Logo
IndianGlobalBlogsPublicationsPodcastsMarketAboutContact
Logo
IndianGlobalBlogsPublicationsPodcasts
7News
GDT 396: Dairy Prices Rally Again After Nine DropsHatsun Agro Q3: Revenue, net profit surgeIndia Slaps 30% Duty on US Pulses; Trade Talks Feel StrainHigh-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk QualityAmul Dairy Records ₹14,099 Cr Turnover, 9.2% Growth

Indian Dairy News

Hatsun Agro Q3: Revenue, net profit surge
Jan 19, 2026

Hatsun Agro Q3: Revenue, net profit surge

Dairy products maker Hatsun Agro Products Ltd. on Monday, January 19, reported a 48% year-on-year (YoY) growth in net profit to ₹60.6 crore for the quarter ended December 31, 2025. Net profit for the...Read More

Amul Dairy Records ₹14,099 Cr Turnover, 9.2% Growth
Jan 19, 2026

Amul Dairy Records ₹14,099 Cr Turnover, 9.2% Growth

The Kaira District Cooperative Milk Producers’ Union Ltd (Amul Dairy) reported a turnover of ₹14,099 crore in FY25, marking a 9.2 % year-on-year growth, according to figures announced at its 79th Annu...Read More

Hi-Tech dairy plant to be commissioned in Namakkal in February
Jan 19, 2026

Hi-Tech dairy plant to be commissioned in Namakkal in February

A hi-tech dairy plant, that is upcoming in Namakkal at a cost of ₹89.28 crore, will be commissioned next month (February) and the trial run of the plant has begun. The Namakkal Aavin that was bifur...Read More

DairyNews7x7
Advertisement

Latest Blogs

See More
5 Year Budget Plan to Make Indian Dairy Global Leader in 2047
Jan 15, 2026

5 Year Budget Plan to Make Indian Dairy Global Leader in 2047

I recently moderated a key session on India Dairy Vision 2047 at the TPCI's International Dairy Processing Conference 2026, gaining valuable insights from panellists. This led to me developing policy...Read More

From Forecast to Fact: 2025 Lessons, 2026 Dairy Outlook
Jan 01, 2026

From Forecast to Fact: 2025 Lessons, 2026 Dairy Outlook

As we step into 2026, it is worth pausing to reflect on how the Indian dairy sector navigated the challenges of 2025 and how closely reality tracked the forecasts I outlined in the first blog of last...Read More

India–NZ Dairy FTA: Safeguards or Silent Slippages?
Dec 26, 2025

India–NZ Dairy FTA: Safeguards or Silent Slippages?

The recently concluded India–New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (FTA) marks an important milestone in bilateral trade, while carefully ring-fencing India’s sensitive dairy sector. Under the agreement, c...Read More

Vision 2047: India’s Dairy Development Roadmap
Dec 21, 2025

Vision 2047: India’s Dairy Development Roadmap

As India moves steadily toward Vision 2047, the dairy sector stands at a strategic inflection point. From being a food security instrument in the decades following Independence, dairy has evolved into...Read More

Global Dairy News

GDT 396: Dairy Prices Rally Again After Nine Drops
Jan 20, 2026

GDT 396: Dairy Prices Rally Again After Nine Drops

The 396th Global Dairy Trade (GDT) auction — the second dairy trading event of 2026 — delivered a second consecutive rise in global dairy prices, with the GDT Price Index increasing by 1.5 % to 1,088...Read More

India Slaps 30% Duty on US Pulses; Trade Talks Feel Strain
Jan 19, 2026

India Slaps 30% Duty on US Pulses; Trade Talks Feel Strain

India has quietly imposed a 30 % tariff on pulses imported from the United States — including key crops like yellow peas and lentils — in what officials present as a protective trade measure for domes...Read More

High-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk Quality
Jan 19, 2026

High-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk Quality

New research shows that feeding high-oleic soybeans to dairy cows can both improve milk composition and cut feed costs, offering a promising feed strategy for producers amid rising input prices. This...Read More

DairyNews7x7
Advertisement
Dairy News 7x7

Your trusted source for all the latest dairy industry news, market insights, and trending topics.

FOLLOW US
CATEGORIES
  • Global News
  • Indian News
  • Blogs
  • Publications
  • Podcasts
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Stay informed with the latest updates and trending news in the dairy industry.

