Tuesday, April 4, 2023

How to stop dumping over-quota milk


Dr. Sylvain Charlebois says dairy farmers could solve their over-quota milk issue by setting up a reserve similar to the stockpiling of butter when supply exceeds demand.

“The Chinese figured how to export our own milk to China, while Canadian dairy farmers claimed it wasn’t possible. You can dehydrate milk, store it and create a strategic reserve, like we have with butter.

“The Canadian Dairy Commission would be responsible,” the researcher from Dalhousie University said.

Canada Royal Milk in Kingston makes infant formula from Canadian milk that’s then shipped to China. To build the plant, the firm received both provincial and federal funding in 2017.

Charlebois says this plant should have been built by Canadian dairy farmers.

Most of them, he says, don’t understand supply management themselves, and furthermore, they “have no understanding of how the policy can be adapted to modern expectations.

“So, when someone comes forward with any radical idea, they just don’t understand why changes are necessary.

“The Chinese plant in Kingston should have been built by dairy farmers, but their lack of foresight got them to believe it was impossible to export milk abroad, especially not to China.”

The Canadian public is also not generally aware that the former head of the CDC who “facilitated a $225-million investment” by Canada Royal Milk to build its plant also later took a paid position on the company’s board of directors, Charlebois said.