sold to Triumph Foods LLC a 50% interest in Daily's® Premium Meats, its processed meats division.<ref>{{cite web|title=Triumph Foods Purchased A 50 Percent Ownership in Daily's Premium Meats|url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-corporation-announced-today-triumph-foods-purchased-a-50-percent-ownership-in-dailys-premium-meats-2/}}</ref>

In recent years, Seaboard Corporation has invested in several entities abroad to strengthen and expand its trading and milling businesses. At home, effective December 31, 2012, Seaboard increased its ownership to 85% in PS International, LLC, a specialty grain trading business in [[Chapel Hill, North Carolina]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard 2013 Annual Report, Page 12|url=http://seaboardcorp.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2014/02/AR-12-31-13-websitef.pdf}}</ref>

From year-end 2009 to December 31, 2013, Seaboard's [[net sales]] nearly doubled from $3.6 billion to $6.6 billion. In a five-year comparison of basic earnings per common share of stock, Seaboard grew from $74.74 in 2009 to $171.92 (which is down from 2010, 2011 and 2012).<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard 2013 Annual Report, Page 8|url=http://seaboardcorp.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2014/02/AR-12-31-13-websitef.pdf}}</ref> Total return to investors (5 year, annualized) was 18.8%, and 26.1% (10 year, annualized).

Seaboard had 127 shareholders as of January 24, 2014.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard 2013 Annual Report|url=http://seaboardcorp.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2014/02/AR-12-31-13-websitef.pdf}}</ref> One share of Seaboard (SEB), currently sells for around $3,800. Its unusually large price tag is attributed to the company never undergoing a [[stock split]].<ref>{{cite news|title=The $3500 Butterball turkey stock|url=https://money.cnn.com/2014/11/26/investing/butterball-turkey-cost/index.html|publisher=CNN Money|date=November 26, 2014|first1=Paul R.|last1=La Monica}}</ref>

===Governance===
The current members of the [[board of directors]] of Seaboard Corporation (as of 2020) are Ellen S. Bresky, David A. Adamsen, Douglas W. Baena and Edward I. Shifman, Jr.

===Sustainability & Stewardship===
In 2008, Seaboard Foods released its first “[[Sustainability]] & [[Stewardship]]” Report outlining its commitments to: Quality, Customers, Employees, Environment, Animal Care and Community.

Seaboard Foods began producing biodiesel from the animal by-products at its Guymon, Oklahoma processing plant in 2008. Since then, Seaboard Foods has implemented numerous initiatives and contributed to community endeavors, including:
*High Plains Bioenergy, a subsidiary of Seaboard Foods, opened its first public [[compressed natural gas]] (CNG) filling station in Guymon, Oklahoma, on August 21, 2014.
*Seaboard Foods added trucks and several pickups to its fleet that use compressed natural gas (CNG).
*As part of Seaboard Foods' continuous improvement program, a dedicated audit team inspects 109 environmental, health and safety-related items at its farms twice a year.
*Seaboard Foods has a zero-tolerance policy for improper animal handling. The company was the first large-scale pork producer to voluntarily agree to animal welfare audits.
*An annual survey gages overall customer satisfaction with products and services.
*Seaboard Foods donated more than 12,000 pounds of pork and refrigeration trailers to tornado relief efforts following the [[Moore, Oklahoma]] [[tornado]] in 2013.
*Implemented regional community college scholarship programs for students pursuing technical careers.

Following the lead of Seaboard Foods, Butterball, LLC has implemented significant additions and changes to its animal care and well-being program. The company is also well known for its free Turkey Talk-Line, where customers can ask preparation questions and receive safety tips, and for its commitment to armed forces and their families.<ref>{{cite news|title=Butterball Enhances Food Safety Promise|url=http://www.progressivegrocer.com/industry-news-trends/cpgs-trading-partners/butterball-enhances-food-safety-promise|publisher=Progressive Grocer|date=September 17, 2013}}</ref>

