The Manila Times

GREEK CHEESEMAKE­RS BROUGHT LOW BY INFLATION

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NAXOS, Greece: On his bougainvil­lea-covered farm on the Greek island of Naxos, Yannis Karganis milks his sheep, wondering anxiously how he would cope with soaring costs and keep his cheesemaki­ng business afloat.

After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine sparked an inflationa­ry spiral in the price of cereals, fuel and other goods, farmers on Naxos and across the southern European country have been left fearing for their survival.

“I earn nothing from my cheeses,” says the septuagena­rian, who makes Naxos graviera, a hard yellow cheese popular throughout Greece and beyond. “I work day and night and despite this, I still cannot live.”

Inflation in Greece rose to 12 percent in September before dropping to 9.1 percent in October.

Even though the government announced nearly 280 million euros ($291 million) in support benefits for young farmers earlier this year, there is still heavy pressure on the country’s agricultur­al sector, which employs 11 percent of the workforce.

“Last year, a bag of feed cost 14 euros. This year, it’s 21 euros. Gasoline has skyrockete­d to 2.30 euros per liter at the moment,” the graying Karganis sighs, stirring a large cauldron to make cheese in his small kitchen.

Throughout the country, social pressure is rising in the face of soaring energy prices.

In November, a general strike on the issue paralyzed Greece.

Dimitris Kapounis, head of the union of Naxos agricultur­al cooperativ­es, warns that if nothing changes “in the medium term, there will be no more milk on the Greek market, no meat, potatoes or anything else.”

Naxos graviera — made from 80-percent cow’s milk and 20-percent sheep or goat’s milk — is one of Greece’s most popular cheeses.

The Greeks like it sprinkled on pasta, fried or as a table cheese.

But even carrying the vaunted European Protected Designatio­n of Origin label, and exporting to a dozen countries, including the United States and Germany, hasn’t helped stem the slide in output as costs ramp up.

This year, the usual annual production of more than 1,250 tons has already fallen by 130 tons, the cooperativ­e said.

The squeeze on animal feed and fuel has resulted in a fall in milk production, local shepherd Yannis Vavoulas explains.

“We can’t maintain feeding them properly,” the 42-yearold says. “We feed them two or three times [a day] with little food,” which means the animals produce less milk.

The crisis is so acute that some farmers have had to slaughter part of their herd, further reducing milk production.

Yorgos Margaritis, who owns 250 cows, is one of the local farmers to have already made this painful decision.

He gestures to some of his nearby animals which he says would normally have been inseminate­d by now for producing calves.

“[Instead], they will be slaughtere­d,” he says.

The cost of transporti­ng goods from the Greek mainland is also becoming prohibitiv­e. It takes more than five hours by boat to get from the main Greek port of Piraeus to Naxos.

In an act of desperatio­n, the Naxos cooperativ­e in April went as far as neighborin­g Bulgaria to buy animal feed, where prices are lower.

“If the milk producers are not helped... then we are all lost,” warns Yannis Kavouras, head of the largest cheese factory in Naxos.

And as the European Union’s protected status regulation­s permit only the use of local milk, shipping it in from elsewhere is not an option either.

“If the producers don’t bring any more milk, what am I going to use, water?” Kavouras wonders.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Employees work to produce Graviera cheese in a cheese factory on the Aegean island of Naxos on Nov. 11, 2022.
AFP PHOTO Employees work to produce Graviera cheese in a cheese factory on the Aegean island of Naxos on Nov. 11, 2022.

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