SHIJIAZHUANG, July 13(Xinhua) -- Chinese dairy
farmers in the home province of the bankrupted Sanlu Group, which was at the
center of a tainted milk scandal, have just got over the incident and are
bracing themselves for a market boom, said an industry chairman in northern
Hebei Province on Monday.
"We have visited all major dairy farms in the
province this month, and noticed that most farmers are keen to expand their
business scale, which was in sharp contrast to the post-scandal phenomenon of
dumping milk," said Wang Yinsheng, chairman of the Hebei Food Industry
Association.
"The market has recovered to 70 percent of the
pre-scandal consumption level, and we expect it recover to 90 percent by the end
of this year," said Song Kungang, director-general of the China Dairy Industry
Association.
Xiao Luozhen, a 60-year-old dairy farmer in Hebei,
said "the worst time has passed" since the melamine contamination scandal soured
China's dairy business last year, although dairy farmers are still "running
businesses at losses".
"The raw milk was collected at 1.6 yuan (0.23 U.S.
dollar) per kg in December last year, which is much cheaper than a bottle of 500
ml mineral water. The price has bounced back to 2.6 yuan per kg now," said Xiao,
who has a cow-breeding farm in Xingtang County,the largest cow-breeding base in
north China.
The farmer has been expanding the number of cows in
stock from 300 to 600 this year, as he foresaw a "hope" of a new round industry
boom, after the melamine scandal of the Hebei-based SanluGroup shattered the
market.
"I am applying for a bank loan in hope to add another
200 cows.I should get prepared as the market is getting hot sooner or later,"
said the veteran dairy farmer.
He nicknamed his grandson born in June this year "Xi
Wang", which means hope in Chinese.
He named his twin grandsons, born in October last
year during the scandal, "Nan Jiao" and "Dao Guan", meaning "hard to sell milk"
and "dumping milk," as the grandfather wanted the kids to remember the difficult
period when he found no buyers for his raw milk.
The county government has provided dairy farmers with
40 million yuan in subsidies and low-interest loans worth 60 million yuan to
help them withstanding the difficult time, after the melamine scandal broke out
in September last year.
Sanlu Group, the dairy company headquartered in
Shijiazhuang, the provincial capital of Hebei, was found to have adulterated its
infant formula milk powder with melamine, an industrial chemical substance,
leaving at least six infants dead and over 300,000 others suffering kidney
problems and other symptoms.
The tainted milk scandal has taken its toll on the
dairy industry, resulting in a sluggish market, excess raw milk in stock and low
purchasing prices.
"Farmers began to dump raw milk and abandon cows
after the incident. The county government acted swiftly to help build 109
cow-breeding bases to raise the cows and collect milk from the farmers," said Lu
Shuping, deputy head of the county animal husbandry department.
He said the county now has about 75,000 cows in
stock, accounting for one third of the total in Shijiazhuang.
"Daily fresh milk output from Xingtang County now
reached 490 tonnes, which supplied China's dairy bellwethers of Yili, Mengniu
and Sanyuan," he said.
However, a latest investigation by the county
government showed that one third of the cow-breeding bases in Xingtang still
could not make their ends meet.
"The milk price is still low, and the forage costs
are getting higher," said the farmer Xiao, whose farm business lost 10,000 yuan
a month.
Nationwide, in response to the melamine crisis, the
Ministry of Agriculture found 3,908 of the country's total 20,393 milk
collection stations defective, and shut them down.