Seaboard Corporation and The Seaboard Foundation are focused on making a difference around the world by supporting a broad range of worthy causes in the local communities in which they operate. The Foundation provides funding for education, improving public health, eliminating hunger, sustainable agriculture and food production. Corporation and Foundation beneficiaries<ref>{{cite web|title=The Seaboard Foundation|url=https://giving.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-foundation/}}</ref> include:
*CCLD Medical Center – new maternity ward ([[Bas-Congo]])
*[[Ronald McDonald House]]
*[[Special Olympics]]
*[[Habitat for Humanity]]
*[[Food for the Poor]] (FFTP) – Caribbean and Latin America
*Doobay's Medical Centre – Guyana


===Awards===
===Awards===
Seaboard Foods received the 2014 Achievement Award from [[NGVAmerica]] for Outstanding CNG Fleet & Station Program. NGVAmerica is the national organization driving the use of natural gas as a clean, domestic, safe and abundant transportation fuel.<ref>{{cite web|title=NGVAmerica honors recipients of the 2014 NGVAmerica Award|url=http://www.seaboardfoods.com/news/Pages/NGVAmerica%20honors%20recipients%20of%20the%202014%20NGV%20Achievement%20Award.aspx}}</ref>
Seaboard Foods received the 2014 Achievement Award from NGVAmerica for Outstanding CNG Fleet & Station Program. NGVAmerica is the national organization driving the use of natural gas.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.seaboardfoods.com/news/Pages/NGVAmerica%20honors%20recipients%20of%20the%202014%20NGV%20Achievement%20Award.aspx|title=NGVAmerica honors recipients of the 2014 NGVAmerica Award|accessdate=27 May 2023}}</ref>


For seven consecutive years, Seaboard Marine has been recognized by the Jamaican Exporters Association (JEA) for its growth and development of Jamaica's export sector. The JEA is a non-government members association.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard Marine Jamaica Wins 7th Consecutive JEA Award|url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-marine-jamaica-wins-7th-consecutive-jea-award/}}</ref>
For seven consecutive years, Seaboard Marine has been recognized by the Jamaican Exporters Association (JEA) for its growth and development of Jamaica's export sector. The JEA is a non-government members association.<ref>{{Cite web |date=8 July 2014 |title=Seaboard Marine Jamaica Wins 7th Consecutive JEA Award |url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-marine-jamaica-wins-7th-consecutive-jea-award/}}</ref>


In August 2014, Seaboard Marine was also awarded a [[Logistics Management magazine]] 2014 Quest for Quality Award in Ocean Carriers. This was its third consecutive year to receive the recognition. Logistic Management's over 7,000 readers chose top performers in various transportation sectors. The annual survey is viewed as one of the transportation industry's more reliable measures of customer satisfaction and performance excellence.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard Marine Wins Third Consecutive Quest For Quality Award|url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-marine-wins-third-consecutive-quest-for-quality-award/}}</ref>
In August 2014, Seaboard Marine was awarded a [[Logistics Management magazine]] 2014 Quest for Quality Award in Ocean Carriers for the third consecutive year. Logistic Management's over 7,000 readers chose top performers in various transportation sectors.<ref>{{Cite web |date=25 August 2014 |title=Seaboard Marine Wins Third Consecutive Quest For Quality Award |url=https://www.seaboardcorp.com/seaboard-marine-wins-third-consecutive-quest-for-quality-award/}}</ref>


==Criticism==
==Criticism==


;Corporate welfare
===Corporate welfare===
In 1998, ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine published "The Empire of the Pigs" by investigative journalists [[Donald Barlett]] and [[James B. Steele|James Steele]] that chronicles "how an extremely resourceful corporation plays the welfare game, maximizing the benefits to itself, often to the detriment of those who provide them". It reports that Seaboard Corp. had a history of worker abuse and environmental damage during the same period that stock prices rose dramatically from $116 to $387 per share.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Barlett |first=Donald L. |last2=Steele |first2=James B. |date=November 30, 1998 |title=The Empire of the Pigs |publisher=Time Magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101981130-140572,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061023181005/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0%2C9171%2C1101981130-140572%2C00.html |archive-date=October 23, 2006}}</ref> Rick Hoffman, CEO of the company's Seaboard Farms subsidiary, responded that "there were no programs that Seaboard solicited by the state that did not already exist for other new businesses", and that much of the money ''Time'' claimed was earmarked for Seaboard did not actually benefit the company.{{citation needed|date=March 2021}}


