Fonterra Pilot Scheme to Give Farmers Milk Price Certainty
Fonterra Pilot Scheme to Give Farmers Milk Price Certainty
Fonterra is piloting a new ‘Guaranteed Milk Price’ (GMP) scheme that will provide farmers with the opportunity to have more certainty in their milk price. The pilot will mean farmers can choose to lock in a milk price announced at the beginning of a season for up to 75 per cent of their milk supply.
Fonterra’s Managing Director of Group
Optimisation and Supply Chain, Ian Palliser says the past
few years have confirmed that volatility in commodity prices
is here to stay.
“We recognise that every
farming business is different. And while most farmers can
live with the market volatility, there are times when some
farmers would prefer more certainty as it would help them
manage their own farming businesses,” Mr Palliser
says.
“Certainty can be particularly important
for farmers at times when they are considering investing in
new equipment, expanding or undertaking a new conversion.
It’s a bit like having a fixed interest rate on your
mortgage versus a floating rate. It enables you to know
exactly where you stand with a percentage of your production
and this can help with future planning.
“As well as
providing farmers with the certainty they are looking for,
GMP also has benefits for the Co-op. That’s because we
know what a certain proportion of our milk will cost us for
the season and this in turn provides us with another selling
tool when talking to our customers, some of whom are also
looking for price certainty.
“We have been
talking to farmers and the Shareholders’ Council about the
GMP concept and we’re now inviting farmers to take part in
the pilot scheme that will run over the next
season.”
The Co-op will run the pilot for the
2013/2014 season with interested farmers who will have a
proportion of their production set at the opening milk price
which will be announced in May.
Like converting from a
fixed to floating interest rate on a mortgage, there will be
a break fee for any farmer who decides to revert back to the
normal milk price system during the season.
Mr
Palliser says that the pilot would ideally involve around
200 farmers throughout the country, at different stages of
their farm operations and with varying herd
sizes.
“We will monitor the pilot over the next
season and provide feedback to all shareholders on the
benefits and the risks and this way farmers can see if it is
something that might suit them in the
future.”
ENDS