Lidl GB is also ensuring that Muller farmers who opted to benefit from a 3-year fixed-price contract for up to 50% of their milk supply will see this fixed price temporarily increase by 4ppl to 33ppl from the same date.
Rob Hutchinson, COO at Muller, said the rises were in light of the unprecedented increase in costs: “The commitment to the dairy industry from Lidl GB to increase the value of the fixed-price contract, an important and valuable hedge against milk price market volatility, also recognises the current pressures facing farmers.”
Pressure on milking herd
The pressure on the sector is one reason for the ongoing shrinking of the GB milking herd, which according to the Agriculture Horticulture Development Board, totalled 1.67 million as of 1 October. Katherine Jack, AHDB dairy analyst, said the milking herd had seen a 1.7% (29,000 head) decline in numbers compared to October 2020, marking an ongoing continuation of the long-term decline seen in the national herd.
While youngstock numbers have risen, she said there were many other factors that could maintain the status quo of long-term decline.
“Margins are particularly important at the moment, with higher prices having to compete with increasing costs. If the economics don’t favour expanding individual herds, farmers are likely to cull older animals to make space for the new ones instead.”