The Scotsman

Dairy farmers

● Calls for DRS milk carton opt-out over fears that costs will cripple the industry

- By ILONA AMOS Environmen­t Correspond­ent

Scottish farmers are calling for plastic milk containers to be excluded from the nation’s new deposit-return system (DRS), which is being set up to improve recycling and cut the amount of man-made litter polluting the environmen­t.

They say Scotland should copygerman­yandpartso­fthe US and Canada, where plastic cartons for fresh milk are not part of DRS schemes.

They fear Scottish food producers such as dairies, which already operate on tight profit margins, will be adversely affected by additional costs involved in complying with the national system.

NFU Scotland, which represents 9,000 farmers, crofters and growers across the country, is urging Scottish ministers to look more closely at the impact a DRS could have on specific sectors in the food chain that are heavily reliant on plastic packaging.

Responding to the Scottish Government’s public consultati­on on the DRS, the union has acknowledg­ed the potential merits of such a system in Scotland and supports efforts to encourage recycling.

However, members believe proposed changes will increase the outlay for suppliers without bringing major benefits, which will hit dairies particular­ly hard.

Gone are the days when milk was delivered to doorsteps in returnable glass bottles.

Nowadays most people buy milk from shops and supermarke­ts, meaning dairies have grown increasing­ly dependent on convenient disposable packaging.

However, farmers claim most local authoritie­s already have successful schemes in place to recycle common plastic packaging such as milk containers, so including them in the DRS is unnecessar­y.

“The fresh milk chain is one that sees the process of milking, cooling, farm collection, processing, pasteurisa­tion, packaging and delivering to shop shelves often completed within 24 to 36 hours,” said George Jamieson, milk policy manager for NFU Scotland.

“That is a high-value chain delivering a fresh, nutritious product but one that traditiona­lly operates on small margins.

“Introducti­on of a depositret­urn scheme on milk packaging will bring additional costs to an industry already under strain, and farmers fear, based on past experience, that GEORGE JAMIESON NFUS milk policy manager any such additional costs will simply be passed all the way back to the farm gate and a lower milk price.

“Our thoughts are that exempting milk containers from deposit-return but continuing to encourage and promote recycling through kerbside collection – a system that is currently working well – will still deliver on our recycling ambitions but without huge additional cost on the dairy sector.”

The government-funded charity Zero Waste Scotland

“A deposit-return on milk packaging will bring extra costs to an industry already under strain. Farmers fear these will be passed back to the farm gate”

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