The continuing low levels of milk production are continuing to push up mild and medim Cheddar prices. Increases of £50 and £100 a tonne in wholesale rates have been recorded by the Provision Trade Federation.
Cumulative wholesale milk figures for the quota year to September 2000 show a 215 million litre year on year gap against 1999 this is equivalent to nearly six days' worth of averaged-out production.
Nor are the next set of MAFF milk utilisation figures likely to tell a brighter story.
With the exception of whole milk powder, the entire British dairy industry has had less product to sell throughout the calendar year to September in averaged out figures, this comes to -9% in butter, -8% in cheese, -19% in SMP.
Even liquid milk, half the UK dairy industry's production, is nearly 2% down year on year in volume on the cumulative January to September figures.
There was a hint of a recovery in milk output before Christmas. But it will take more than an 800,000 litre week on week lift in wholesale milk production, currently just under 230 million litres a week, to bring the supply back into balance with demand.
January and February will see a lot of early calvings, but milk output from these cows will not reach their peak for a further 100 days, by which time the output gain is barely discernible against the high numbers of cows starting lactations in March and April.
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