The Mercury News

COW-IFORNIA

Agricultur­ally, California is famous for its wine, but the state has led the nation in milk and dairy production for 25 years. Massive production and mounds of manure are making dairy farmers change their ways.

- By KURT SNIBBE | Southern California News Group

INDUSTRY SNAPSHOT

Wisconsin might call itself the America’s Dairlyland, but the next time you pour a glass of milk, butter a piece of bread or eat ice cream, think of California. California leads the nation in all those dairy categories and has been the nation’s top dairy producer for 25 years. One in 5 glasses of milk poured in the U.S. came from California.

California’s has a legacy of dairy developmen­ts that goes back to what could have been its first commercial dairy at Point Reyes in 1857. Today the state’s dairy farms provide more than 400,000 jobs, generated $6.07 billion in cash receipts in 2017 and have an estimated economic impact of $60 billion a year.

In recent years, the glass of milk has been seen as half empty. During California’s drought, the price of corn rose, labor costs went up and hundreds of dairies closed. There were 1,950 dairy farms in 2007, and in 2017 there were 1,331. The state had 20,000 dairy farms in 1950 and about 800,000 cows.

MILK AND METHANE

The days of the local dairy around the corner are gone, and the work of managing mountains of manure is done far from the city where your favorite latte is made.

In 2014, the state appropriat­ed $12 million from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund to reduce methane emissions from dairy and livestock operations. It was the nation’s first voluntary incentive program for the dairy industry to reduce emissions. The state increased funding to $50 million in 2016, followed by $99 million in 2017. To date, California Department of Food and Agricultur­e has awarded $56.3 million to 42 projects across the state through the Dairy Digester Research and Developmen­t Program and the Alternativ­e Manure Management Program. Announceme­nt of awards for the $99 million allocation will be made this summer.

Here’s a look at the average dairy cow’s estimated milk and manure production.

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