Burger King signs deal with Kepak

Contract will see fast food chain resume supplies from former Silvercrest plant in Ballybay

The Burger King logo hangs outside a Burger King restaurant
The Burger King logo hangs outside a Burger King restaurant

Burger King has signed a deal with Kepak that will it take supplies from the Ballybay meat plant at the centre of the horsemeat crisis.

The fast food group had suspended its contract with Silvercrest Foods days after it emerged in January that one frozen burger produced by the plant had 29 per cent horse DNA in its meat content.

At the end of January, Burger King disclosed that tests it had carried out on burgers produced by the Silvercrest plant came back negative for horse DNA., However, the company said at that time it would not be renewing its renewing its contract with Silvercrest.

It had been sourcing burgers from Germany and Italy since then.

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Burger King has more than 500 fast food outlets in Ireland and the UK. The fast food chain was one of four major customers of the Monaghan plant, then owned by Larry Goodman's ABP Food Group, and its business was understood to be worth tens of millions of euro to the plant.

In April, ABP announced it was exiting the frozen burger business and sold the plant to Kepak for an undisclosed sum. Silvercrest’s 122 staff transferred to the new owners as part of that deal.

The Kepak facility will undergo “frequent and rigorous audits to ensure industry leading safety and quality”, the two companies said as they announced the new contract today.

Raj Varman, Burger King's general manager for north-west Europe said the group was "proud to bring back 100 per cent Irish and British beef to our restaurants".

“Our partnership with Kepak means that our guests can continue to have every confidence in the provenance and high quality of the locally sourced and great tasting burgers they enjoy at our restaurants,” he said.

Minister for Agriculture Simon Coveney welcomed news of the new contract. said, "I want to thank Burger King and Kepak for their continued support for the Irish Beef industry. This is a very positive news story for the industry today and an endorsement of the high quality product that we are best in the world at producing."

Kepak managing director John Horgan said: "Kepak Group is delighted to confirm that it has agreed terms with Burger King Worldwide to exclusively supply burgers to restaurants in Ireland, UK. The contract will be supplied from Kepak Ballybay."

Dominic Coyle

Dominic Coyle

Dominic Coyle is Deputy Business Editor of The Irish Times