DAIRY INDUSTRY WITHERING ON THE VINE, SAYS LORD MORRIS

[caption id="attachment_3876" align="aligncenter" width="500"]PLAQUE UNVEILING: Lord Morris and Emyr Jones during the official opening PLAQUE UNVEILING: Lord Morris and Emyr Jones during the official opening[/caption]

Former Secretary of State for Wales Lord Morris of Aberavon has expressed serious concerns for the survival of the UK dairy industry.

Opening the Farmers' Union of Wales's iconic new pavilion at the Royal Welsh Showground, the union's first deputy general secretary and legal adviser, said the dairy industry is "withering on the vine" because it is operating on an unfair playing field.

"There is something completely wrong when a pint of milk is about 50p and a pint of water 83p!" he said.

"The major supermarkets hold the industry in their grip but some firms have been less fair than others - to their discredit.

"Do they really want, in their own interests, the dairy industry to die?

"When I was a young man working for farmers there were 6,000 registered milk producers in Carmarthenshire alone.

"I doubt whether there are 3,000 in the whole of Wales now.

"The Westminster minister of agriculture is trying to agree a voluntary code of practice with the dairy and retail industries and to work with them to ensure stability in the market.

"In a deregulatory age this is the only offer on the table and I wish the minister well - time is not on his side for it to succeed.

"The whole supply chain needs repair, perhaps more robustly."

Lord Morris welcomed eminent agriculturalist Lord Plumb's recent support in the House of Lords of a Groceries Code Adjudicator (Ombudsman) to ensure fairness in the market place.

"The only argument was what powers he should have.

"It reminds me of the time when there was a process of arbitration involving the Milk Marketing Board, the industry and the retailers. It is a welcome step forward." 

Dealing with another topical issue, Lord Morris said the dairy herd must be kept in good health and he welcomed "positive steps" being taken at last in England to deal with badger culling.

"The former Welsh agriculture minister Elin Jones is to be commended for her brave and pioneering fight (to introduce a badger cull in Wales). It was the process that let her down.

"I hope Wales will watch closely at what is happening in England.

"A reduction in tuberculosis would bring a welcome relief to both the industry and the taxpayer."

FUW president Emyr Jones said it was an easy decision for the union's presidential team to choose Lord Morris to open the pavilion.

"In his recently-published autobiography he reminds us of the difficult times the union faced in its formative years.

"In chapter three he recalls the time when he came home for Christmas in 1955 and 'all hell had broken loose in the farming community in Carmarthen and Ceredigion'.

"A small minority of farmers had broken away from the NFU and formed the FUW.

"People said at the time that this union would not last more than three months but this building is proof that we are here to stay.

"It is very important for everybody connected to the industry to work together to make sure that we have a strong and prosperous farming industry in Wales.

"Please don't play politics with the future of the industry in Wales."

FUW WELCOMES U-TURNS ON MILK PRICE CUT PLANS BUT WARNS OTHERS TO FOLLOW SUIT

With August 1 rapidly approaching all milk processors must follow the example set by others and reverse decisions to reduce farmgate milk prices - or face the anger of the farming industry, the Farmers' Union of Wales said today.

Today global dairy company Arla Foods joined First Milk and Dairy Crest who had earlier this week done a U-turn by withdrawing plans to reduce the milk price it pays to farmers in its liquid and balancing pools from next Wednesday (August 1).

FUW dairy and milk produce committee chairman, Holywell dairy farmer Dei Davies, welcomed the decision but warned that others must now follow suit or face the wrath of the industry.

Following a meeting for FUW dairy producers at the Royal Welsh Show on Thursday, Mr Davies said: "Dairy farmers have their backs to the wall and are facing further increases in input costs as the summer goes on.

"We desperately need a long term solution, but in the short term all processors need to undo the damage done over recent weeks and months.

"This has been made clear during meetings with numerous processors, politicians and other farming organisations over the past weeks, and we will continue to make this clear at a number of further meetings arranged for the coming weeks."

FUW AND SCARLETS PROMOTE MILK FOR SPORTSPEOPLE

Scarlets

The Scarlets rugby region and the Farmers' Union of Wales teamed up at the Royal Welsh Show today to highlight the nutritional benefits of milk for young sportspeople.

During a visit to the union's pavilion alongside the main ring a group of Scarlets sampled a variety of milk dinks produced in Pembrokeshire by family-run company Trioni Ltd and supplied by team sponsor Daioni.

"The drinks are low in sugar and fat and are free from preservatives and artificial colours," said FUW member Laurence Harris, the farmer behind the Trioni brand.

The players' group was led by Scarlets attack coach Mark Jones - who was brought up nearby in Builth Wells - and included new signings Gareth Owen and Kristian Phillips plus newly-appointed Scarlets captain Rob McCusker and players Tavis Knoyle, Peter Edwards, Gareth Davies, Emyr Phillips, Dan Newton and Aled Davies.

Daioni, which is produced in Pembrokeshire by family-run company Trioni Ltd, has re-styled its branding and signed a sponsorship deal with The Scarlets.

"Daioni is a healthy and nutritional alternative to fizzy drinks so we are delighted to help the Scarlets spread the healthy living message," said FUW president Emyr Jones.

