News Ababil.
Explore
U.S. Screwworm Sterile Flies Delay Threatens Beef Supply
Global Economy

U.S. Screwworm Sterile Flies Delay Threatens Beef Supply

Photography & Words by Arthur Sterling June 14, 2026 2 MIN READ
2 Min Read
Share

U.S. screwworm sterile flies: Production Bottlenecks and Economic Stakes

The United States’ effort to deploy U.S. screwworm sterile flies faces a year‑long lag, leaving cattle producers vulnerable as the parasite spreads from Texas into the nation’s heartland. The New World screwworm, a flesh‑eating larva of a fly, has already been confirmed in six Texas cattle, the country’s top producer, at a time when the herd is at a ↓ 12% 75‑year low due to drought and soaring feed costs.

Federal officials rushed to quarantine livestock and ship medical countermeasures, but the cornerstone of the eradication strategy—a sterile‑fly breeding plant at Moore Air Base—won’t hit its initial output of 100 million insects per week until ↑ 300 million capacity is reached in November 2027. A Panama facility currently supplies 100 million flies weekly; a Mexican plant may double that by summer, yet the gap remains stark.

Economic Ripple Effects

Livestock prices are already climbing; beef processors report record‑level losses, and consumers face the highest retail beef prices in a decade. Reuters notes that the 2023 Texas outbreak cost $375 million and affected 1.5 million cattle, a reminder of the stakes.

“We will contain it, but eradication requires a couple hundred million more flies,” Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins told a Senate hearing, adding she needs “a month to see what happens.”

Experts warn the delay could force producers to shoulder ongoing treatment costs. Merck Animal Health says its drug stockpile is being replenished daily, yet applying medication across entire herds is financially burdensome, says North Carolina State’s Derek Foster.

Policy Debate and Technical Options

Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller has urged the USDA to adopt a lure‑and‑kill system that targets female flies, but Under Secretary Scott Hutchins argues the attractant is too indiscriminate. Meanwhile, senators have petitioned Rollins to invoke the Defense Production Act to speed up fly production and retain critical staff, fearing a relocation of workers could cripple the response.

The USDA is also mobilizing the National Veterinary Stockpile and has opened a new Texas depot for fly dispersal. As the agency refines its “Main Event” strategy—pitting sterile flies against the screwworm—industry watchers watch the Bloomberg feed for any sign of escalation, recalling how the pandemic taught supply chains to adapt under pressure.


Dispatch from: Arthur Sterling

Macroeconomics Editor

Global Gallery Dispatches

More from this Intel

Digital Twin Revolution: Why $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Won’t Fix America’s Blind Spot

Digital Twin Revolution: Why $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Bill Won’t Fix America’s...

Jun 13, 2026
iPhone Fertility Rate Shock: How Smartphones Are Driving America’s Birth Decline

iPhone Fertility Rate Shock: How Smartphones Are Driving America’s Birth...

Jun 12, 2026
Ryanair charging parents faces UK CMA probe over mandatory seating fees

Ryanair charging parents faces UK CMA probe over mandatory seating...

Jun 11, 2026
Inflation 4% Returns in May: Implications for Fed Chair Kevin Warsh

Inflation 4% Returns in May: Implications for Fed Chair Kevin...

Jun 10, 2026
Six-figure Earners Fuel Discount Grocery Surge, Walmart CEO Says

Six-figure Earners Fuel Discount Grocery Surge, Walmart CEO Says

Jun 09, 2026
Botswana Diamond Slump Threatens Miner Viability Amid Global Demand Weakness

Botswana Diamond Slump Threatens Miner Viability Amid Global Demand Weakness

Jun 09, 2026

Join The Elite

Get the top 0.1% global intelligence and market insights delivered directly to your inbox before the masses.

We respect your privacy. No spam.