===Land misappropriation===
In 1998, ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine published "The Empire of the Pigs", an article by investigative journalists [[Donald Barlett]] and [[James B. Steele|James Steele]] that chronicled "how an extremely resourceful corporation plays the welfare game, maximizing the benefits to itself, often to the detriment of those who provide them." It also reported that Seaboard Corp. had a history of worker abuse and environmental damage during the same period that stock prices rose dramatically from $116 to $387 per share.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Empire of the Pigs |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101981130-140572,00.html |publisher=Time Magazine |date=November 30, 1998 | first1=Donald L. | last1=Barlett | first2=James B. | last2=Steele}}</ref> Rick Hoffman, CEO of the company's Seaboard Farms subsidiary, responded that "there were no programs that Seaboard solicited by the state that did not already exist for other new businesses.", and that much of the money ''Time'' claimed was earmarked for Seaboard did not actually benefit the company.
In 1996, Seaboard bought the sugar plantation and refinery San Martin de Tabacal, in Salta, Argentina, and immediately fired 6,000 workers. Many of them were members of the Ava [[Guarani people|Guaraní]] and Kolla indigenous communities, who maintain a claim to ancestral lands they have inhabited and farmed for centuries. In 2003, they were removed at gunpoint, re-invigorating a campaign to have Seaboard Corp. and San Martin de Tabacal return their land. The campaign gained the support of [[Adolfo Pérez Esquivel]] and other international activists.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Worcester Global Action Network |url=http://www.wogan.org/seaboard.php}}</ref> In August 2007, a judge ordered Seaboard to cease all tree and earth removal pending a decision on land ownership.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Juez ordena sentencia favorable a comunidad guaraní (Spanish) |url=http://www.adital.com.br/site/noticia.asp?lang=ES&cod=28953 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081028175945/http://www.adital.com.br/site/noticia.asp?lang=ES&cod=28953 |archive-date=2008-10-28}}</ref>

;Misappropriation of land

In 1996, Seaboard bought the sugar plantation and refinery San Martin de Tabacal, in Salta, Argentina, and immediately fired 6,000 workers. Many of them were members of the Ava [[Guarani people|Guaraní]] and Kolla indigenous communities, who maintain a claim to ancestral lands they have inhabited and farmed for centuries. In 2003, they were removed at gunpoint, re-invigorating a campaign to have Seaboard Corp./San Martin de Tabacal return their land. The campaign gained the support of [[Adolfo Pérez Esquivel]] and other international activists.<ref>{{cite web|title=Worcester Global Action Network |url=http://www.wogan.org/seaboard.php}}</ref> In August 2007, a judge ordered Seaboard to cease all tree and earth removal pending a decision on land ownership.<ref>{{cite news |title=Juez ordena sentencia favorable a comunidad guaraní (Spanish) |url=http://www.adital.com.br/site/noticia.asp?lang=ES&cod=28953 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081028175945/http://www.adital.com.br/site/noticia.asp?lang=ES&cod=28953 |archivedate=2008-10-28 }}</ref>

;Cruelty to animals


===Animal cruelty===
[[File:Gestcrate01.jpg|thumb|Female pigs in gestation crates]]
[[File:Gestcrate01.jpg|thumb|Female pigs in gestation crates]]
In January 2012, an undercover exposé of Seaboard pig operations <ref>{{cite web|title=Oklahoma Pig Investigation video|url=http://video.humanesociety.org/press/video.php?bctid=1414114795001&channel=931219457001}}</ref> revealed numerous severe welfare concerns including:<ref>{{cite web|title=HSUS Report: Undercover Exposés at Two of the Nation's Largest Pork Producers|url=http://www.humanesociety.org/assets/pdfs/farm/seaboard_prestage_gestation.pdf}}</ref>
In January 2012, an undercover exposé of Seaboard pig operations<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://newsroom.humanesociety.org/video/video.php?bctid=1414114795001&channel=931219457001|title=Newsroom|website=newsroom.humanesociety.org|accessdate=27 May 2023}}</ref> revealed numerous severe welfare concerns including<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.humanesociety.org/assets/pdfs/farm/seaboard_prestage_gestation.pdf|title=HSUS Report: Undercover Exposés at Two of the Nation's Largest Pork Producers|accessdate=27 May 2023}}</ref> sanitation, abandonment of dead or medically suffering animals, violent abuse, and callous indifference to pain.

