Most residential neighborhoods were spared outages during last week’s winter storms, but not the same can be said for the Ag industry.

At Continental Dairy Facilities Southwest, a select milk co-op in Littlefield, the machines are usually running 24/7.

That was, until about a week ago.

In an effort to curtail gas use, Atmos energy forced the facility to stop in its tracks for an entire week.

“We ended up dumping 1,400 truckloads of milk which equals about 8 million gallons of milk at about a $12 million loss for producers,” Select Milk HR director Haley Welch explained.

The order came after Atmos had already marked up its gas prices by 1000%.

“So, it was going to cost us $300,000 a day to run the gas, which we were willing to pay so we did not have to dump all these tankers of milk,” Welch said.

In the end, it was an unavoidable worst-case scenario.

The facility is a balancing plant, it takes raw milk and turns it into butter or dry milk, giving the product a longer shelf life.

“I think that was one of the most frustrating things about this is, this plant was designed to help us in a situation like this and then we sat full-milk for 7 days and weren’t able to process any marketable product.”

“To see all the hard work going down the drain, that’s not something anyone likes to watch,” John Van De Pol said.

He is one of more than 100 dairy producers that works with the plant.

Even though production was stopped, he says the cows did not stop milking.

“It’s sad and disheartening to a lot of people, and there’s a lot of effort and work that goes into making these products and getting the milk,” he said.

“The dairy producers take the big hit on this. And they’ll see it as early as next month,” Welch explained.

Though the plant has business interruption insurance, it’s unclear if the claim will go through because there is no physical damage to the facility.

The price for the butter so essential to the pastries has shot up in recent months, by 25% since September alone, Delmontel says.

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