DAIRY farmers have hit the streets of Brussels to protest against the lifting of European Union milk quotas, fearing that the move will flood the market with cheap surplus milk.
“With quotas being lifted, we’re really scared that production is going to explode and we won’t be able to pay our costs anymore,” said Belgian milk farmer Yvan Deknudt after driving his tractor some 19 miles to a rally at the European Parliament.
The quota system that kept a lid on production will be scrapped today, more than 30 years after it was introduced to try to halt massive overproduction that had resulted in so-called milk lakes and butter mountains in the EU.
The system is ending to allow European producers to compete with US and Australian farmers targeting the burgeoning markets of countries such as China and Korea.
The move was announced in 2003 and quota levels have been raised progressively over the last seven years to get farmers used to producing more milk.
But for small farmers like Deknudt, 54, the extra produce has already driven the wholesale price of milk down, some 30 per cent lower than the minimum he needs to break even.
“My son has given up on the idea of producing milk. We have a great farm. It’s a shame for it to go to waste,” he said.
Deknudt is one of a group of about 50 farmers from 16 countries protesting the move.
Though quotas were criticised, they did provide some price stability. The big fear for small farmers is that production will no longer be based on the amount of milk being consumed.
They say that will only benefit big food companies and could see milk being dumped abroad.
“It serves no purpose to raise production and dump milk on other countries, as is the case in Africa, which is destroying small producers in Africa and Europe,” said European Milk Board spokesman Erwin Schoepges.
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