Title: Dairying in Europe is changing:
1Dairying in Europe is changing EU-Enlargement
EU-CAP-Reform J.F. Kleibeuker, Secretary General
European Dairy Association
2- Content
- Dairy in EU - 15
- Enlargement
- CAP-Reform
- Conclusion
3EU Dairy Markets Summary
4EU Milk Supplies Skim Milk Utilisation
5EU milk balance 2003 (mt)
- Deliveries to dairies 116
- Import 4
- Clearing of stocks 0
- Available 120
- 106 Internal consumption
- 13 Export
- 1 Clearing of market by intervention
- 120 Total utilisation
6Differences in milk production per farm
- Austria 40 tonnes/year
- Greece 60
- Portugal 86
- Finland 106
- Spain 116
- Italy 166
- Ireland 188
- France 189
- Belgium 190
- Germany 212
- Sweden 274
- The Netherlands 411
- Denmark 487
- United Kingdom 548
7Differences in processing sector
- Countries with 1 or 2 main companies
- Countries with more than 10 main companies
- From small to very big production plants (lt30
million litres 1.500 million litres / year) - Countries mainly producing for internal
consumption(eg. France) and countries mainly
producing for export (eg. Ireland)
8Differences in products
- Liquid milk and milk products
- Cheese
- Skim milk powder and butter
- Whole milk powder
- Food and feed ingredients
- Pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals
9Differences in producer price in 2002 (/l)
- UK 0.256
- Belgium 0.263
- Ireland 0.264
- Spain 0.281
- France 0.292
- Germany 0.296
- The Netherlands 0.297
- Austria 0.301
- Luxembourg 0.318
- Sweden 0.321
- Denmark 0.323
- Portugal 0.326
- Finland 0.343
- Greece 0.356
- Italy 0.358
10EU Enlargement 10 EU members
- 20 inhabitants / consumers
- 13 milk production
11Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (1)
Milk production (000t)
direct sales delivery to dairies 2001 7.200 15.00
0 Quota as per 1 May 2004 1.500 18.000
12Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (2)
Quotum Deliveries Surplus 2004 2002 not
internally consumed
- Poland 9.900 7.200 1.500
- Czech Rep. 2.700 2.600 600
- Hungary 1.900 1.800 400
- Lithuania 1.600 1.100 500
- Slovakia 1.000 1.000 300
- Latvia 700 400 100
- Estonia 1.000 500 300
- Slovenia 600 500 100
13Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (3)
Production per farm
- Lithuania 7 tonnes / year
- Latvia 10 tonnes / year
- Poland 12 tonnes / year
- Slovenia 13 tonnes / year
- Hungary 62 tonnes / year
- Czech Rep. 234 tonnes / year
- Estonia 247 tonnes / year
- Slovakia 921 tonnes / year
14Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (4)
Average producer prices in 2001 (/l)
- Hungary 0.297
- Slovenia 0.296
- (EU- average 0.295)
- Czech Republic 0.256
- Slovakia 0.211
- Estonia 0.204
- Poland 0.181
- Latvia 0.166
- Lithuania 0.144
15Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (5)
Domestic support
Export support
for dairy - 2001
for dairy - 2001
(million Euro)
4.6
- Poland
130,0
24.5
- Czech Rep.
