Court Slams EU Dairy Deregulation Policy

EU - The European Union should focus on satisfying the needs of its domestic dairy market and ensuring a fair standard of living for farmers rather than deregulating the sector, the European Court of Auditors (ECA) said yesterday.
calendar icon 16 October 2009
clock icon 2 minute read

In a special report on the EU dairy sector, the ECA said the European Commission should continue to monitor the development of the milk and milk product market so that liberalisation does not lead again to overproduction.

"Failing this, the Commission's objective of keeping to a minimum level of regulation, of the safety net type, might rapidly prove impossible to fulfil," the court said in a statement.

According to EurActiv.com, thousands of dairy farmers staged protests and embarked on a two-week milk supply boycott across Europe in September, blaming the Commission's liberalisation policies for falling milk prices.

The court said that in real terms, the milk producer price had fallen continuously since 1984 and recommended that price formation in the food industry be monitored regularly by the EU executive.

"The concentration of processing and retailing companies must not reduce milk producers to 'pricetakers', and must not restrict opportunities for final consumers to benefit fairly from decreases in prices," the court said.

It added that in-depth reflection should be given to strategies to tackle the special problems of regions where milk production is most vulnerable, as well as the environmental consequences of a concentration of milk production.

The 15 older member states of the EU lost half of their dairy farms between 1995 and 2007, with more than 500,000 producers giving up during this period.

The trend towards consolidation of production is expected to continue, and even accelerate, the court said.

More than a million producers supply 148 million tonnes of milk annually with an approximate value of €41 billion at the farm gate.

The milk processing sector, making mainly cheese, butter and drinking milk, employs around 400,000 people and generates a turnover of €120 billion.

Further Reading

- You can view the full report by the European Court of Auditors by clicking here.


Further Reading

- You can view the ECA statement by clicking here.

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