Title: Overview of the Canadian Dairy Industry
1Overview of theCanadian Dairy Industry
- Gilles Froment, M.Sc., P.Ag.
- COO
- Canadian Dairy Commission, Ottawa
- February 21, 2014
DM272659
2Outline
- The Canadian marketing system and its component
- 3 pillars of supply management
- Seasonality programs
- Milk pools
- Marketing and innovation initiatives
- Current issues
3The Canadian Milk Marketing System and its
Components
4Snapshot of theCanadian Dairy Industry
- 12,234 farms producing approximately 8 billion
litres of milk (315 million kg BF) - 480 processing plants
- Farm receipts 5.9 billion
- Adds a net 10 billion to the GDP
- Processed products sales 14.7 billion
- Supports 15 billion of economic activity
- Sustains more than 215,000 jobs
Source EcoRessources
5World Milk Production 2005-2012(all species)
6World Cow Milk Production (2012)
6
Source IDF World Dairy Situation 2013
7Canadas Milk Marketing System
Regulated market
Unregulated market
8CMSMC
- Canadian Milk Supply Management Committee
- Permanent body of signatories of the National
Milk Marketing Plan - NMMP (voting members) - One vote per province
- Dairy Farmers of Canada, Dairy Processors
Association of Canada and Consumers Association
of Canada (non-voting members) - Responsible for policy determination and
supervision of the NMMP provisions - Meets 4 times a year
- Virtually all decisions require unanimity
9The CMSMC directs the implementation of the
National Milk Marketing Plan (NMMP) to coordinate
actions of provincial marketing boards and
governments
SK (3)
Non-voting members
Quebec (4)
DFC
DPAC
P.E.I. (3)
CAC
CDC chair
Ontario (4)
N.S. (3)
Alberta (3)
Newfoundland (3)
B.C. (3)
N.B. (3)
Manitoba (3)
10NMMP
- National Milk Marketing Plan
- Federal-provincial agreement
- Regulates marketing of industrial milk
- Balances supply and demand
- Sets out the establishment, distribution and
adjustment of industrial milk quota
11The Canadian Dairy Commission
- Crown corporation created in 1966
- Reports to Parliament through Minister of
Agriculture - 3 commissioners, 60 employees
- Generally deals with industrial milk
- Total budget for 2013-2014 7.75 million
- Funded by government, dairy producers, commercial
operations, and the marketplace
12Legislated Mandate
- Provide efficient producers of milk and cream
with the opportunity to obtain a fair return for
their labour and investment. - Provide consumers of dairy products with a
continuous and adequate supply of dairy products
of high quality.
13Overview of Key Activities
- Chair the CMSMC
- Calculate Estimated Requirements (demand)
- Recommend Market Sharing Quota
- Establish Support Prices
- Administer Revenue and Market Sharing Agreements
(pools) - Administer Special Milk Class Permit Program
- Carry out external audits
- Create and administer marketing programs
- Remove surplus production
- Administer Seasonality Programs
14Milk Classes
- Industrial (Classes 2-4)
- used in the manufacture of butter, cheese, ice
cream, yogurt, milk powders - longer shelf life
- federal responsibility interprovincial trade of
product
- Fluid (Class 1)
- used in 1, 2, skim milk, etc. and creams
- short shelf life
- provincial responsibility historically made and
consumed in province of origin
153 Pillars of Supply Management
- controlled prices
- controlled imports
- controlled production
16Pillar 1 Controlled Prices
- Industrial milk prices
- Are determined by provinces based on CDC support
prices and vary depending on the end use of the
milk - Support prices are the prices at which the CDC
buys and sells butter and skim milk powder under
its various programs. - Support prices are usually announced in November
or December by the CDC to be effective February 1.
17Support prices 1997-2014 (/kg)
18Producer Milk Prices (2012)
19Evolution of Farm PricesCanada and the US 1998
- 2013
20Pillar 1 Controlled Prices
- Fluid milk prices
- are determined by provinces according to a
formula - 50 indexed COP
- 50 CPI
- Valid until February 1, 2016
- Applied once per year (in February)
21Milk Prices in last 12 monthsEnding December 2013
- Average in-quota revenues 77.99/hl
- Average price for fluid 94.78/hl
- Average price for industrial 66.63/hl
22Example - Prices per Component for February 2014
Class /kg BF /kg protein /kg other solids /hl standard _at_3.6 kg
Fluid milk 1(a) 7.15 74.39 /hl for SNF 74.39 /hl for SNF 100.13
Cheddar 3(b) 8.02 13.98 0.90 79.16
Butter 4(a) 8.02 5.55 5.55 78.31
Cheese as ingredient 5(a) 4.14 7.84 0.93 45.53
23Pillar 2 Controlled Imports
- Most dairy products are protected by Tariff Rate
Quota (TRQs). - Above TRQs, dairy products have a tariff of
almost 300.
