Dairy Farmers of Britain

Environment Food and Rural Affairs written statement – made at on 30 June 2009.

Alert me about debates like this

Photo of Hilary Benn Hilary Benn The Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

I wish to update the House on recent developments related to Dairy Farmers of Britain.

I informed the House in my written statement of 9 June 2009, Hansard, column 31WS, that on 3 June PricewaterhouseCoopers had been appointed as receivers and managers of Dairy Farmers of Britain Ltd (DFoB). In the debate on Food, Farming and the Environment on 18 June 2009, Official Report, column 480, I reported that new buyers had been found for 96 per cent. of the milk, leaving fewer than 200 of the 1,800 farmers affected yet to find an alternative milk buyer. A further 47 farmers secured new buyers before the end of last week.

Throughout this time DEFRA officials and the Regional Development Agencies have worked closely with the receiver, the DFoB Members Council and with many other parties whether those affected or those offering support. All parties have worked to find new buyers for all the remaining farmers as quickly as possible.

On 26 June the receiver and Milk Link announced that all 143 farmers who were on short-term rolling contracts with the receiver at that time were being offered a contract with Milk Link. This would be for a three-month rolling contract paying a standard litre price of 18.45 pence per litre. Some farmers started to sign up to these contracts over the weekend.

I welcome this initiative by Milk Link which, by making use of economies of scale and Milk Link's existing infrastructure, has enabled them to offer these farmers significantly more than the 10p per litre being offered by the receiver, although whether that price is commercially viable for individual farmers is a matter for them to determine. DEFRA will continue to work with other parties to ensure affected farmers know how to access advice, including advice funded by the Rural Development Agencies through the Rural Development Programme England (RDPE) where appropriate.

I would like again to pay tribute to the hard work of the many individuals and organisations who have contributed to ensuring that no milk has been thrown away since the collapse of DFoB and that all farmer members of DFoB have now been offered a contract with a new milk buyer.

I will update the House as necessary.

Annotations

Mike Donovan
Posted on 1 Jul 2009 2:46 pm (Report this annotation)

A farm gate price of 18.48p/l compares with 22p in 1996 when I sold my cows - 13 years on and 16% less. To make this sustainable, farmers need to be given every money saving tip that's going, yet most government and commercial advice involves capital investment - apart from Practical Farm IDEAS www.farmideas.co.uk The advice on grassland aeration http://www.farmideas.co.uk/newsdetailed.php?id=45 can save £000s and also cuts surface run-off leading to flooding.