The Scottish Farmer

New milk purchasing legislatio­n announced

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NEW regulation­s have been laid which aim to stamp out rogue milk purchasing businesses from abusing their position and exploiting farmers.

The Fair Dealing Obligation­s Regulation­s, first announced in June 2023, aim to promote fair business between milk producers and purchasers.

The legislatio­n seeks to bolster the good practice many milk purchasing businesses have developed and acted upon since the introducti­on of the Voluntary Dairy Code in 2012.

Scottish Dairy Hub and NFU Scotland milk policy manager Tracey Roan said: “Ašer more than a decade of campaignin­g from NFUS and other UK farming unions, calling out unfair practices in the dairy supply chain, new legislatio­n on dairy contracts known as the ‘Fair Dealing Obligation­s (Milk) Regulation­s 2024’ has been made law.

“There will be an implementa­tion period of three months before new contracts must be compliant which will be July 9, 2024. There will be a period of a further 12 months before existing contracts are to be compliant, which will be July 9, 2025.

“A significan­t proportion of the calls that all UK farming union dairy teams receive are from farmers with issues which ultimately relate back to their milk contract. It has taken a great deal of work from a dedicated team within NFUS to help drive this over the line.”

The Farmers’ Union of Wales (FUW) also welcomed the news, saying it was hopeful that there would now be a fairer foundation for selling milk across Britain.

FUW Milk committee chair, Brian Walters said: “The voluntary dairy code was establishe­d to stamp out unfair contractua­l arrangemen­ts between milk producers and purchasers which could in turn help stabilise the UK dairy industry.

“Despite many processors supporting the values of the voluntary dairy code, the lack of legislatio­n meant that some processors continued with unfair and underhande­d contractua­l expectatio­ns leaving dairy farmers extremely vulnerable to market changes.

“Processors will now be required to review their contracts over the next twelve months in order to become compliant with these regulation­s.”

The NFU said the new regulation­s marked a significan­t step forward in the government’s e orts to increase fairness and transparen­cy in the dairy supply chain.

It said: “Unfair milk contracts have held British dairy businesses back, and these changes will give dairy farmers much needed business security and confidence, as well as helping to share risk along the dairy supply chain.”

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