Edmonton Journal

Canadian Dairy Commission faces calls to hike milk prices again

- JAKE EDMISTON

The federal body that manages Canada's milk supply is under pressure to raise prices for a second time this year to help dairy farmers cope with inflation.

The set price that farms receive for their milk jumped by a historic amount in February, but farmers say it's not enough to cover unpreceden­ted spikes in the cost of livestock feed, fuel and fertilizer.

The calls for another price hike will undoubtedl­y mean more debate over Canada's supply management system, which seeks to protect dairy, poultry and egg farmers and stabilize the domestic food supply by controllin­g prices, capping production and blocking foreign competitor­s.

The Canadian Dairy Commission, a Crown corporatio­n, is responsibl­e for establishi­ng what's known as the “farm-gate” price for milk, or the amount dairy companies pay to Canadian farmers for their milk. Those increases happen once a year, and this year's increase was controvers­ial. CDC recommende­d raising the farmgate price of milk by 8.4 per cent — a historic increase that sparked calls for more transparen­cy in the CDC'S decision-making process. The provinces implemente­d that increase in February.

But less than six months later, the CDC is mulling another hike. The Dairy Farmers of Canada wants the CDC to trigger “the exceptiona­l circumstan­ces process” so it can implement a mid-year milk price increase, according to a June 2 memo from CDC chairwoman Jennifer Hayes. Any price increase would be instituted on Sept. 1, and “would be deducted from any price increase that may result from the routine price review in the fall of 2022,” Hayes wrote.

The CDC will consult with industry leaders in retail, hospitalit­y, farming and food processing between June 13 and 15. The final

This points to another example of how retailers continue to face multiple price increases ... from suppliers.

decision will be announced on June 17. The CDC confirmed that it has not implemente­d a mid-year price increase since 2018.

It wasn't immediatel­y clear exactly how much the Dairy Farmers of Canada are asking to raise the farm-gate price. Dairy prices at the retail level were up eight per cent in April, compared to the previous year, according to the latest Statistics Canada consumer price index. The overall inflation rate for grocery bills in April was 9.7 per cent — the worst it has been since 1981.

The Retail Council of Canada, a lobby group that represents grocery chains, blamed food inflation on food producers raising their prices. “This points to another example of how retailers continue to face multiple price increases and/ or demands from suppliers which is the primary reason why consumers' grocery costs are increasing,” Retail Council spokespers­on Michelle Wasylyshen said in an email in reaction to the calls for a dairy price hike.

But the Dairy Farmers of Canada stressed that the request only impacts farm-gate prices, and it's still up to dairy processors and retailers to set their own prices further down the supply chain.

DFC said the farm-gate increase is necessary because farmers are facing “never-before-seen” spikes in costs for the commoditie­s needed to produce milk, which have continued to go up in the months following the CDC'S last price hike. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has caused massive jumps in the global prices for fuel and fertilizer, as well as grains, which are in short supply in Canada due to last summer's extreme drought across the Prairies.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dairy farmers say they are struggling with unpreceden­ted hikes in the cost of livestock feed, fuel and fertilizer.
RYAN REMIORZ/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Dairy farmers say they are struggling with unpreceden­ted hikes in the cost of livestock feed, fuel and fertilizer.

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