24Pillar 2 Controlled Imports
- Examples of TRQ and over-quota tariffs
Product TRQ (000 t) Tariff ()
Skim Milk Powder 0 201.5
Whey Powder 3.2 208.0
Butter 3.3 298.5
Cheese 20.4 245.5
Ice cream 0.484 277.0
25Pillar 3 Controlled Production
- Provincial milk marketing boards allocate
production quota to their respective dairy
farmers. - This quota combines both fluid milk quota and
industrial milk quota. - Fluid milk quota is established by provincial
marketing boards and equals demand. - Industrial milk quota is established nationally
by the CMSMC and is called Market Sharing Quota
(MSQ). - Quota is calculated and expressed in kg of BF.
26Establishing MSQ
- The CDC calculates the Estimated Canadian
Requirements or ECR (demand) on a monthly basis.
- ECR Production Opening stocks Imports -
Closing stocks - Exports - DIP- Class 4(m) - MSQ is adjusted every two months when ECR
increase or decrease.
27The 7 steps in sharing quota adjustments among
provinces
1 Skim-off
2 The 1090 rule
3 PEIs share
4 DDPIP DIP
5 Growth allowance
6 Exports
7 Fluid quota
28Evolution of MSQ
1 and 2 milk more popular lower butter
consumption
Quota cut of 1976
Low butter stocks
29Respecting Production Targets
- Provincial production targets
- Upper limit 0.5
- Lower limit 1.5
- Provinces are free to have their own policies to
adjust their farm quota or not, however,
provinces will be penalized if they over or under
produce their share of quota. - Over production no payment for the milk
penalty - Under production lost opportunity to produce
30Evolution of Milk Supply and Demand
Forecast includes a 1 growth allowance
31CDC Seasonality Programs
- While milk production is quite stable year round,
people consume more dairy products in the
fall/winter and less in the spring. - To offset this, the CDC buys and stores butter
and skim milk powder in the spring and puts those
products back in the market in the fall/winter. - These transactions are done at support prices.
32Seasonality Programs - Butter
- Plan A
- Becomes the property of the CDC
- 25 kg blocks
- Plan B
- Processors must buy back within one year of
production of the product - One-pound prints ready for retail sales.
33Managing Surpluses
- Production is managed on a butterfat basis.
- Surpluses of milk solids non fat (SNF) arise
because consumers want the fat portion of the
milk more than the SNF portion. - The CDC buys the surplus SNF and disposes of it
by exporting it or selling it for animal feed. - Both these markets yield a lower return to
producers than regular sales.
34CDC Import / Export
- IMPORTS
- According to WTO (3,274 t)
- Butter sold to further processors
- Cheese private sector imports (20,412 t)
- EXPORTS
- Subsidized exports according to WTO limits (none
to USA) - SMP (CDC exports to Cuba and Mexico)
- Permits for private exporters including
non-contingent classes
35The Milk Pools
36Pools were established in themid-1990s in
response to
- Increased concentration at the retail and
processing levels - New trade rules (FTA, NAFTA, WTO)
- Differing provincial policies (for ex. milk
allocation to plants) - Fluid milk moving between provinces
- Inequities in producer returns
37The CDC administers 3 milk pools
- The P10 (all 10 provinces)
- The P5 (in the East)
- The WMP (in the West)
- These pools allow dairy farmers to share and
balance revenues, markets and in some cases,
transportation costs.
38What is Pooled?
Pool Milk Revenue Market Promotion Transport
P10 Special Class x x
East All x x x x
West All x x x
39How Pools are Administered
- Provinces report production and sales data (by
milk class) monthly to the CDC. - The CDC calculates money transfers between
members to equalize returns. - The CDC calculates quota allocation when demand
changes. - The CDC keeps a bank account for pool operations.
40Resulting in harmonization of
- Multiple component pricing
- Producer prices
- Milk classification
- Quota policies
- POOL RISK MANAGEMENT TOOL
41Current Issues
42Current Issues
- Increased imports and cross-border shopping
- Harmonization issues within regional pools
- Quota management
- Audit rules
- National all milk pool
- Milk allocation to plants
- Marketing/Innovation
- Special Classes, Dairy Marketing Program and CDC
Dairy Innovation Program - Trade negotiations
- Focus market growth
43Some observations on Trade
- Several countries still have high budget
expenditure for the milk sector - EU - 3,5 billion on average 2008-2011
- US approx. 4 billion per year (40 billion in
the last decade) New Farm Bill? - These subsidies contribute to depressed Pw
- Trade agreements
- WTO
- CETA (additional cheese imports)
- TPP ?
- Producing milk in Northern hemisphere is more
costly than in the Southern hemisphere
44Increased focus on additional flexibility to grow
the market
- 1 permanent growth allowance for added
flexibility in supply - Dairy Innovation Program
- Skim Milk Redirection Program
- Mozzarella market and fresh pizza - Class 3(d)
- More flexible allocation policies (yogurt and
fine cheeses) - On-going development of market of SNF
- Reduce structural surplus
- Opportunity to add value and increase returns to
producers without increasing price to consumers
45A note of interest for students
46CDC Graduate Scholarships
- To ensure that Canada has enough specialists in
the areas of - Food and dairy sciences
- Economics and policy (supply mgt.)
- Animal science
- CDC commitment 3 million over 5 years
- 70 M.Sc.s and 25 Ph.D.s
- Renewed for the last time 2011-2016
-
47QUESTIONS
- www.cdc-ccl.gc.ca
- www.dairyinfo.gc.ca
- www.milkingredients.ca