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A keeper draws milk from cows on Youth
Farm in Jeminay, Altay, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous
Region, Sept. 20, 2008. A project which encourages farmers to take part in
dairy industry was started since 2007. Now there are 82,000 milk cows in
the Altay region. Altay region is expected to develop more than 20
townships each have more than 1000 high qualified milk cows by the year
2010.(Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
by Xinhua writer Fu Shuangqi and Cao Guochang
SHIJIAZHUANG, Sept. 21 (Xinhua) -- On the outskirts
of Nantongye village, a huge yogurt plant is under construction. It is planned
that it may take all fresh milk produced by more than 3,000 cows raised by one
third of the village households.
The plant owner is the Sanlu Group, whose baby
formula was found containing the toxic chemical melamine that caused more
than6,200 children nationwide to have kidney stones.
Dairy farmers at Nantongye village were long-term
suppliers to Sanlu, the biggest dairy producer in northern Hebei Province and
nationwide, though villagers say they did not sign contracts with the company.
The company built five stations
in the village to collect freshmilk, but since last Sunday it has stopped buying
from farmers as all Sanlu plants have been suspended from production since the
scandal was revealed.
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A keeper feeds milk cows on Youth Farm
in Jeminay, Altay, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region,
Sept. 20, 2008. A project which encourages farmers to take part in dairy
industry was started since 2007.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Most farmers raise cows in small farms covering not
much more than a courtyard. Li Zhidong's 18 cows produce about 160 kg of milk a
day. In the past week, her earnings have dropped by 330 yuan (48.5 U.S. dollars)
a day.
"I gave away the milk to family, friends and
neighbors. Some feed it to their pigs. The rest I pour into the sewer," says Li,
56, who manages the farm with her husband. "All good milk. It's such a waste."
She has stopped feeding the cattle concentrated feed,
giving them hay. Now they produce less milk each day.
"I have no choice but to cut costs," she says. "If
the cows stop producing, it will take at least 10 months for them to give milk
again."
Usually Li and her neighbors herd
their cattle to a nearby milking station, where tankers collect the fresh milk
and carry itto the plants.
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Photo taken on Sept. 20, 2008 shows milk
cows on Youth Farm in Jeminay, Altay, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region. A project which encourages farmers to take part in
dairy industry was started since 2007. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
"We did not add anything bad in the milk. We never
even had the opportunity," Li says. "Those bad guys have put all of us in
trouble."
Some of the 378 milk stations supplying Sanlu are
like those in Nantongye village, directly run by the company itself, and others
are owned by middlemen or big dairy farms.
Hebei police have arrested two brothers, surnamed
Geng, who rana station supplying Sanlu and charged them with adding melamine
tomilk.
"Sanlu did help us in our business and improved our
lives," says Li. Her family earned about 10,000 yuan (1,470 U.S. dollars) a year
from their cattle. Her son and daughter-in-law worked at Sanlu plants.
But the farmers are now in difficulty. Li's neighbor,
Li Jufeng, plans to sell all 13 cows his father raised.
"My dad had a traffic accident two days ago. We need
money to pay for his treatment," says the 32-year-old. "If we keep the cattle,
we cannot sell the milk and have to spend money on them."
A father of a boy and girl, he worked for a Sanlu
milk powder plant until the scandal broke. "I don't know what will happen to me
and whether I will get paid this month."
The local government has been busy searching for new
milk buyers. "Yili and Mengniu (two major dairy brands) had promised tobuy our
milk, but they just came a day and stopped because some of their products were
also found with problems," says Zhang Junyong,an official in charge of
agriculture at Tongye township government.
Four dairy firms in Hebei have reached agreements
with the provincial government to buy some of the 2,500 to 3,000 tonnes of daily
milk formerly supplied of Sanlu, a government source told Xinhua.
The government is also negotiating with Beijing-based
Sanyuan Group and Shanghai-based Bright Dairy.
Some district governments and neighborhood committees
in the provincial capital, Shijiazhuang, also approached dairy farmers. They
carried fresh milk to government offices and neighborhoods and sold direct to
residents.
Chen, a district government worker who declined to
give her full name, bought 1.5 liters of fresh milk. "I paid 0.5 yuan (7 cents)
per 500 ml. I heard the government gave an 0.5 yuan subsidy per 500 ml to
farmers," she says. "The only problem is that fresh milk cannot keep for long."
SECURITY OF CONTRACT
Unlike Li in Nantongye, Zhou Dongji at Nanjiachun
village continues feeding his 14 cows as usual.
The scandal has had little effect on him and 58 other
dairy farmers in his village. Bright Dairy continued buying their milk though
its yogurt products were also found containing melamine in a nationwide
inspection.
"We signed contracts to sell only to Bright Dairy,"
says Zhou.
His cattle are not kept on his own farm, but a big
farm with those of other farmers. In the eight-hectare lot, each farmer has one
unit for their own cattle. They feed the cows themselves whilethe dairy company
is in charge of milking, breeding, disease prevention and treatment.
In Wangdu county where Zhou's village is located,
other dairy giants like Mengniu and Yili have set up similar facilities.
"It is always easier to control the quality of milk
produced bycontracted farmers than the independents as the latter sell to
whoever gives the highest price," says Liu Chenfa, a Mengniu facility manager.
But insiders say some dairy firms refuse to contract
farmers inorder to avoid risk when supply exceeds demand.