Farms.com Home   News

Milk like no udder: N.L. dairy farmers launch co-op to localize sector

Dairy farmers in Newfoundland and Labrador have launched a new co-operative with financial support from the provincial government, which one farmer says will change the province's industry for the better.

The Newfoundland and Labrador Dairy Co-operative will be the province's only locally owned and operated milk processor, according to founding member Crosbie Williams. He called it a direct investment in the future of the industry, and in provincial food security.

"The farmers in our province now are going to own this industry. It's a proud moment for us, it's a proud moment for the industry, and it's something that's going to go down in our time as being historic for our industry," Williams, a fourth-generation farmer, said Monday at the co-op's official launch, at Pond View farms in the Goulds neighbourhood of St. John's.

Co-op president Scott Antle said plans for the group have been in the works for at least two years, and the catalyst for officially launching the co-op is a $10-million loan from the provincial government to help it buy Central Dairies from Quebec-based processing giant Agropur.

At the Central Dairies milk processing plant in Mount Pearl, Antle said, Agropur employs 70 people, each of whom will be offered employment by the co-op. Around a dozen management positions will also be created for people in Newfoundland and Labrador, he said.

The deal hasn't been finalized and the price hasn't been disclosed, Williams said, but they expect to close the deal by the end of the summer.

Williams said the co-op is made up of 19 dairy farmers, who he said account for about 80 per cent of the province's milk supply. He said farmers believe the move will increase milk production and spur creation of new products from milk made in the province.

"There's a lot of intricacies here that are difficult for some companies to wrap their head around, but we have an intricate knowledge," he said.

Click here to see more...

Trending Video

Canada reaches tariff deal with China on canola, electric vehicles

Video: Canada reaches tariff deal with China on canola, electric vehicles

Canada has reached a deal with China to increase the limit of imports of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) in exchange for Beijing dropping tariffs on agricultural products, such as canola, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Friday.

The tariffs on canola are dropping to 15 per cent starting on March 1. In exchange for dropping duties on agricultural products, Carney is allowing 49,000 Chinese EVs to be exported to Canada.

Carney described it as a “preliminary but landmark” agreement to remove trade barriers and reduce tariffs, part of a broader strategic partnership with China.