Maleny Dairies addresses animal welfare concerns with artificial insemination, adoption
It has long been a stain on the dairy industry — the slaughter of unwanted male "bobby" calves in their first week of life.
Key points:
Maleny Dairies program sexes semen before the herd is artificially inseminated
Practice ensures majority of calves are born female
The home farm is trialling Ceres Tags to monitor animal movements
Maleny Dairies, an independent dairy processor on the Sunshine Coast, says it is addressing those concerns on its home farm.
The family-owned business has celebrated the arrival of its first female calf born from a program that sexes semen before the herd is artificially inseminated to ensure the majority of calves are born female.
Bobby calves welcome tourists on farm visits to the factory and there is a waiting list for an adoption program.
Owner Ross Hopper said he was asked lots of questions about what happened to male calves.
"We've had activists ring us up and we just encourage them to come on a tour and we'll answer all your questions," he said.
He said the dairy had nothing to hide.
"We have bobby calves as our tour calves and then when they are getting a bit too old and boisterous and too rough on the tourists here, we have got an adoption program," he said.
"We sell them on and people use them as their pet lawn mowers."
The dairy has also tagged 10 cows with GPS trackers in a six-month trial with Brisbane-based agtech company Ceres Tag.
Solar-powered ear tags weighing 35 grams communicate directly with satellites to monitor activity levels, temperature and if the animal is being attacked, stolen or behaving abnormally.
Maleny Dairies chief executive Stephen Tait said big retailers such as Coles and Woolworths wanted primary producers to be more transparent and to have more responsible management of their herds.
"With Ceres Tag we can use technology and data to prove how well we run our herd and our business," Mr Tait said.
Improving traceability
At $US3,000 for 10 tags the price is high.
But Ceres Tag general manager of projects Greg Campbell said the cost would come down and the tags provided proof of provenance to producers' customers.
"If it is reduced stock theft, through carbon accounting or through better identifying sick animals, all of those things add up to savings," Mr Campbell said.
Industry in decline
Savings are important as challenging times continue for the dairy industry.
Just 53 per cent of 573.8 million litres of fresh milk sold in Queensland last year was produced in the state.
The rest was trucked up from southern states where the cost of production is lower.
The number of dairy farms in the state has shrunk from 1,500 to fewer than 280 since deregulation in 2000.
The average price paid to farmers in Queensland and northern New South Wales last year was 71 cents per litre.
Co-chief executive of farmer advocacy group eastAUSmilk, Eric Danzi, said farmers had continued to exit the industry and record prices were now being offered for fresh milk, with competition fierce for supply.
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Uncharted territory
Mr Danzi said Maleny Dairies, Lactalis and Bega were currently offering an average of 86 cents per litre while Norco was offering 84 cents per litre.
"It is a reflection of the massive shortage of milk but also the high escalation in input costs for fertiliser, fuel and chemicals," Mr Danzi said.
"Realistically the price needs to go up by at least 15-20 cents per litre at the farmgate just to cover the farm cost increases."
Investing in the future
Ross and Sally Hopper have spent millions of dollars upgrading their factory.
Mr Hopper said Maleny Dairies' point of difference was supporting smaller family farms that would never receive bonuses from larger processors because their volumes were too small.
"Demand is high and we are positive about the future," Mr Hopper said.
"We don't want any more farmers to disappear, we've got to look after them.
"Once they're gone there are no new ones starting up."