NO ORGANIC MILK?
You mightāve seen it; Pret a Manger have pulled organic milk from some stores. Not because they wanted to, but because their supplier hasnāt enough to go round.
Thatās not a supply chain hiccup - itās a warning light.
The truth is, there is an organic milk shortage in the UK - itās not some freak event, itās been brewing for years, and thereās a few reasons:
Some organic farmers have either quit or been pushed out in recent years. Despite financial returns for organic milk finally being where they need to be for organic farmers to farm sustainably, it hasnāt been like this for a long time. Itās taken years of serious graft by so many to make it work and for some itās been too late.
Proper organic herds rely on grass. Grass needs rain. No rain, no milk ā and thereās a drought in the UK South
Climate change vibes? Weāll let you debate that one.
BIG DAIRY treat organic as an āadd-onā to win contracts for wider non-organic sales, not something they genuinely believe in.
But hereās the worst bitā¦
Some smaller dairies, the ones who genuinely focus on organic, work with the same farmers every week, bottle the milk themselves and can guarantee supply are being pushed out of the supply chain. They have contracts pulled because BIG DAIRY have undercut them. Weāll give you an example of this next weekā¦
Then a few months later, those same big processors tell their customers, āSorry, thereās a shortage⦠weāll just send you non-organic instead.ā ā and THEY GET AWAY WITH IT!
Itās no wonder weāre in a mess.
We need more organic farmers and plenty want to convert but the process is slow, expensive and stacked against them. The āconversion periodā means detoxing land and animals from years of chemical use. It means risk, it means getting paid less while doing more until Organic day and with the bank manager lurking just around the corner with the farm deeds as security, it takes gut and support.
We believe organic can be the future for the planet, for our health and for farming but it needs help.
For now, if your flat whiteās missing organic milk; Itās not a glitch in the system.
It is the system.
@pete_ar_fryn You've missed the point, the value of the assets and business will be high (which for some reason people think its criminal to have business & assets) and the net profit won't afford the tax. Imagine the goverment taxing your pay slip 200% tax, how do you pay?
@heritage_surv@MerryAlbright They do, they're just highlighting the fact this tax is an unaffordable and illogical one. Imagine the government tell you to pay 10% the value of your house in tax every year for 10 years and your job doesn't make enough to pay it?? What are you going to do? Sell the garden?
The University of Nebraska has called out the misleading narrative on cow burps & methane on climate change:
āThey have not accounted for the capture part, they only account for methane being released. Carbon capture in soil and grass - helped out by cow grazing and manure - can far outweigh the emissions from cattle. Grasslands can take up more CO2 and carbon in the soil and plants, that offsets the CO2 that cattle are producing but it also offsets the methane.ā
Ultra-processed food as a % of household purchases (Europe).
The UK is the only country on this map to be over 50%. And look at the huge difference between UK and France/Italy/Spain.
āI buy avocados grown in Mexico and shipped to the UK.ā
āI buy tomatoes grown in Morocco and shipped to the UK.ā
āI buy Tofu grown in Indonesia and shipped to the UK.ā
"Red meat from local UK farmers should be reduced. Itās bad for the planet.ā
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Natural gas prices have plummeted since the tariffs talk, if our energy prices do not fall very soon, itās a clear indication of how much we are being fleeced and taken advantage of in this country.
So as you can see here is one of my tractors when working hard it burns 400 litres a day so it costs Ā£280 to fill it currently if they axe red diesel it will then cost me Ā£580 - would be nice if I could double the price of my wheat but we simply canāt I really fear the future
Half of UK horticulture firms consider their businesses to be at serious risk of failure.
UK fruit/veg consumption at its lowest in 50yrs.
Only 1:10 kids eat 5 a day.
Cost of diet related disease to NHS is over £6 billion.
This is a national tragedy
https://t.co/6WYKP5BA1u
I am starting to get quite angry about what's going on atm. We have those in power who have never risked a pound of their own money running a business & are doing their level best to harm business owners & farmers with umpteen daft policies & broken promises. #Reevecession