Farming: Taoiseach to address ICMSA AGM days before Derogation decision to be announced

This is the 75th AGM of the specialist dairy family farm association and mindful of Waterford’s extraordinary involvement with ICMSA from its earliest days in 1950, a special invitation is extended to members who might wish to come
Farming: Taoiseach to address ICMSA AGM days before Derogation decision to be announced

Ireland’s case for retaining the Nitrates Derogation is due to be decided shortly.

The Taoiseach, Michael Martin, will address the 75th AGM of ICMSA to be held at the Limerick Radisson on Friday, November 28, just days before Ireland’s case for retaining the Nitrates Derogation is submitted to the EU and a decision is made. 

The President of ICMSA, Kilkenny farmer Denis Drennan, has said that it is “impossible to understate the importance of retaining the Derogation for Ireland’s ‘flagship’ dairy sector” and much attention will focus on the tone and tenor of comments made by the Taoiseach and the Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Martin Heydon, who will also address the 300-odd delegates from all over the State. 

The day will also feature an expert panel discussion of where milk prices are headed and - in light of the alarming fall experienced over the last 10 weeks – a robust Q and A can be expected with television presenter, Helen Carroll, to MC the exchanges of opinion and tease out the best analysis and opinions. 

This is the 75th AGM of the specialist dairy family farm association and mindful of Waterford’s extraordinary involvement with ICMSA from its earliest days in 1950, a special invitation is extended to members who might wish to come. 

They are invited to ring 061-314677 and register their intention and so reserve a place.

Farm price and income volatility

Meanwhile, ICMSA described the latest milk price reductions as “horrendous”. The Chairperson of ICMSA Dairy Committee, Noel Murphy, said that attributing the precipitous fall in milk price to a ‘simple’ oversupply relative to demand was to ignore what he said was actually a much more fundamental problem with the existing dairy pricing system. 

Noel Murphy, Chairperson of the ICMSA Dairy Committee.
Noel Murphy, Chairperson of the ICMSA Dairy Committee.

Mr. Murphy said that the recent history of milk price ‘boom and busts’ demonstrated a ‘primitive’ market that protected every other component in the market through the expedient of loading all the risk onto the farmer-producers. He said that effectively all the links further up the supply chain are using farmer price and farm income as a ‘market correction device’ and a risk management tool. 

“It’s hugely important that we all see clearly what’s happening here. This isn’t any kind of ‘invisible hand of the market’ at work; what’s happened here is that the other components of the dairy markets knowingly use farmer milk price as a ‘reset button’ for dairy product price movements. 

"They do that in the full knowledge that reducing milk price leaves them untouched. It’s really important to emphasise that ‘farmer’ aspect there: no-one else’s margins or incomes fall are affected when we get the kind of price collapse we are seeing now. 

"They all protect their own position in the knowledge that our reduced milk price and wiped income is effectively the ‘reset’ button for the whole cycle to start again.”

Mr. Murphy said that everybody understands that dairy markets have weakened in recent months with little warning: “Farmers understand this but we are questioning – and have every right to question – where all the processors’ ‘forward sold’ contracts at defined prices have gone? 

"These are always cited when prices are rising but are nowhere to be seen when the markets fall. The markets suddenly weaken and ‘Bang!’, the farmer takes the hit straight away. This is an absolutely primitive way of managing a sector, it’s utterly destructive and it’s simply unsustainable for the family dairy farm to be the only ones left ‘holding the baby’ when the markets fall,” he said.

By way of context, Mr. Murphy said that the farmer milk price reductions over the last two months would represent a loss of €32,000 if applied to a full year for a 400,000-litre milk supplier. 

“Who else is expected to just take an income ‘hit’ like that? Is there any other sector where people are just expected to do the same work and actually lose money, as will be the case for thousands of Irish farmers if prices fall below the cost of production?” 

Mr. Murphy concluded by noting that the Ornua PPI for October stands at 41 cents per litre, which is below the cost of production, with an additional value-added payment of €6.3 million. Mr Murphy said that farmers are very legitimately asking how any processor can justify setting a milk price below this level. 

The so-called strategy of simply passing back the reductions to farmers needs to stop and needs to stop now, concluded Mr. Murphy.

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