Western Morning News (Saturday)

Milk prices on the rise as costs increase

- AUGUST GRAHAM Press Associatio­n

THE UK boss of diary giant Arla, has said that customers are likely to face higher prices to buy a pint of milk, as farmers are being squeezed by soaring costs.

“We are calling time on cheap milk,” Ash Amirahmadi told the PA news agency as the business set out its plan for the next five years.

Farmers have been facing squeezed milk prices for years. In the last 10 years consumer prices have gone up 26% as a whole, Mr Amirahmadi said, but the price of milk has dropped by 7% in the same period.

“This strategy is about improving the profitabil­ity of fresh milk,” he said. “We saw the inflation on farms, on feed, fertiliser and fuel, starting around June or July last year.

“There were already some pressures building, but since the Ukraine crisis that’s just increased exponentia­lly, particular­ly things like fertiliser.”

It could take some time for costs to be passed through to shoppers, he said, but over the next five years things are likely to change.

“If you look at what we’re paying our farmers today, we’re paying over 30% more than we were a year ago. They need it.”

Milk production is still dropping, he said.

Farmer-owned Arla runs the Taw Valley Creamery at North Tawton in Devon and the Trevarrian Creamery near Newquay.

Its five-year strategy could see it become the first dairy to export milk at scale out of the UK to tap into higher milk prices abroad.

The business said there are signs that demand for dairy around the world will increase by two per cent every year over the next half decade.

It warned there are “clear signals” that milk producers might not be able to meet that rise.

Recent fairer deals between supermarke­ts and dairies have not been enough to offset huge recent price rises. Just like for many parts of the economy, agricultur­e is facing runaway costs.

Fuel prices have increased significan­tly and fertiliser costs are also through the roof, Mr Amirahmadi said.

The UK’s largest supplier of fresh milk, Arla’s products can be spotted on supermarke­t shelves around the country. They include Cravendale, Lactofree, Lurpak and Anchor.

The cooperativ­e’s 2,100 UK farms also supply stores’ own brand milk.

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