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Milk prices rise as Ukraine war threatens cow feed and fertiliser supplies

Milk prices are soaring on the expectation that a tight market will be hit by further disruption to fertiliser and feed supplies and inflationary pressures following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Bad weather in New Zealand, the US and Australia had already combined with rocketing gas prices and pandemic-related supply chain disruptions to put pressure on milk producers in the five biggest exporters before the war.

Combined milk production in New Zealand — known as the “Saudi Arabia of milk” because it controls 35 per cent of global exports — the EU, Australia, the US and Argentina fell 1.7 per cent in January compared with the previous year, down according to commodity broker StoneX.

Milk output for the five producers fell year on year, with New Zealand and Australia posting declines of more than 6 per cent.

After the start of the war on February 24, prices of crucial products have risen further. Anhydrous milk fat, a core dairy product, hit a record $7,111 a tonne on March 15, according to Global Dairy Trade index, which monitors New Zealand dairy prices. Whole milk powder, the most actively traded product, hit an eight-year high this month.

New Zealand company Fonterra, the world’s biggest dairy exporter, said last week it was paying farmers 30 per cent more for milk than it did a year ago and predicted the price would rise further.

“The conflict in Ukraine has added to an already complex Covid-19 operating environment, impacting global supply chains, the oil price and global supply of grains,” Fonterra chief executive Miles Hurrell said as the company reported interim results on Thursday.

Michael Harvey, an analyst at Rabobank, said that although dairy processors and food companies were bearing the brunt of costs, consumers were likely to face price increases.

He added that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine would add to milk production costs, as both countries were leading exporters of nitrogen-based fertilisers and wheat, an important feed for cattle along with corn and soy.

New Zealand and the EU account for about 70 per cent of milk exports, followed by the US, Australia, Brazil and Argentina.

Craig Hough, director of policy and strategy at Australian Dairy Farmers, a trade body, said the rising cost of feed was a “big problem” for dairy farmers because it accounted for 70-80 per cent of costs.

Hough added that Australian dairy farmers imported most of their fertiliser from China. But the gas supply crunch following the Ukraine war and pandemic restrictions in China as the country faces a growing Covid outbreak, meant it was “hard to get fertiliser, and it’s bloody expensive”.

In the ‘good ole days,’ farmers could often be found chatting with each other at the local breakfast joint in town, solving the world’s problems one cup of coffee at a time. Today, farmers are lucky if they’re able to even finish their cup of coffee while it’s still hot.

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