· unsanitary pens and gestation crates containing accumulations of feces and urine.

· pigs left in pens and gestation crates either dead or in severe need of medical attention.

· callous indifference to pain, and abuse of pigs including smacking their genitals, pulling their hair, jabbing their eyes, and hitting them with gate rods to move them between crates.


Following the investigation, Seaboard faced [[Federal Trade Commission]] (FTC) and [[Securities and Exchange Commission]] (SEC) complaints alleging false statements in defense of the abuses documented in video.<ref>{{cite web|title=Seaboard Corporation Pig Treatment Challenged By Humane Society Investigation|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/01/seaboard-corporation-pig-video_n_1244229.html}}</ref>
Following the investigation, Seaboard faced [[Federal Trade Commission]] (FTC) and [[Securities and Exchange Commission]] (SEC) complaints alleging false statements in defense of the abuses documented in video.<ref>{{Cite web |date=February 2012 |title=Seaboard Corporation Pig Treatment Challenged By Humane Society Investigation |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/01/seaboard-corporation-pig-video_n_1244229.html |website=[[HuffPost]]}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
Line 163: Line 127:


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.seaboardcorp.com Seaboard homepage]
* {{Official website|https://seaboardcorp.com}}
* [http://www.hoovers.com/company-information/cs/company-profile.Seaboard_Corporation.a500221bb903109d.html Hoovers]
* [http://www.hoovers.com/company-information/cs/company-profile.Seaboard_Corporation.a500221bb903109d.html Hoovers]
* [https://www.reuters.com/finance/stocks/overview?symbol=SEB.A Reuters]
* [https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0000088121 SEC Filings]
* [https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0000088121 SEC Filings]
* [http://www.tabacal.com.ar Tabacal Agroindustria homepage]
* [http://www.tabacal.com.ar Tabacal Agroindustria homepage]

Revision as of 12:54, 5 December 2023

Seaboard Corporation
Company typePublic
AMEXSEB
Russell 1000 Component
IndustryAgriculture and shipping
FounderOtto Bresky
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Robert L. Steer (Director and Chairman of the Board, President and CEO)
Productspork, commodities, poultry, sugar, produce and electrical power
Number of employees
11,800[1] (2017)
SubsidiariesSeaboard Foods, Seaboard Marine, Seaboard Overseas & Trading Group (SOTG), Tabacal Agroindustria, Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd.(TCCB), Mount Dora Farms, and 50% non-controlling interest in Butterball, LLC
Websitewww.seaboardcorp.com

Seaboard Corporation is a diverse multinational agribusiness and transportation conglomerate with integrated operations in several industries. In the United States, the company mainly engages in pork production and processing and ocean transportation. Internationally, Seaboard is primarily engaged in commodity merchandising, grain processing, sugar production and electrical power generation. The parent company, Seaboard Corporation is based in the Kansas City suburb of Merriam, Kansas. Its subsidiaries include Seaboard Foods, Seaboard Marine, Seaboard Overseas & Trading Group (SOTG), Tabacal Agroindustria, Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd. (TCCB), and Mount Dora Farms. It has 50% non-controlling interest in Butterball, LLC. Its principal operating divisions are pork, commodity trading and milling, marine, sugar, and power. More than 50% of the corporation is owned by members of its founding family, the Breskys.[2]

Seaboard Corporation's subsidiaries and affiliates employ more than 23,000 people in more than 45 different countries, mostly in the U.S., Latin America and Africa. With net sales of approximately $6.8 billion annually, Seaboard Corporation is #444 on the 2020 Fortune 500 list, having risen almost 40 spots in 2 years.[3] Stock is traded on the NYSE MKT under the symbol SEB.

History

Seaboard's history is deeply tied to grain. Otto Bresky purchased his first flour mill in Atchison, Kansas, in 1918. During the next 40 years he would purchase additional flour mills, mostly in Kansas, under the name Rodney Milling.

