News Details
29.04.2009
The 29th April more than 25,000 milk producers rallied in Europe for fair milk prices
No end to protests. Fair framework conditions needed.
Hamm, 29 April 2009: More than 25,000 milk producers demonstrated today for fair milk prices in over ten European countries. Uniting under the slogan “Flexible volume regulation for fair milk prices”, they urged politicians to create the requisite framework conditions. Milk producers rallied with tractors and dairy cows in front of political institutions and handed over letters of demand to members of parliament, ministers and heads of government.
Romuald Schaber, President of the European Milk Board, commented: “The excess supply of milk has resulted in existence-threatening milk prices in the whole EU. We urgently need to rebalance supply and demand. For dairy farmers to be able to do so in a coordinated way, politicians are called upon to adapt existing provisions.”
All over Europe, excess supply of milk results in milk prices plummeting in free fall. The wrong decisions taken by politicians in 2008 are destroying one third of the value created on milk. Ernst Halbmayr, EMB Executive Committee member from Austria: “It is synonymous with destroying 100% of the farmers’ income as producer prices of 25 cents leave no room for rewarding the farmers’ work. De facto, the families no longer generate any income from producing milk.”
Today’s demonstrations were preceded by numerous protests in the whole of Europe. In early 2009 Greek, Latvian and Bulgarian farmers took to the streets to protest against unfair prices. 8,000 Slovak, Austrian, Polish, German, Hungarian, Slovenian and Lithuanian dairy farmers gathered in the Czech Republic in March. In April, more than 5,000 people rallied in Madrid to draw the public’s attention to the disastrous situation in many areas of agriculture and the total lack of perspectives for farmers.
Sieta van Keimpema, member of the EMB Executive Committee from the Netherlands, says: “Milk requires stable framework conditions. It is a special product, it is available each day, and you cannot just stop production for a few days or weeks. When dairy farmers stop producing, they go out of production for good and the consumers in the respective region are no longer supplied with local milk.“
Romuald Schaber: “Pursuing the liberalisation strategy means abandoning supply control and external protection. This constitutes a great danger, not only for farms, it also jeopardizes the provision of the population with high-quality products.” The European dairy farmers are calling upon politicians to jointly elaborate a concept to preserve milk production in Europe in future. Other sectors (e.g. fisheries, sugar production or the energy industry) have long realized that certain framework conditions are needed to regulate production. Flexible supply control is necessary to ensure that the market brings about a milk price that is fair for both consumers and producers.
“Flexible volume regulation for fair milk prices”
This is the solution that was demanded by milk producers all over Europe today.
Contact:
Romuald Schaber (DE): 0049/15155037174; Sieta van Keimpema (NL, EN, DE): 0031/612168000; Ernst Halbmayr (DE) 0043/6649249635; Sonja Korspeter (FR, EN, ES): 0049/1786021685
More News
Great Britain‘s dairy farmers enjoy the full support of their colleagues throughout Europe
Dairy farmers in Great Britain are manning blockades set up outside milk processing plants in protest against the current series of cuts in milk prices. The European Milk Board unreservedly supports these actions and the demands of the British dairy farmers.
read more...
Dairy farmers demonstrate in Brussels: Milk overflow causing prices to plummet!
Overproduction on the European milk markets is leading to a dramatic fall in milk prices, and is likely to directly precipitate the next milk crisis. Hundreds of dairy farmers attached to the European Milk Board have come to Brussels today to demonstrate in front of the European Parliament building.
read more...
Photos
EMB Newsletter July online
Dear Dairy Farmers and Interested Parties,
The crisis in the European milk market is back. That is the situation we are experiencing first hand and which is evident from a glance at neighbouring farms. How long the crisis will last and when prices will bottom out is anyone’s guess.
read more...
EMB Newsletter June online
Dear Dairy Farmers and Interested Parties,
There is growing concern amongst Irish dairy farmers regarding the direction of milk price in 2012. The majority of milk processors cut milk price by 3 cents per litre for April and are now strongly signalling further reductions in the coming months.
read more...
Swedish Milk Producers take to the streets
The Swedish member organisation of the EMB Sveriges Mjölkbönder organised a demonstration of milk producers in Stockholm on the occasion of the World Milk Day on 1 June 2012. Committed milk producers from Sweden and other European countries had come to Stockholm to support the fight against the difficult situation in the...