2,7
0
- Hungary
49,5
- Lithuania
0,0
0
5
- Slovakia
26,3
- Latvia
0
6,5
- Estonia
7,4
0
- Slovenia
0,27
0
last year without dairy scheme
Source WTO
16Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (6)
Source USDA, WTO
17Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (7)
Transformation
- Structure of industry
- consolidation
- foreign participation
- Quality level
- EU 92/46
- derogation
18Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (8)
Product portfolio
- Types of products
- Differentiation and specialisation
19Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (9)
Distribution
- Large super and hyper markets
- Market share
- Foreign participation
20Dairy in new Member States
Some characteristics (10)
Dairy consumption
- Liquid milk
- EU 15 95 kg / head (91-140 kg / head)
- EU 10 75-85 kg / head
- Cheese
- EU 15 18.9 kg / head (9-26 kg / head)
- EU 10 9-10 kg / head
- Liquid milk products
- EU 15 17.6 kg / head (up to 40 kg / head)
- EU 10 4-15 kg / head
21Evaluation of threats and opportunitiesof
Enlargement
- Sales into new Member States
- - significant market increase, but increasing
competition with local lower cost producers - Sales out of new Member States
- - short term possibly quality problems
- - longer term competitive dairy production
sector - In the long term, new Member States dairy
sectors may be better equipped to produce at
world market price level - Certainly after 1-3 years, the EU-25 export
quotum () will be equal or lower than at
present in EU-15 - As per 1 May 2004 new Member State dairies will
ask for support WTO budgetary limits
22EU - Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
- Initiated in 1962
- Three major principles - unified market with
free flow of agricultural commodities within
the EU - Preference in the EU for internal
products over foreign imports - financial
solidarity through common financing
23Primary objectives of CAP in 1962
- Increase of agricultural productivity
- Ensure a fair standard of living for farmers
- Stabilise markets
- Guarantee regular food supplies
- Ensure reasonable prices to consumers
24Instruments in CAP/Dairy Common Market
Organisation
- Target prices
- Intervention
- Export restitution
- Domestic support
- Import duties
25Results of introduction of CAP
- Primary objectives achieved
- reasonable economic and social development in
most rural areas - From net-importer to net-exporter of agricultural
products - Strong increase of EU-spendings in agriculture
- Development of large, market disturbing,
intervention stocks
26Measures to reform CAP
- Introduction of supply management - quota for
e.g. dairy - set-aside programmes for arable
crops - Decoupling of payments from production volume
- Introduction of cross-compliance payments
depending on production conditions - Introduction of ceiling on spendings
27The process of CAP-Reform
- 1984 introduction of milk quota
- 1992 introduction of direct payments for
main arable crops - 1999 decision on direct payments for dairy
- 2002 decision on ceiling on agriculture
spendings up to 2013 - 2003 decision on CAP-Reform package
introduction of full decoupling
28The dairy CAP - Reform package
- Milk quota continue until 1st of April 2015
- Previous decided quota increase (3 x 0,5)
postponed up to 2005 - Target price cancelled
- Reduction of intervention prices - Butter -
25 (in 2007) - SMP - 15 (in 2006) - Compensation by direct payments less than 60 of
intervention price reductions - Full decoupling of direct payments from
production development - Severe limitations in the intervention scheme -
only 1st March-31st August each year - ceiling
for butter up to 30.000t by 2008 - ceiling for
SMP up to 109.000t
29Expected consequences of CAP-Reform in dairy (1)
- Only very limited increase of production quota in
the next 10 years - based on present world market prices in 2006/2007
reduction of export restitutions - for SMP
50 - for Butter 50 - reduction of domestic support for SMP and Butter
of 50-80 - Possibility of production level below quota
30Expected consequence of CAP-Reform in dairy (2)
- Further decrease of product/production volume
related support for dairy products
31EU milk market support spendings/budget 1993 to
2010 (billion euro)
32Expected consequences of CAP-Reform in dairy (3)
- Further consolidation, both in primary
production as with transformation
33(No Transcript)
34Expected consequences of CAP-Reform in dairy (4)
Further reduction of EU contribution to world
trade
35Shifts in world dairy market shares
1995 27,6 mln tonnes
1999 33.2 mln tonnes
2002 36.7 mln tonnes
Dutch Dairy Board Rabobank
International , 2003
36CONCLUSION (1)
- Both EU-Enlargement and CAP-Reform will have main
effects on the EU dairy sector - For a main part, the effects will be an
acceleration of processes that are already going
on ? improvement of competitiveness by
increasing efficiency through consolidation
both in the primary production and with
transformation ? reduction of contribution to
the world market because of fixed production
level with increasing internal consumption - Strong reduction of any trade distorting support
37CONCLUSION (2)
- Any support to rural areas should not be based on
compensation for inefficiencies but on basis of a
needed sustainable development of these areas - To achieve a full liberalisation of the
agricultural trade, combined with sustainable
development in the EU rural areas, further
CAP-Reforms have to be developed in the coming 10
years