In 1959 the company went public through a merger with Hathaway Industries, Inc., a publicly traded company. The name changed to Seaboard Allied Milling Corporation, and stock was traded under the symbol SEB.

The newly formed company began concentrating on milling operations closer to major metropolitan areas along the East Coast and in the Southeast. Beginning in the early 1960s Seaboard built five U.S. mills over the course of a 14-year period. The company's first investment outside the U.S. was the joint acquisition of a flour mill in Ecuador. Seaboard later constructed mills in Sierra Leone, Guyana, Liberia and Nigeria.

When Otto Bresky retired as Seaboard's chairman and member of the board of directors in 1973, his son H. Harry Bresky took his place. After serving in WWII, Harry joined his father in the milling business and assumed the title of president in 1967, then later CEO. Seaboard built its current corporate headquarters in Merriam, Kansas in 1980.

In 1982 Seaboard sold its domestic flour milling division to Cargill, Inc. and changed its name to Seaboard Corporation, while continuing its milling operations outside the U.S. Harry Bresky and Seaboard took noticeable steps to diversify the company, initially by entering the poultry industry and by further international investments. Even though Seaboard eventually sold these original poultry interests to ConAgra in 2000 for $375 million,[4] the poultry business proved the efficiency of a vertically integrated business model. This model of integration would continue to be successful in Seaboard's expansion and growth.[5]

Seaboard Marine, Ltd. was formed in 1983 to provide containerization services between the U.S. and other international ports. In 1986 Mount Dora Farms, Inc. was established in Latin America to produce fruits and vegetables. The company utilized its marine transportation division to ship its produce from South America to Miami. Today Mount Dora Farms, Seaboard's produce division, specializes in processing jalapeños in Honduras to ship to the U.S. and European markets.

Also during the decade of the ‘80s, Seaboard purchased two baking companies in Puerto Rico and ventured into shrimp farming in Ecuador and the Honduras. It constructed a new polypropylene bag plant in Nigeria. The Puerto Rico bakeries were sold in 1998, and after a brief entry into salmon farming, Seaboard eventually sold off all seafood investments in the early 2000s.

Transcontinental Capital Corporation, Ltd. formed in 1989 with the purpose of supplying electrical power to the Dominican Republic. The new subsidiary was the first independent power producer in the Dominican Republic.

In 1990, Seaboard Corporation began pork production and processing. The company's pork division, Seaboard Foods, acquired a pork processing plant in Albert Lea, Minnesota. As it had done with poultry, Seaboard quickly began to invest in processing pork, constructing its first feeder pig facility and feed mill in Northeast Colorado in 1991. In 1992 Seaboard began construction on a state of the art pork processing facility in Guymon, Oklahoma. To support the Guymon facility, Seaboard constructed feed mills in Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas. Guymon eventually opened in 1996. The $110 million plant had the capacity to process over four million hogs annually, employing more than 1,000 workers, utilizing two shifts. The Minnesota pork processing plant closed in 1994.[4]

That same year, in 1996, Seaboard acquired an interest in Tabacal Agroindustria, an Argentine company engaged in sugar cane production and refining and citrus production. Two years later, in 1998, Seaboard Corporation purchased a controlling interest in a winery in Bulgaria.

Seaboard added Daily's® Premium Meats, a bacon processor with two processing plants in Salt Lake City, Utah and Missoula, Montana to its integrated operations in 2005. Seaboard also has an exclusive agreement to market Triumph Foods pork products utilizing a processing plant in St. Joseph, Missouri.

H. Harry Bresky retired in July 2006, but remained chairman of the board until his death in March 2007. Steven J. Bresky, his son, then served as Seaboard Corporation's president and CEO and its director and chairman of the board until his death in 2020.[6]

Seaboard once again entered the poultry business with the acquisition of half ownership in Butterball, LLC in 2010.

With continued expansion in commodities trading, alcohol distillery operations and specialty crops processing abroad, Seaboard exceeded $4 billion in revenue by 2010. In 2011 Seaboard Corporation made the Fortune 500 for the first time in company history.

