Top Banner
Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University
23

Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Dec 23, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities

John F. Smith

Extension Dairy Specialist

Kansas State University

Page 2: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Percent of U.S. Milk Production for Different Herd Sizes

0

10

20

30

Herd Size

% o

f U.S

. Inv

ento

ry

1999 2000 2001

1999 2 8.5 20.9 17.9 17.3 12.5 11.7 9.2

2000 1.8 7.7 19.4 17.3 18 13.7 11.6 10.5

2001 1.6 6.7 18.2 16.5 18 12.9 13.4 12.7

1-29 30-49 50-99100-199

200-499

500-999

1000-1999

>1999

>200 cows = 57%

Page 3: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Percent of U.S. Inventory (cows) for Different Herd Sizes

0

10

20

30

Herd Size

% o

f U.S

. Inv

ento

ry

1999 2000 2001

1999 3.1 10.1 23.2 18.4 16.3 11 10 7.9

2000 2.9 9.1 22 18 16.7 12 10.1 9.2

2001 2.6 8.1 20.9 17.4 16.4 12 11.5 11.1

1-29 30-49 50-99100-199

200-499

500-999

1000-1999

>1999

>200 = 51%

Page 4: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Number of Operations for Different Herd Sizes in the US

0

10000

20000

30000

40000

Herd Size

% o

f U.S

. Inv

ento

ry

1999 2000 2001

1999 32920 24055 32935 13250 5290 1600 695 255

2000 30810 22110 31360 12865 5350 1700 695 280

2001 28155 19865 29215 12335 5195 1700 770 325

1-29 30-49 50-99100-199

200-499

500-999

1000-1999

>1999

>200 = 7990 herds (8.2%)<200 = 89,570 Herds

Page 5: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Percent of U.S. Milk Production from Dairies with > 200 Cows

-

10.0

20.0

30.0

40.0

50.0

60.0

93 94 95 96 97 98 99 0 1

Source: USDA-NASS

Page 6: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Two Ways to Increase Milk Production

• Milk More Cows

• Increase Milk Production per Cow

• Operations over 200 cows are doing both

Page 7: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Pounds of Feed (DM Basis) Required* For Maintenance at Different Levels of Peak Milk

Production

10496

86

13 1313

Po

un

ds

of

Milk

Po

un

ds

of

Fe

ed

* Assumes a ration containing 0.78 Mcal/lb of dry matter* Assumes environmental factors are constant.

Page 8: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Total number of milk cows and milk production per cow on dairy farms in the United States

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

1925

1930

1935

1940

1945

1950

1955

1960

1965

1970

1975

1980

1985

1990

1995

1999

Year

Co

ws

/Fa

rm(M

illio

ns

)

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

Milk

/Co

w(T

ho

us

an

d P

ou

nd

s)

Number of Cows Pounds/Cow

Compiled from: USDA Statistical Bulletin 303, 430 USDA Statistical Bulletin Entitled Milk: Final Estimates for Various Issues.

80’s + 2432 lb/c/y

90’s + 2989 lb/c/y

Page 9: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Consolidation!!!

Page 10: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Opportunity!!!

Page 11: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Other Industry Trends

• Many producers are building new facilities– Upgrading existing facilities– New facilities

• Urban encroachment is encouraging producers to relocate creating new dairy pockets– ID,NM,TX,KS,IA,IN,MI– Tax implications

Page 12: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.
Page 13: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Total Milk Production by Region of the United States

1990

Midwest 38.2%

Southeas

t 10.4%

Northeast 18.5% West

32.9%

1999

Northeast 18.3%

Southeast 7.7%

Midwest 32.4%

West 41.6%

Adapted from: U.S. Dairy Industry Statistics 1900-99. Hoards West. April 25, 2000. Pg 50-51.

Page 14: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Other Industry Trends• Significant Premiums for Shipping a Tanker of Milk

– $0.10-1.80 cwt.• Dilute Fixed Assets over as Many Cows as Possible

– Milking parlor & Manure mgt.• Manage Employees• Partnerships & Business Structures

– Combining Resources

• Increase in the Number of Multiple Unit Operations

Page 15: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Where will the Cows Go?

• Social Acceptance• Environmental Pressure

– Large Tracts of Land

• Quality of Life• Climate

– Both Cold & Hot

• Economic Incentives– Milk Market– Local Incentives

Page 16: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Potential Locations for New Dairies

• Big 3-CA, ID, NM• High Plains-SD, NE, KS• Eastern Oregon• Panhandle of TX & OK• I-29 Corridor-SD, MN, IA, NE, KS, MO• Tri-State Area-IL, IN, OH• Upper Midwest• Western New York• Utah, Nevada, Montana & Wyoming

Page 17: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Who’s Building These New Dairies?

• Expansion of Existing Operations

• Relocations– CA– Other States– Immigrants

• Unknown Entities or Investor Groups– Business Structure Changes

Page 18: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Limitations to Expansion or Relocation

• Capable Managers• Ability to Obtain Permits

– Clear Definition of Requirements– Permits Held Up in Court

• Social Acceptance• Technical Support

– Engineers, Contractors, Technicians, Management Specialist

Page 19: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Effect of Herd Size on Annual Ownership Costs Per Cow for a Double-8 Herringbone

$691

$401

$304$255 $226

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

100 200 300 400 500

Herd Size (total cows)

An

nu

al P

arlo

r O

wn

ersh

ip

Co

sts

per

Co

w

Source: Craig Thomas, Michigan State University

Page 20: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Investment in Facilities and Livestock

Number of Lactating Cows

Housing Type Investment per Lactating Cow

100 Freestalls $6,582

600 Freestalls $5,105

2400 Freestalls $4,751

2400 Dry-lot $3,932

KSU: Dairy enterprise budgets, 2001

Page 21: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Summary

• The dairy industry at the farm level is consolidating very rapidly.– 8.2% of the herds produce 57% of the milk

51% of the cows

• New dairy pockets are developing rapidly– Relocating dairies– Expansion of existing dairies

Page 22: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Summary

• Business structures are changing• Dilute the cost of facilities over as many

cows as possible• Shortage of people with the management

skills needed to run a large dairy• Limited number of places where large

dairies can be built• Volume and quality premiums

Page 23: Dairy Industry Trends and Opportunities John F. Smith Extension Dairy Specialist Kansas State University.

Thank You!