Let me begin by thanking you for the privilege and opportunity to make a presentation before the standing committee.
My name, as you already know, is Peter Gould. I'm the chief executive officer for Dairy Farmers of Ontario.
Dairy Farmers of Ontario represents 3,800 dairy farms that currently produce approximately 2.7 billion litres of milk annually. As a result of pooling arrangements, Ontario processes close to three billion litres of milk in about 60 processing facilities across the province, most of which are small or medium-size plants, privately owned, family businesses.
This meeting is timely. It is timely because it is a critical time in the dairy industry, not critical because important decisions have to be made for the next year, but critical because today's decisions will influence, and perhaps I should say, determine the future success, viability, and sustainability for the next generation of dairy farmers.
Everyone has a role to play: producers, processors, and governments, both federal and provincial. In Ontario, we believe solutions come about when industry, producers, and processors can work toward common outcomes. There are times when those outcomes need help from government. We need private-public partnerships to ensure investment, innovation, growth, and jobs.
Caroline has touched on some of these things but I'll just reiterate some of them.
Supply management is often described as having three pillars: effective border control, production discipline, and pricing.
My belief has always been that effective border control is the bedrock that the system is built on. It is also the pillar that has been least effective over the years. That presents all sorts of challenges from income instability to investment planning for both producers and processors. It negatively impacts the scale of industry in Canada.
I'm going to talk a little about leaky borders, touch on the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, and as already mentioned, milk protein isolates.
One of today's defining issues is the uncontrolled imports of milk protein isolates, MPIs. They're being imported in an ever-increasing amount, displacing domestically produced skim milk solids and proteins, changing the competitive landscape and negatively affecting dairy farmer incomes.
Imports of milk protein isolates have increased exponentially since 2012. Canada has had a tariff rate quota on milk protein concentrates, MPCs, since the mid-1990s. Ten or twelve years ago, a few companies started importing MPIs, the isolates, higher concentrations of proteins.
Milk protein concentrate is a skim milk product, from which varying degrees of lactose and permeate, mostly water, is removed. These highly concentrated proteins were entering duty-free, effectively circumventing the MPC tariff. This was recognized by Dairy Farmers of Canada. The Canada Border Services Agency sought redress by taking the issue to the Canadian International Trade Tribunal.
The protein levels in skim milk, the normal skim milk as it comes off the farm, in round terms is 35% protein on a dry matter basis. Any protein level above that is considered to be concentrated. If we have skim milk with 40% protein, a common concentration is 52%, 72%, all the way up to 84% protein, it's still considered a concentrate.
The Canadian International Trade Tribunal determined that a concentration over 85% is an isolate, not a concentrate, even though it is used for the exact same purpose, and it was designed in the first place for the sole purpose of circumventing the MPC tariff.
That decision would not be the common understanding of an average person, and it is also not consistent with government policy.
The Government of Canada sought redress. In and around 2008, the government established a new TRQ and tariffs for milk protein isolates. The only problem was that no new tariffs could be applied for our NAFTA partners, the U.S. and Mexico, so it has been and remains an open border with the United States. MPIs cross the borders as ingredients, but can be used in Canada as milk. It is a conundrum that also makes no sense to the average person.
This is not the first problem resulting from a CITT decision. Twenty-five years ago, the Canadian International Trade Tribunal decided that butterfat in butteroil-sugar blends should not be subject to a tariff. A butteroil-sugar blend was also designed to circumvent the tariff and can be and is used as a primary input for both ice cream and confectionery.
The test the CITT applied was whether you would put it on a piece of toast. The answer was no, so no tariff. Butteroil-sugar blends come in by the thousands of tonnes every year.
As I said earlier, border controls are the most important of the three pillars, the foundation of supply management, of orderly marketing.
