Food Plant Openings and Expansions March 2026

Food Engineering
Food EngineeringMay 11, 2026

Why It Matters

The wave of multi‑billion‑dollar plant projects expands supply chains, creates jobs, and accelerates automation, reshaping the competitive landscape for food manufacturers and consumers alike.

Key Takeaways

  • Smithfield seeks approval for new pork facility in South Dakota.
  • Nestlé Purina invests $481M in Brazil, doubling wet pet food capacity.
  • James Mucker Co. invests $20.5M expanding plant for Milk Bone, Meow Mix.
  • Drink Pack opens 1.4M‑sq‑ft DFW facility with high‑speed canning lines.
  • Dainty Foods launches $85M Ohio plant, targeting $250M annual unit output.

Summary

Food engineering editor Elise Thompson Richards outlines the latest food‑processing plant openings and expansions announced for 2026, spanning meat, pet food, beverage, and ready‑meal manufacturers across North America and Brazil.

Smithfield Foods is pursuing permits for a new packaged‑meats and fresh‑pork plant in Sou Falls, South Dakota, with groundbreaking slated for early 2027 and production by late 2028. Nestlé Purina’s $481 million Vera, Brazil factory will nearly double its wet pet‑food capacity, featuring next‑generation digital production lines. James Mucker Co. and BigArt Pep Brands are injecting $20.5 million into their historic Topeka, Kansas facility, while Drink Pack’s 1.4 million‑sq‑ft Dallas‑Fort Worth site boasts high‑acid lines capable of 2,600 cans per minute and laser‑guided warehouse vehicles. Dainty Foods commits $85 million to a first‑U.S. Ohio plant, scaling to a $150 million, 250,000‑ton capacity over five years, and meal‑delivery service Tovala secures a 140,340‑sq‑ft Illinois lease for 2027 completion.

Richards highlights Nestlé’s digital transformation drive and Drink Pack’s automation, underscoring how technology is central to efficiency gains. The projects collectively represent over $1 billion in capital spending, reflecting confidence in post‑pandemic demand growth across protein, pet nutrition, and convenience segments.

These investments signal robust expansion in food‑processing capacity, promising job creation, regional economic boosts, and heightened competition that could drive down consumer prices while accelerating industry automation.

Original Description

EIC Alyse Thompson-Richards recaps some recent plant openings and expansions in the food and beverage industry.

Comments

Want to join the conversation?

Loading comments...