How milk got its mojo back
MILK is back. Cow's milk that is.
It's been a tough couple of decades for the liquid white stuff. Under fire from climate activists, animal rights groups and diet gurus concerned about fat content, US dairy milk consumption has halved since the 1970s.
Soy milk, and then almond and oat products, elbowed their way on to cafe menus and supermarket shelves. Plant-based milks make up more than 12 per cent of refrigerated milk sales.
Now the dairy industry is getting its mojo back. Traditional milk sales are up 3.5 per cent for the year to May in dollar terms, according to Nielsen IQ, and 2024 saw the first real increase in US dairy milk consumption since 2009. Meanwhile, sales of plant-based milks have declined 8.4 per cent for the two years to May, and shares in Oatly, one of the best known makers, are down 98 per cent from their 2021 highs.
'Milk is winning fair and square in the marketplace, which implies there could be legs to this,' says an ebullient Alan Bjerga of the National Milk Producers' Federation. A similar trend is showing up in meat, with animal product sales up by double digits and alternatives down even further.
Milk's change in fortunes holds lessons for other traditional industries that are trying to fend off trendy new challengers.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
After years of complaining, and a so far unsuccessful campaign to prevent rivals from using the word milk, the dairy industry has buckled down and started to meet Americans where they are. US dairy companies are investing more than US$10 billion in dairy processing plants between 2023 and 2027, bolstering their ability to offer the milk products that customers actually want.
Faced with concerns about animal welfare and global warming, the industry responded with net-zero carbon promises and humanely raised and organic options. (Their cause was also helped by climate change backlash and broader eco-fatigue.)
Dairy producers also leaned into changing attitudes about what constitutes healthy food. Two decades ago, the industry suffered mightily when diet gurus such as the authors of Skinny Bitch took aim at dairy's fat content. But fat fears have receded and today's health concerns tend to be focused on getting more protein and avoiding ultra-processed foods. Older customers also want calcium and vitamin D.
All of these play to dairy's advantage. Plant-based drinks are lower in protein and often rely on sweeteners, emulsifiers and stabilisers, while milk has naturally occurring calcium and has been fortified with vitamin D for generations. 'Dairy milk has a very clean label while plant milk is more complex,' says John Crawford, milk expert at market research company Circana.
In other words, consumers are returning to the notion that milk, as the old US adverts used to say, does a body good.
The dairy industry has also adapted to overcome one of its biggest weak points: a large share of the US population, particularly people with Asian and Hispanic heritage, cannot digest lactose, so ordinary dairy products make them feel physically ill.
US dairy producers are now wooing these shoppers with a wide variety of lactose-free and reduced milks that have the protein benefits of dairy with an added enzyme that breaks down the lactose. It is the fastest growing milk segment, up 15.5 per cent in the past year. Total American sales just climbed past the entire plant-milk category.
But there are dark clouds looming on the horizon. Ageing dairy herds and bird flu are weighing on production, leading to potential shortages that could easily erode traditional milk's current 10 per cent price advantage over its plant-based competition.
At the same time, the Trump administration has been making swingeing cuts to the federal agencies that have a role in food safety. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has paused a quality control programme for milk testing, the Department of Agriculture shut down two food safety committees, and the Justice Department disbanded the unit that prosecutes food safety violations.
It does not help that Donald Trump's health and human services secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, has repeatedly touted the benefits of raw milk, which can harbour salmonella and E coli and has been linked to tuberculosis.
The FDA says its quality control programme will eventually resume, and that testing of food samples continues at other labs. But the chances of a nasty outbreak of food-borne illness are rising.
