Tuesday 8 July 2014

News from the 'Beef Summit'

Last week saw DEFRA’s Farming Minister, George Eustice chair a so called “Beef Summit” with a view to dealing with the desperate situation the British Beef Industry finds itself in. In the last year beef prices have plummeted by around 20% which is posing very real problems to beef farmers, particularly those who “finish cattle”.

What is interesting to note here is that most farmers who finish cattle, purchase animals, called “store cattle”, from other farmers usually by auction at livestock markets. Here it is argued there is fair and open competition and thus the price paid represents the true open market value of the livestock purchased.

However, once the animals have been fattened they have to be sold to the dwindling number of abattoirs who in turn sell the majority of meat to the big supermarkets. It is this processor/retailer section of the food chain where the “market” becomes much less transparent. Thus many beef finishers are finding themselves having to compete for stock in the open market and then having to sell at “fixed” prices to abattoirs without any transparent competition in the system.

It was issues such as this that stimulated the beef summit where representatives from farming organisations, processors and retailers met in Westminster to discuss the problems facing beef farmers. The outcome of the meeting was that representatives from the farming unions and the British Meat Processors Association (BMPA) will meet over the summer to discuss a code to increase transparency.

The code will cover how trading terms, abattoir specifications and penalties are communicated to beef producers. This represents one of the areas of concern facing farmers but the retail sector is also another big issue where the perennial problem of clear labelling and fair pricing of meat is important.

Farmers appreciate that markets do go up and down but if supermarkets truly want to retain beef production in this country they need to work with the industry to give some certainty as to what prices are likely to do over a period of time.

To some extent supermarkets such as Waitrose are doing this and have recently announced that they will hold prices at no less than 345p/kg for their producers through to October. Tesco has also started a promotion of beef although from the advert I have seen includes British and Irish beef which illustrates the problem of labelling where nothing ever seems as transparent as it should be – will it be British or Irish beef that you actually have on your plate?

So it seems that although some progress has been made and that a code of conduct will be a good thing, there is a lot more still to be done before British beef farmers will feel they are at least being treated fairly by the processors and retailers that dominate the food chain “upstream” from the farm gate.


James Stephen MRICS FAAV
Partner
Rural Practice Chartered Surveyor, Wells

T: 01749 683381
E: james.stephen@carterjonas.co.uk

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