In 2018, Seaboard acquired the West-African agri-food group Mimran, increasing its flour and feed milling capacity with approximately 15 percent to over 24,000 metric tons per day.[7]

Divisions

Pork

Seaboard was a pioneer in the vertical integration of the U.S. pork industry. Seaboard Foods, its Pork Division, is able to efficiently control pork production across the entire life cycle of the hog. Seaboard Foods hog production facilities in Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Iowa and Texas consist of genetic and commercial breeding, farrowing, nursery and finishing buildings. They produce more than 5 million hogs annually. Hogs processed at Seaboard's main plant in Guymon, Oklahoma are primarily Seaboard Foods raised hogs. At full capacity, the facility processes approximately 20,000 hogs per day, selling to further processors, food service operators, grocery stores, distributors, export and retail outlets. The Pork segment is mainly a U.S. business, with some export to Japan, Mexico, Russia, Korea and other foreign markets. In 2013 Seaboard was ranked #2 in pork production and #4 in processing in the U.S. (including Triumph Foods volume).

Since 2008 Seaboard Foods has been producing biodiesel from the animal by-products of Guymon's processing plant. High Plains Bioenergy, a wholly owned subsidiary of Seaboard Foods, produces more than 30 million gallons annually. High Plains Bioenergy is located next to the Guymon, Oklahoma, processing plant and also has the capabilities to produce vegetable oil.

Seaboard bought a defunct ethanol plant in Hugoton Kansas and converted it to a renewable diesel plant.

Other ventures include renewable natural gas made from biogas.

In 2009 Seaboard Foods opened, Seaboard Foods de México, to produce fresh boneless hams, using mostly bone-in hams from Guymon's U.S. facility.

Commodity trading and milling

Managed under the name Seaboard Overseas and Trading Group (SOTG), the Commodity Trading and Milling segment sources, transports, and markets wheat, corn, soybean meal, and other commodities. These commodities are purchased worldwide, with primary destinations in Africa, South America and the Caribbean.

SOTG operates facilities in 23 countries. With ten trade offices in nine countries, Seaboard traded more than 8 million tons of agricultural products into approximately 100 countries in 2013.

Marine

The Marine segment provides cargo shipping services mostly between the United States and 26 countries in the Caribbean Basin, Central and South America. Seaboard Marine's primary office is in Miami, but also operates out of the Port of Houston, Brooklyn, New York and New Orleans. The division's fleet consists of 30 vessels and over 60,000 dry, refrigerated, specialized containers and related equipment. It uses a network of offices and agents with full service capabilities to allow truck or rail transport to and from various U.S. ports.

Sugar

Tabacal Agroindustria in Argentina has an annual capacity to produce approximately 250,000 metric tons of sugar and approximately 15 million gallons of alcohol. The mill is located in the Salta Province of Argentina, with administrative offices in Buenos Aires.

This segment also owns a 51 megawatt cogeneration power plant. The plant is fueled by the burning of sugarcane by-products during harvest season. It also sells dehydrated alcohol to certain oil companies under an Argentine government bio-ethanol program.

Power

Seaboard's Transcontinental Capital Corporation (TCC) electric power generating facility is in the Dominican Republic. Using a system of diesel engines mounted on floating barges, TCC generates a combined rated capacity of approximately 178 megawatts. As an independent power producer, Seaboard generates electricity for the local power grid, selling mainly to government-owned distribution companies.

Other

With a 50% acquisition of Butterball, LLC, Seaboard added a turkey segment to its portfolio in 2010.[8] Butterball is the largest vertically integrated producer, processor and marketer of branded and non-branded turkey and other products. Butterball produces approximately one billion pounds of turkey each year.

Through Mount Dora Farms, Seaboard processes jalapeño peppers at its plant in Honduras.

Corporate

Each of Seaboard Corporation's segments is separately managed, and each was started or acquired independent of the other segments. Most of the sales and costs of Seaboard's segments are significantly influenced by worldwide fluctuations in commodity prices and changes in foreign and political conditions.

