Categories: BusinessMarket

Tunisia milk market ‘collapsing’ as feed prices soar

Noura paces around the center of Tunis in search of milk. “When I find it, I can not buy more than two bricks,” she said about a shortage that illustrates the plight of a sector “in slow collapse.

The Tunisian market absorbs 1.8 million liters daily while production reaches a maximum of 1.2 million, according to official data.

“Milk is essential, especially for our children,” Noura Bchini, a housewife in her fifties, told AFP. Near her, another customer, Leila Chaouali, says she gets it “but at specific times, especially in the morning. The afternoon there is more.

This shortage came to light in late October when supermarkets have posted the injunction: “two bricks of milk per citizen.

40 km west of Tunis, Mohamed Gharsallaoui, a farmer in the village of El Battan, leaning on his milking machine, explains that he has had to sell four cows in recent months to buy fodder and feed his twenty animals.

On his farm, this 65-year-old farmer shows his invoices for hay, barley or corn-soya supplement, which he is struggling to pay.

The price of a 50 kg bag of supplement has increased eightfold in 10 years, reaching 81 dinars (24 euros).

“Why do we lack milk? Because the cows are not given the quantities of food they need,” he explained to AFP.

“At a loss”

From 30 liters of milk per day, each cow produces only 12. “We provide them with half the previous amount of fodder and grass,” he stresses.

A passionate farmer who started 50 years ago with one cow, Gharsallaoui is sad to see his herd wither away.

“These are the cows that used to support my family,” says the father of four adult children. “Today I have to send (my children) to work elsewhere to support my cows.

The Tunisian Union of Agriculture and Fisheries (Utap) sounded the alarm a year ago “when farmers began to sell their milk at a loss.”

“Animal feed prices have gone crazy with 30 to 40% increase over a year. This is related to the international situation, the war in Ukraine in particular,” which has caused the price of cereals, which Tunisia is a major importer, said his spokesman Anis Kharbeche.

He is concerned about the month of Ramadan, which will begin around March 22, “during which the consumption of milk increases and where the shortage will reach one million liters per day.

These difficulties are exacerbated by the drought in Tunisia, with dams filled to a maximum of 30%, according to Utap.

“Fresh grass”

To limit their losses, many farmers are forced to sell part of their livestock, either to local butchers or to breeders in neighboring Algeria.

According to Utap, the Tunisian herds have been reduced by 30% in 2022.

Faced with this “slow collapse”, the state, which had supported after independence (in 1956) the establishment of a milk sector, must take the initiative, said Kharbeche, recalling that Tunisia managed to export milk some years until 2017.

For the moment, the state has been content, in the Finance Act 2023, to lift taxes on the import of milk powder, at the risk of competing with local production.

And recent statements by President Kais Saied attributing to “speculators” unidentified problems of the sector have not reassured farmers.

For Utap, the solution would be “a variable price” applied by the State to milk purchases, which would fluctuate according to the price of animal feed. And it would be necessary to “help farmers for the production of fresh grass”, with a strategy of reprocessing wastewater and support them in the purchase of food supplements.

Milk is only one of the products affected by sporadic shortages in recent months, alongside coffee, sugar and oil.

Experts explain them by a lack of liquidity of the Tunisian State, which has the monopoly of the supply of subsidized basic products. Heavily indebted, the country has been negotiating for months a loan of almost 2 billion dollars with the IMF.

AMN | Business | Media Report.

Amnewsworld

We gather, verify, distribute news and information to the general public, media outlets, and businesses. Our channels shares politics, arts & culture, sports, business, Lifestyle, science, technology, health, education, history and environmental news across the globe.

Recent Posts

Uganda deploys troops to South Sudan amid rising tensions between Kiir and Machar

In a move signaling deepening instability in South Sudan, Uganda has deployed an undisclosed number…

15 hours ago

The silencing of African Voices: Who owns the right to tell African Stories?

For decades, the global media landscape has operated under an unspoken rule: Western narratives about…

1 day ago

Elon Musk claims X outage was due to a massive Cyberattack

Hours after widespread outages left thousands of users unable to access X, the social media…

1 day ago

U.S. Stock Market Sell-Off Deepens amid Tariff Concerns

Wall Street Takes a Hit as Uncertainty Over Trump’s Policies Grows The U.S. stock market…

1 day ago

A/R-Independence Day: Dr. Amoakohene Embarks On Massive Clean-up Exercises

In line with the president of the republic of Ghana, H. E, John Dramani Mahama's…

5 days ago

Morocco’s Exotic Gardens: A Flourishing Haven of Global Biodiversity

Nestled in the town of Bouknadel, Morocco’s Exotic Gardens stand as a botanical paradise, bringing…

5 days ago

This website uses cookies.