"Daioni has several top sporting organisations and clubs among its fans including the Welsh Rugby Union, and Chelsea, West Ham and Tottenham Hotspur football clubs.

"With an increasing amount of research into milk as a recovery and re-hydration aid for athletes, there is a growing body of evidence suggesting milk may be just as effective in these areas as some sports drinks."          

FUW AND OFCOM HOST MOBILE 'NOTSPOTS' TALKS AT ROYAL WELSH SHOW

Plans for helping solve Wales' mobile broadband "notspots" were outlined during the Royal Welsh Show today when the Farmers' Union of Wales and Ofcom held wide-ranging talks with farmers and representatives from the communications industry.

The theme of the meeting was "Connecting Rural Wales - 4G Mobile Broadband and the Mobile Infrastructure Project" and the Llanelwedd venue was an ideal place to discuss mobile coverage issues in Wales, said FUW president Emyr Jones.

"We are pleased to work in collaboration with Ofcom to show how the rollout of 4G services and the UK Government’s Mobile Infrastructure Project will bring significant benefits to consumers and businesses in rural areas of Wales.”

Demand for mobile data in Western Europe - estimated to increase by more than 500 per cent over the next five years - is being fuelled by smartphones and mobile broadband data services such as video streaming, email, messenger services, online mapping and social networking.

As the UK switches from analogue to digital TV, new spectrum capacity has become available to meet this demand.

Ofcom’s Wales director Elinor Williams said: “Our recent announcement on the combined spectrum auction will bring significant benefits to citizens and consumers in rural Wales.

“The auction is a crucial step in preparing for 4G mobile services and it is of significant importance to the Welsh economy.

“It will support a wide range of data services rapidly becoming essential features of modern life in rural Wales.”

Ofcom hopes 98% of the UK will have 4G coverage by 2017.

The meeting’s facilitator, FUW director of agricultural policy Nick Fenwick, said the introduction of 4G would be hugely beneficial to farmers.

Mr Fenwick - who grew up on a hill farm in Llanbrynmair, near Machynlleth, with poor mobile coverage - added: "The farming industry, in increasing numbers, is reliant on smart phone technology such as apps.

"It's second nature for the up-and-coming younger generation to use their phones in innovative ways.”

FUW WELCOMES PWLLPEIRAN ANNOUNCEMENT

The Farmers’ Union of Wales today welcomed the Welsh Government’s decision to maintain ownership of Pwllpeiran research farm in Ceredigion.

Deputy agriculture minister Alun Davies revealed at the Royal Welsh Show that the Aberystwyth-based Institute for Biological Environmental and Rural Studies (IBERS) will take over the running of the farm.

“This decision is a major relief for the industry,” said FUW president Emyr Jones.

The proposals include the development of a knowledge exchange centre for upland land use, a cultural heritage centre and two early entrants’ starter farms with an educational support mission linking to skills and training.

Work with IBERS has already started towards a lease commencing in April next year.

Pwllpeiran’s main aim has been to significantly improve the viability of farming in the uplands to ensure continued agricultural productivity in disadvantaged areas while also stemming rural depopulation.

”Therefore, the continuation of existing research and the establishment of new research is great news for the industry,” said Mr Jones.

“For the best part of a century, Pwllpeiran has played an important role in the development of agriculture in Wales and in terms of global agriculture.

“Closing this facility would have been a step backwards for agriculture in Wales as there is no doubt thousands of farming families such as my own owe our very existence to the work being carried out there,” added Mr Jones, whose Bala upland beef and sheep farm won the British Grassland Society's top UK grassland award in 2008.

The FUW has made representations to the minister and attended various meetings outlining its concerns about the proposed closure of Pwllpeiran.

Against a background of rising global populations and diminishing natural resources, the union stressed that it is essential research work is undertaken to allow farmers to produce more food while having less impact on our environment.

FUW RAISE CAP CONCERNS WITH EC AGRI COMMISSIONER

The Farmers' Union of Wales today raised Welsh farming's concerns about the future of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) at a high level meeting with European Commissioner for Agriculture Dacian Ciolo? at the Royal Welsh Show.

During the meeting, also attended by numerous EU Commission officials and cabinet members and deputy agriculture minister Alun Davies, FUW president Emyr Jones made it clear that Wales needed to implement a payment system which did not undermine food production and that any changes should take place over an appropriate transition period.

"A host of other key concerns were discussed, including the adverse impact that 'greening' measures would have on both agriculture and the environment, and the need to allow farms to respond to market pressures, rather than limiting land use through restrictive greening measures."

Mr Jones said the meeting had been a very positive one at which the Commissioner acknowledged the need to look at a number of key issues of concern to Welsh farmers.

"We very much welcome the Commissioner's presence at the largest agricultural event of its kind in Europe.

"Mr Ciolo? has been left with a clear impression of the importance of agriculture and food production to Wales, and the key changes which need to be made to the CAP proposals in order to ensure Welsh agriculture is not undermined."

Mr Jones added that important amendments to the proposals had already been submitted to the EU Parliament by the FUW, following a report by EU Agriculture Committee Rapporteur Capoulas Santos, and that he hoped these would be accepted during the coming months.