Edmonton Journal

Milk prices to increase again on Sept. 1 in rare manoeuvre

- BRETT BUNDALE

The Canadian Dairy Commission has approved a rare second milk price increase this year.

The Crown corporatio­n, which oversees Canada’s dairy supply management system, said Tuesday farm gate milk prices will go up about two cents per litre, or 2.5 per cent, on Sept. 1.

The increase comes after milk prices rose six cents per litre, or roughly 8.4 per cent, on Feb. 1.

The commission said when it reviews prices again this fall, the mid-year price increase approved for Sept. 1 will be deducted from any adjustment for next February.

Prices are usually reviewed once a year.

The decision follows a request by Dairy Farmers of Canada in May for a mid-year milk price hike due to high inflation. The industry lobby group said farmers are facing never-before-seen price increases on goods and services they need to produce milk.

Dairy Farmers of Canada said the commission’s decision to raise prices serves as recognitio­n that farmers have been under pressure as a result of higher input costs.

“Dairy farmers are not the cause of the unpreceden­ted global economic turmoil plaguing all sectors of the economy, but have to adjust to the conditions like everyone else,” the group said in a news release Tuesday.

The commission said in a memo that the increase in milk prices will partially offset increased production costs due to inflation.

“Feed, energy, and fertilizer costs have been particular­ly impacted, with increases of 22 per cent, 55 per cent and 45 per cent respective­ly since August 2021,” the commission said.

The actual increase in milk prices for consumers could be much more as various players in the supply chain could also tack on additional price increases.

“The impact of these adjustment­s on retail prices will depend on many factors such as manufactur­ing, transporta­tion, distributi­on, and packaging costs throughout the supply chain,” the commission said.

Still, the increase approved by the dairy commission is much less than some industry observers were expecting.

“It could have been worse,” said Sylvain Charlebois, Dalhousie University professor of food distributi­on and policy. “Based on the data we were looking at, we were expecting an increase north of five per cent. I was expecting way more.”

The dairy commission has been under pressure in recent weeks by various industry stakeholde­rs to keep prices manageable for Canadian consumers.

“The Canadian Dairy Commission is starting to listen to Canadians and the concerns that people have with food inflation,” Charlebois said. “The CDC tried to strike a balance between what the industry needs and what consumers are feeling.”

Gary Sands, senior vice-president of public policy with the Canadian Federation of Independen­t Grocers, agreed that the increase was less than anticipate­d.

Still, consumers can expect to pay much more than 2.5 per cent extra due to companies “piggybacki­ng” their own increases on top of the higher farm gate price for milk, he said.

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