Milk producers have invested a lot to bolster dairy's aura of purity and health. They need to be alert to the risks that short-sighted government cuts could rain on their triumphal parade. FINANCIAL TIMES
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
8 hours ago
- Straits Times
Singapore and the US still in early stages of tariff negotiations, says Vivian Balakrishnan
Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said he had fairly extensive discussions on tariffs during his visit to the US. ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH Singapore and the US still in early stages of tariff negotiations, says Vivian Balakrishnan SINGAPORE – It will be some time yet before countries can know for certain the final shape of the United States' tariff regime against virtually all its trading partners. This is as, aside from the revisions and legal challenges to the trade barriers that have been announced, it is clear that the US is looking to conduct multiple rounds of bilateral negotiations with its trading partners, which will take time, said Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan on June 7. His meetings with US senators and members of Congress also showed there was bipartisan recognition between the Republicans and Democrats that trade, investment, intellectual property protection, reliability and supply chain security remain vital issues to the Americans, he added. In a video call with the Singapore media to wrap up his five-day visit to Washington, Dr Balakrishnan said both sides reaffirmed the strong and stable bilateral relationship during his visit. 'The relationship with the United States is a vital, critical one for Singapore – it spans the entire gamut ... the economy, defence, security, and we're also pursuing emerging opportunities in areas like cyber security and energy,' he said. 'So it's a relationship which needs to be tended to, and attended to carefully.' In his meetings with senior US administration officials and members of Congress, Dr Balakrishnan conveyed Singapore's appreciation for the bipartisan support that enabled bilateral cooperation to flourish across a wide range of areas. Both sides also expressed commitment to continued constructive engagement and to advance cooperation in both traditional areas such as defence, as well as new and emerging areas such as critical technologies, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. Dr Balakrishnan told reporters he had fairly extensive discussions on tariffs during his visit, including their impact on open economies like Singapore, and that his US counterparts understood his perspective. At his meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on June 4, Dr Balakrishnan said he raised the impact of the US tariff s, a nd came away assured that the measures were not directed at Singapore. 'Nevertheless, I expressed our concern with the secondary impact, because any impact on global trade, any friction in the system, will have an impact on an open economy like ours, where our trading volume is three times our GDP,' he said. 'So that point needed to be made.' Manufacturing activity in Singapore shrank for the second consecutive month in May on the back of global trade uncertainty, according to purchasing managers' index figures released on June 2. Dr Balakrishnan said he 'made the point repeatedly' to his US counterparts that America has a trade surplus against Singapore, and that the city-state should not be subjected even to the baseline 10 per cent tariff. That said, Singapore is more concerned with sectoral tariffs, and will be looking at them 'very carefully' so as to minimise these as much as possible, he said. The majority of US President Donald Trump's sweeping 'Liberation Day' tariffs announced on April 2 have been paused for 90 days, but on June 4, Mr Trump signed an order to double tariffs on steel and aluminium imports from 25 per cent to 50 per cent. In May, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong said there were early indications that Washington was open to discussing how the Republic could ensure a continued supply of semiconductors to the US, and that talks were on for preferential or even zero US tariffs on Singapore's pharmaceutical exports. Dr Balakrishnan said: 'We're still in the early stages of our discussions and negotiations, so let's watch this space.' Responding to a question from the media on whether he faced any challenges engaging US officials on his visit, he said there were no hurdles to interactions with the Americans. 'They were very welcoming, courteous. We got along in our own usual direct and constructive manner, so I have no anxiety on that front,' he said. The anxiety is that the world order that had prevailed for 80 years and which helped Singapore to succeed – premised on free trade and the free flow of investments – is clearly changing, and this period of transition is 'the time of greatest danger', he added. This is a time when the Republic needs to be alert and prompt in responding to change, said Dr Balakrishnan. 'And it is also important to interact frequently, candidly, openly and constructively with our interlocutors, and especially with a superpower which is of great strategic importance to us,' he added. 'So what's important is to recognise that situation has changed, to be able to have complete, comprehensive and candid conversations, and then for us to take the appropriate precautionary measures or to make the necessary adjustments domestically as well.' Prior to being in Washington, Dr Balakrishnan met the United Kingdom's Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs David Lammy in London, with whom he discussed economic ties, geostrategic issues and potential areas of cooperation. Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.