There are other examples of leaky borders. One is a product called pizza kits, which is 20% meat, 80% cheese. It entered Canada as a meat product. That was addressed by the government—thank you—shortly after the CETA was signed. Caroline has also referred to a couple of products, cream-sugar and cream-salt blends that are 99% cream. They're entering this country and I'm not exactly sure how they get here. It's either through an advanced ruling under the CBSA or it could be just coming in illegally.
The dairy industry needs consistent application of policy and solid government support to achieve its potential. Producers are responsible for the other two pillars. It's only the federal government that can effectively control the border.
I'm going to shift gears a little here and talk about some changes in the market.
One of the big ones has been growth and demand for butterfat, which is really a phenomenon. Traditionally, a lot of butter, not all, is made from cream, and that cream is a by-product. When we make fluid milk products, there's extra cream; when we make cheese and yogourt, that has been used to make butter. In the last two or three years, I can't emphasize this enough, there's been a profound shift in consumers' attitudes and behaviour. Butterfat is no longer a bad word, nor is it a bad fat. That's great news for the dairy industry, at least it should be. That also means less cream to make butter and more milk going into butter-powder plants. You don't have the sources of cream from milk and yogourt and those types of sources, so if we're going to meet our butterfat demand, we have to put raw milk into the butter-powder plants.
One of the things that happened for the first time in April or possibly May 2015, in Ontario, was we reached plant capacity. We did not have enough capacity to process particularly skim milk powder, and we started putting the milk into the butter-powder plants, extracting the cream, and finding alternative places to use the skim milk. I'm sure you're all aware of that. Sometimes it ends up in liquid manure pits or it goes to hog farms, but there are limits to how much skim milk can end up in those uses. Nobody wants to see that either in the short term, or certainly in the long term.
As a country, the simple problem is we are not able to meet current demand let alone future growth for butter and butterfat. The situation is further exacerbated by the fact that with few exceptions—I'm not saying there are no exceptions, but in general—the skim milk powder dryers we have in this country are old. They use old technology. The cost is high to operate them and they have arguably outlived their useful life. Simply put, they need replacing.
The bottom line is dryers in Canada need to be replaced with up-to-date technology, and that's not necessarily a dryer for a dryer. There are new technologies, better referred to as ingredient plants, that handle the skim milk solids. In addition to that, dryer capacity needs to be significantly increased, not only to meet current demand, but also future growth for the next 15 to 20 years. We don't want to build just to replace what we have. There has to be much more capacity.
There are two pre-conditions for investment by processors: one is an ingredient class; the second one is a competitive price. Producers and processors are jointly working on that solution. It's called an ingredient strategy, and we're making good progress, from our perspective. This is an opportunity for a private-public partnership. Government financial support would greatly assist in ensuring necessary investments are made. Without those investments, the danger is we'll be looking at potential divestment, disinvestment, and contraction, rather than meeting the potential for a vibrant, growing, high-tech, domestic dairy industry.
I'll make just a few concluding remarks before I wrap up and summarize some of the things that I said.
The first point is, effective border control is the foundation of a successful supply management system, of a strong domestic dairy industry, and that is the pillar in supply management that the federal government has the sole responsibility for. I'm suggesting it is time for an overhaul to ensure the government is fulfilling its end of the bargain. Leaky borders hurt the system.
The second point is that skim milk dryers are old and need to be replaced. They need to be replaced with modern technology and much greater capacity. Time is not on our side. From the day a company makes a decision until milk is delivered to that plant, it will be two to three years—more likely three than two. The real question is what happens if we don't? The impact will be immediate and dramatic.
The third point I want to summarize is that there is a great opportunity, which I just mentioned, for the government to be a partner in the future of the Canadian dairy industry, to ensure that it stays on track for investment, growth and the viability of the next generation, not for today, not for tomorrow, but for the next 20 or 25 years.
The last point is that we need a federal investment modernization fund for the whole industry to allow the dairy industry to modernize, especially the processing sector. Now is the time to act. The Ontario ingredient strategy actually is scheduled to start on April 1. Processors need assistance in the form, as I said, of a public-private partnership.
Thank you.