As of September 27, 2014, Seaboard Foods Pork segment sold to Triumph Foods LLC a 50% interest in Daily's Premium Meats, its processed meats division.[9]

Awards

Seaboard Foods received the 2014 Achievement Award from NGVAmerica for Outstanding CNG Fleet & Station Program. NGVAmerica is the national organization driving the use of natural gas.[10]

For seven consecutive years, Seaboard Marine has been recognized by the Jamaican Exporters Association (JEA) for its growth and development of Jamaica's export sector. The JEA is a non-government members association.[11]

In August 2014, Seaboard Marine was awarded a Logistics Management magazine 2014 Quest for Quality Award in Ocean Carriers for the third consecutive year. Logistic Management's over 7,000 readers chose top performers in various transportation sectors.[12]

Criticism

Corporate welfare

In 1998, Time magazine published "The Empire of the Pigs" by investigative journalists Donald Barlett and James Steele that chronicles "how an extremely resourceful corporation plays the welfare game, maximizing the benefits to itself, often to the detriment of those who provide them". It reports that Seaboard Corp. had a history of worker abuse and environmental damage during the same period that stock prices rose dramatically from $116 to $387 per share.[13] Rick Hoffman, CEO of the company's Seaboard Farms subsidiary, responded that "there were no programs that Seaboard solicited by the state that did not already exist for other new businesses", and that much of the money Time claimed was earmarked for Seaboard did not actually benefit the company.[citation needed]

Land misappropriation

In 1996, Seaboard bought the sugar plantation and refinery San Martin de Tabacal, in Salta, Argentina, and immediately fired 6,000 workers. Many of them were members of the Ava Guaraní and Kolla indigenous communities, who maintain a claim to ancestral lands they have inhabited and farmed for centuries. In 2003, they were removed at gunpoint, re-invigorating a campaign to have Seaboard Corp. and San Martin de Tabacal return their land. The campaign gained the support of Adolfo Pérez Esquivel and other international activists.[14] In August 2007, a judge ordered Seaboard to cease all tree and earth removal pending a decision on land ownership.[15]

Animal cruelty

Female pigs in gestation crates

In January 2012, an undercover exposé of Seaboard pig operations[16] revealed numerous severe welfare concerns including[17] sanitation, abandonment of dead or medically suffering animals, violent abuse, and callous indifference to pain.

Following the investigation, Seaboard faced Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) complaints alleging false statements in defense of the abuses documented in video.[18]

References

  1. ^ "Seaboard". Fortune. Retrieved 2018-12-31.
  2. ^ Cover story: Who in the world is Seaboard? Kansas City Business Journal (subscription required)
  3. ^ "Seaboard". Fortune. Retrieved 2018-12-31.
  4. ^ a b "Seaboard Corp | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  5. ^ Sosland, Josh (March 13, 2007). "Harry Bresky, retired chairman of Seaboard Corp., dies". Food Business News.
  6. ^ "Seaboard Chairman Bresky Passes Away".
  7. ^ "Seaboard to acquire West African Group Mimran". Miller Magazine. Retrieved 2019-11-04.
  8. ^ La Monica, Paul R. (November 26, 2014). "The $3500 Butterball turkey stock". CNN Money.
  9. ^ "Triumph Foods Purchased A 50 Percent Ownership in Daily's Premium Meats". 26 September 2014.
  10. ^ "NGVAmerica honors recipients of the 2014 NGVAmerica Award". Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  11. ^ "Seaboard Marine Jamaica Wins 7th Consecutive JEA Award". 8 July 2014.
  12. ^ "Seaboard Marine Wins Third Consecutive Quest For Quality Award". 25 August 2014.
  13. ^ Barlett, Donald L.; Steele, James B. (November 30, 1998). "The Empire of the Pigs". Time Magazine. Archived from the original on October 23, 2006.
  14. ^ "Worcester Global Action Network".
  15. ^ "Juez ordena sentencia favorable a comunidad guaraní (Spanish)". Archived from the original on 2008-10-28.
  16. ^ "Newsroom". newsroom.humanesociety.org. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  17. ^ "HSUS Report: Undercover Exposés at Two of the Nation's Largest Pork Producers" (PDF). Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  18. ^ "Seaboard Corporation Pig Treatment Challenged By Humane Society Investigation". HuffPost. February 2012.

External links