Business Times
12 hours ago
- Business Times
US, China to hold trade talks on Jun 9 in London; Trump says Xi agreed to let rare earth minerals flow to US
[WASHINGTON] US President Donald Trump said on Friday that Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to let rare earth minerals and magnets flow to the United States, a move that could lower tensions between the world's biggest economies. Asked by a reporter aboard Air Force One whether Xi had agreed to do so, Trump replied: 'Yes, he did.' The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Trump's comment came one day after a rare call with Xi aimed at resolving trade tensions that have been brewing over the topic for weeks. At that time, Trump said there had been 'a very positive conclusion' to the talks, adding that 'there should no longer be any questions respecting the complexity of Rare Earth products.' In another sign of easing tensions over the issue, China has granted temporary export licenses to rare-earth suppliers of the top three US automakers, two sources familiar with the matter said. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Trump on Friday also said three of his cabinet officials will meet with representatives of China in London on June 9 to discuss a trade deal. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump said Treasury Scott Bessent, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, and United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will attend from the US side. 'The meeting should go very well,' Trump wrote. The countries struck an agreement on May 12 in Geneva, Switzerland, to roll back for 90 days most of the triple-digit, tit-for-tat tariffs they had placed on each other since Trump's January inauguration. Financial markets that had worried about trade disruptions rallied on the news. But China's decision in April to suspend exports of a wide range of critical minerals and magnets has continued to disrupt supplies needed by automakers, computer chip manufacturers and military contractors around the world. Trump had accused China of violating the Geneva agreement and ordered curbs on chip-design software and other shipments to China. Beijing rejected the claim and threatened counter measures. Rare earths and other critical minerals are a source of leverage for China as Trump could come under domestic political pressure if economic growth sags because companies cannot make mineral-powered products. Since returning to the White House in January, Trump has repeatedly threatened an array of punitive measures on trading partners, only to revoke some of them at the last minute. The on-again, off-again approach has baffled world leaders and spooked business executives. REUTERS

Straits Times
12 hours ago
- Straits Times
Trump signs orders to bolster US drone defences, boost supersonic flight
Mr Trump sought to enable routine use of drones beyond the visual sight of operators and reduce US reliance on Chinese drone companies. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump on June 6 signed executive orders to bolster US defences against threatening drones and to boost electric air taxis and supersonic commercial aircraft, the White House said. In the three executive orders, Mr Trump sought to enable routine use of drones beyond the visual sight of operators - a key step to enabling commercial drone deliveries - and reduce US reliance on Chinese drone companies as well as advance testing electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. The order should boost eVTOL firms including Joby Aviation and Archer Aviation. Mr Trump is establishing a federal task force to ensure US control over American skies, expand restrictions over sensitive sites, expand federal use of technology to detect drones in real time and provide assistance to state and local law enforcement. Mr Trump also aims to address the 'growing threat of criminal terrorists and foreign misuse of drones in US airspace,' said Mr Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. 'We are securing our borders from national security threats, including in the air, with large-scale public events such as the Olympics and the World Cup on the horizon.' The National Football League praised the executive order, saying it was critical to protecting fans. 'Over the past several years, an increasing number of drones have flown into restricted airspace during our games. This executive order is the most significant step taken to address the issue,' the NFL said, adding Congress should also take action. Mr Sebastian Gorka, senior director of counterterrorism at the National Security Council, cited the use of drones in Russia's war in Ukraine and threats to major US sporting events. 'We will be increasing counter-drone capabilities and capacities,' Mr Gorka said. 'We will increase the enforcement of current laws to deter two types of individuals: evildoers and idiots.' The issue of suspicious drones also gained significant attention in 2024 after a flurry of drone sightings in New Jersey. The Federal Aviation Administration receives more than 100 drone-sighting reports near airports each month. Drone sightings have at times disrupted flights and sporting events. Mr Trump also directed the FAA to lift a ban imposed in 1973 on supersonic air transport over land. Supersonic aircraft have been criticised by environmentalists for burning more fuel per passenger than comparable subsonic planes. 'The reality is that Americans should be able to fly from New York to LA in under four hours,' Mr Kratsios said. 'Advances in aerospace engineering, material science and noise reduction now make overland supersonic flight not just possible, but safe, sustainable and commercially viable.' The order directs FAA to repeal the supersonic speed limit as long as aircraft do not produce an audible sonic boom on the ground. Airplane manufacturer Boom Supersonic welcomed the move. Its CEO, Mr Blake Scholl, said: 'The supersonic race is on and a new era of commercial flight can begin.' The era of regular commercial supersonic flights ended in 2003 when Concorde, flown by Air France and British Airways, was retired after 27 years of service. The Trump orders do not ban any Chinese drone company, officials said. In 2024, former President Joe Biden signed legislation that could ban China-based DJI and Autel Robotics from selling new drone models in the US. DJI, the world's largest drone manufacturer, sells more than half of all US commercial drones. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.