There is an awful lot of hand-wringing going on amongst politicians, bureaucrats of various types, and industry pontificators about the state of the dairy industry. Sadly, it has been going on for as long as I have been an observer, which is a long time!

The current drought has been a disaster for the industry, but is not the cause of the long term decline. For 30 years, smaller family farms all over the place have been going to the wall, and those left are mostly just surviving as a result of the margin squeeze, caused by concurrent cost increases and downward price pressure, as well as short term thinking and often mismanagement throughout the supply chain.

This is not a recipe for long term industry health.

25 years ago I was booted out of a senior role in one of the largest businesses in the industry. I had consistently voiced disapproval of industry policy (this was before the inevitable de-regulation in NSW) and of some aspects of the management of my employer. They were as sick of me, as I was of them, so there I was, after a decade of delivering growth and profit, on the footpath with a young family.

After a frustrating search for another job, I emerged as a strategy consultant, never again to be required to act against my best instincts and experience.

Very recently I was asked to prepare a proposal for a body in the industry, and while I had little belief it would proceed, did some on the ground research to uncover the changes that had occurred in the 25 years since I had left active participation, upon which too base my recommendations.

Sadly, I could have almost written the list below 25 years ago.

The drivers of the industry have not changed much, nor has the lack of strategic response. Each factor has impacts on others, and the compounding impact has been significant, and probably terminal for most small operations in the absence of substantive and therefore unlikely change.  The reduction in numbers of family dairy  farm operations over the last 25 years leads to the conclusion that there will be very few, if any, left in another decade.

The list following is not weighted, or in any particular order.

Scale.

The big are getting bigger, sometimes vertically integrating through the chain, and the small are being squeezed out. This applies to all steps in the supply chain, farmers, processors, and retailers. In this environment, scale becomes the primary driver, delivering financial returns at the expense of other considerations. Product quality becomes ‘averaged’. The smaller operations cannot compete on price/cost, and do not attract a commercial reward for the higher quality they are able to deliver. A few have been able to find a niche that does value a superior product, but most have had no option other than to accept the price on offer, irrespective of costs incurred or quality delivered.

Capability.

Over a very long period we have hollowed out our scientific, management, and innovation capability in dairy, as well as allowing it to be taken into overseas ownership. The management focus of larger players is on international prices and commodity trading, rather than domestic demand responsiveness, market development and innovation. As a result, the whole industry has been commoditised. You can buy milk, a natural, nutritious product at your local supermarket for $1.10 a litre, while in the isle next door, water, virtually free from the taps sells for multiples of $1.10 a litre. A gross failure of industry and enterprise marketing, and not one that can be fixed with nonsensical regulation.

Financial depth.

Small farming operations do not have the financial capacity to expand beyond their dairy boundaries, and usually do not have the depth to even utilise existing technology to optimise current operations. This precludes both investing in potential productivity improvements on farm, and moving further into the supply chain to capture some of the value added margins that are potentially available.

Education.

The emerging generation of potential dairy farmers has nowhere to go to learn.  There is no longer any dairy education in Australia, which means that there will not only be a degradation of the management capability of existing industry participants, there will be no new blood coming in, and there will be no process or product innovation. This factor applies throughout the supply chain, but is particularly evident in dairying operations. There are a number of ‘cottage industry’ training courses around, such as cheese making courses. These only teach the ‘how,’ without any reference to the ‘why’ things happen. To a significant degree they also substitute for real education in the public mind, which makes it easier to close down the real education that has the potential to add long term industry value. Most of us would agree to the notion that education is a core foundation of long term success, and yet we have stood aside while it has been raped and thrown out into the street.

Scientific foundation.

The scientific base upon which all else is built has been discarded, not just degraded, discarded. Werribee, formerly the centre of dairy science is an uninhabited ghost-town, and as noted tertiary education in all its forms in dairy technology has been discontinued.  If I wanted my kids to do a degree in dairy technology, they would have to commute to New Zealand.

Food security.

Along with other parts of the food supply chain, Dairy has been sold off to international entities. We no longer control our own food supplies, the manufacturing capability is largely overseas, and local production increasingly in the hands of Multinationals who make decisions on their commercial needs, which are not necessarily aligned with the best interest of Australians.

Water security.

The current drought is a disaster but is not more than a nasty reminder that, in the driest continent on earth, we have allowed water security to diminish, and sub-optimal use to be made of the resource available. This impacts all aspects of primary production and has had a profound impact on the ecological and environmental management of the land.

‘Metro’ farming.

Dairy farming (and intensive farming generally) evolved close to population centres, often on the best land. That land is now more valuable as a short-term development opportunity than it is as a long-term producer of food, and so is largely sold off as ‘bedrooms’ to the population centres, pushing farming to more marginal and logistically costly areas.

Power.

Australia is a substantial net exporter of power, yet we have very high power prices by comparison to other developed economies. This is a failure of public policy over a long period. For dairy farmers, it has proved to be a real problem as they need a lot of power to drive refrigeration and their operational plant. Power costs alone are driving small operators out of the industry.

Survival mode.

Small farmers are in ‘survival mode’ working long hours for little financial return. This leaves little in the ‘kitty’, financial, time, or energy, to undertake the challenges of change on their own. They desperately need an infrastructure that supports and rewards their efforts. Rebuilding this infrastructure is not a short term ‘fix-it now’ press release response, it needs bipartisan political support across a number of  portfolios and geographies.

Demographics.

The average age of dairy farmers is now approaching retirement age (25 years ago it was 56 and it does not seem to have reversed). These people are retiring, selling the farms, and their children and grandchildren are not going to follow on. This loss of farming wisdom may seem minor in the scheme of things, but in the long term will diminish us all, as we try and address the increasing environmental challenges facing us.

 

The egg that is the dairy industry cannot be unscrambled, but there is some hope that a reasonable omelette can still be made. However the chefs seem to be out to lunch, and the apprentices do not know what to do, or how to do it. Only going right back to the basics, removing the politics of power and influence, of all types,  and rebuilding from the foundations up, has any hope of there being much more than a few corporate farms and the odd family with a couple of cows left in a few years.