No spam, unsubscribe at any time

GET IN TOUCH
C-49, C Block, Sector 65,
Noida, UP 201307
+91 7827405029dairynews7x7@gmail.com

© 2026 Dairy News 7x7. All Rights Reserved.

Terms of ServicePrivacy Policy

‘My butter seems harder’: spread sparks furore over Canada’s dairy

By DairyNews7x7•Published on February 26, 2021

Canadians voice suspicions over palm oil, raising questions over transparency in a powerful industry

For years, Canada has strictly controlled the production of milk, butter and cheese. Photograph: Martin Schroeder/Getty Images/EyeEm
It began with an innocent question on Twitter : was butter in Canada becoming more difficult to spread?

“My butter just seemed harder. It was during a very hot period and I noticed it wasn’t behaving right,” said Sylvain Charlebois, a professor of food distribution and policy at Dalhousie University who posted the tweet. “But I thought I was the only one experiencing this.”

He quickly learned he wasn’t alone.

Julie Van Rosendaal, a cookbook author, was one of many others who posted to describe a mysterious transformation in the pantry staple. “Something is up with our butter supply,”

Growing suspicion that the culprit could be palm oil extracts has prompted a nationwide outcry, and as questions mount, the affair has revived longstanding grievances over the country’s powerful dairy industry – and accusations that its policies burden Canadians with higher costs in order to protect farmers.

“Butter is probably two or three times more expensive in Canada than in the United States. And as Canadians, we’ve implicitly agreed to this,” Charlebois. “But we also expect quality. So regardless of what is causing harder butter, people are really wondering what’s going on here. And they’re questioning the lack of transparency from the dairy industry.”

For years, Canada has strictly controlled the production of milk, butter and cheese through supply management – a complex system of production controls and tariffs meant to discourage foreign imports and keep domestic prices stable.

Under the system, farmers receive the same amount of money each month for their product.

During trade negotiations with the US, Donald Trump fulminated against the system and called unsuccessfully for Canada to dismantle its longstanding protectionist measures.

Charlebois believes the system is largely responsible for the current row over butter quality.

“Regardless of the quality of your product, regardless of what goes on your farm, you get the same amount of money. Because of this, farmers in Canada are likely the best cost managers in the world when it comes to dairy,” said Charlebois. “How do you actually generate more fat while keeping costs as low as possible? Well, palmitic acids are a very convenient solution.”

Palm oil extracts have long been used in the dairy industry to increase milk production and the milk’s fat content. Charlebois and other experts suspect that surging demand for butter – exacerbated by the pandemic – has prompted more producers to adopt the practice.

There is still no clear explanation as to why Canadians are noticing a change to their butter, but Charlebois points to an October report from British Columbia’s dairy marketing board, which raised concerns over a lack of froth in milk – saying the issue had “escalated rather significantly since late August” – and called on producers to be vigilant. The observations the board had made, he said, were consistent with the presence of palm oil extracts.

The Dairy Farmers of Canada initially dismissed concerns over a change in butter quality.

But as concerns grew and Le Journal de Montréal published allegations that more farmers admitted to using palm extracts when feeding their herds, the lobby group issued a follow-up statement, saying that while palm products are sometimes added to dairy cows’ rations, the practice has “a very limited impact on the palmitic fatty acid profile of their milk”.

The Dairy Farmers of Canada said the practice of adding palm extracts to cow feed was common in the United States, United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia.

On Wednesday, however, La Presse reported that Quebec’s dairy industry council had called for an immediate halt to the use of palm oil in cow feed.

Alongside questions about the long term health impacts of palm oil and its devastating environmental impact, Charlebois said that the opaque response is equally as troubling.

“Milk and butterfat are to be considered as public goods, because of our government quota system. There is a moral contract between the dairy industry and consumers,” he said.

With Canadian taxpayers set to pay the industry C$1.75bn in subsidies over the next three years, largely as compensation for increased global access to domestic markets, Charlebois said questions over the quality of butter meant the moral contract had been breached.

Previous debates over the country’s supply management have often been riddled with arcane policy issues, but Charlebois said this time, things seemed different.

“People understand butter shouldn’t be destroying toast in the morning. And they also know that palm oil is bad. People understand those things. And that’s why I think people are a little bit shocked by what they’re hearing right now.”

Swipe to continue reading

Previous Article

Next Article