Dairy farming

“We seem to be staring down the barrel of a global dairy crisis, which  could benefit New Zealand’s dairy farmers,” says Willy Leferink,  Federated Farmers dairy chairperson.   
“An act of nature in the United States and subsidies elsewhere are  putting dairy farmers under the most unimaginable pressure.   WeatherWatch’s Philip Duncan says half of the continental United States  is now in drought.    
“The world’s largest corn crop is withering and that’s a key marker  because US dairy and beef production is grain dependent.  US grain  prices have climbed a quarter in the past three weeks and corn is  following suit. 
“The US is also the world’s third largest dairy exporter right behind ourselves and the European Union.
“Before drought struck, US dairy production growth was slowing but the  brakes will be fully on now.  I’ve heard estimates the United States  Department of Agriculture’s modest 0.2 per cent growth forecast may turn  into a two per cent fall. 
“This is important because Fonterra Cooperative Group’s opening season  milk price forecast of $3.85 per kilogram of milksolids (kg/MS), is down  on last season’s opening of $4.40 kg/MS. 
“While the season just ended may return Fonterra’s farmers $6.05 kg/MS  for their milk, it comes from a season right out of the box.  Westland  Milk Products has also lowered its milksolids payout range for the  season just ended, to between $6.00 and $6.20 kg/MS.
“It is fair to say the 2012-13 season is looking tough everywhere plus  we have a monkey on our back called the high Kiwi dollar.     
“In the United Kingdom, thousands of dairy farmers have marched in  London to protest milk payouts lower than the cost of production.   That’s due to a vicious supermarket price war. 
“Hundreds of dairy farmers from Italy, Germany, Ireland and France have  gone further, spraying milk outside the European Parliament.  While it  tells me they have no RMA-type legislation, it shows a sense of  frustration in a world that needs this food.   
“Here, New Zealand milk is unsubsidised and most of it is sold through  cooperatives for export; we are not at the mercy of supermarkets or  domestic processors. 
“Local retail dairy prices are directly tied to the international market  place and while they rode the commodities wave up, that same wave means  retail prices have come down.   
“In the space of 12-months, fresh milk has fallen 8 per cent while  cheddar is down 16 per cent and butter has dropped 24 per cent.  We just  hope what’s good for consumers in the short term won’t turn sour for  ‘NZ Inc’ longer term,” Mr Leferink concluded.























