The report reveals:
Liquid milk, cheese and fresh product markets continue to grow. Kantar Worldpanel estimates the UK dairy market to be worth £10.12bn annually, accounting for 12.4% of food and drink sales.
The UK is the third largest milk producer in the EU and the ninth largest in the world.
Milk production continues to rise and UK dairy companies more than match their EU competitors’ investment in product innovation. Annual capital expenditure by the UK’s major dairy companies has soared to £210m.
Dairy UK chairman Robert Wiseman said that the industry was on the threshold of major structural change, driven by the continuing deregulation of EU legislative regimes.
“All the evidence suggests that we are preparing for the future in the right way”, said Wiseman. “We are investing in competitiveness, through rationalisation and the attainment of scale – right across the supply chain.
“We are securing stronger international links, and our product profile is changing to allow us to exploit the opportunities which, increasingly, the free market will provide for us.
“We anticipate new trading relationships emerging from developments, such as the EU Dairy Package, and we are working as an industry to see how these can be implemented in our best interests.”
Jim Begg, Dairy UK director general, said: “Global oversupply led by strong southern hemisphere production has resulted in the inevitable cyclical reduction in commodity prices.
“Having reached an all time high, producer prices have recently fallen back, reflecting the decline in the commodity market. The long term prospects for the industry, driven by increasing demand and population growth, remain as good as ever, so it is to be hoped that the imbalance between supply and demand is quickly resolved.
“We’ve seen increased competitiveness generating rationalisation in the sector with Muller’s acquisition of Robert Wiseman Dairies and the recently announced proposed merger between Arla Foods and Milk Link.
“Farmer confidence, as measured by DairyCo’s Farmer intentions Survey earlier this year, showed that 36% of farmers intend to expand milk production over the next two years, the highest figure since 2008. At the same time, the number of dairy farmers intending to leave the industry has fallen to 7%, down from 22% when the survey was first undertaken in 2004 and 13% last year.”
Source: Dairy UK
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