UK Parliament / Open data

Dairy Farming

Written question asked by Baroness Hayman of Ullock (Labour) on Wednesday, 24 February 2016, in the House of Commons. It was due for an answer on Wednesday, 24 February 2016 (named day). It was answered by George Eustice (Conservative) on Wednesday, 24 February 2016 on behalf of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.

Question

To ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, how many dairy farmers have gone out of business in each of the last five years.

Answer

The table below shows the net change in the number of dairy farms. Data is only available on the total number of dairy farms in June and December of each year, so the table only shows the net change, rather than the number entering and the number leaving dairy farming. The latest data available on the number of dairy farms in England is for June 2015. This is shown below with data for the previous 5 years. The change in the number of farms includes new holdings which have been registered with dairy cattle, holdings that have ceased to have cattle and holdings that have merged.

The number of dairy cows on these dairy farms is also shown below. This shows that despite a 16% decrease in the overall number of dairy farms between June 2010 and June 2015, the number of dairy cows has remained almost unchanged, suggesting consolidation within the industry.

Date

Number of dairy farms(a)

Number of cows in the dairy herd(b)

Jun-2010

9 461

1 142 497

Dec-2010

9 287

1 147 450

Jun-2011

9 041

1 112 459

Dec-2011

8 823

1 105 290

Jun-2012

8 663

1 104 676

Dec-2012

8 503

1 107 045

Jun-2013

8 342

1 098 610

Dec-2013

8 197

1 124 368

Jun-2014

8 092

1 128 548

Dec-2014

8 051

1 150 007

Jun-2015

7 982

1 148 089

% change Jun15/Jun10

-16%

0.5%

(a) Sourced from Cattle Tracing System. Dairy farms are defined as the number of holdings with more than 10 cows in the dairy herd.

(b) Cows in the dairy herd are defined as female dairy cows over 2 years old in the milking herd (i.e. with offspring).

Type
Written question
Reference
27338
Session
2015-16
Subjects
Contains statistics
Yes
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