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Milk Is Cheaper Than Water: "Ashtarak Milk" Pays Villagers 80-85 AMD

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  • Milk Is Cheaper Than Water: "Ashtarak Milk" Pays Villagers 80-85 AMD

    MILK IS CHEAPER THAN WATER: "ASHTARAK MILK" PAYS VILLAGERS 80-85 AMD PER LITER
    Voskan Sargsyan

    http://hetq.am/en/marzes/milk/
    2009/08/2 4 | 16:07

    Feature Stories marzes

    Of the four districts in Tavush Marz, Berd is the most remote. One
    could say the district is cut off; a no man's land. Local villagers
    have a hard time selling their crops and dairy products in the
    large markets. It's 62 kilometers from the town of Berd, the former
    administrative district center, to the present regional center of
    Ijevan, and 199 kilometers to Yerevan.

    The highway linking Yerevan with Berd is in pretty decent shape except
    for the pot-holed stretch through the village of Vazashen. Once you
    leave Berd, however, the 20-25 kilometer stretch of road linking
    outlying villages to the former district center is almost impassable.

    Villagers in these remote communities have no possibility of selling
    their agricultural goods in the capital, Yerevan. They simply cannot
    compete with the farmers in the Ararat valley, for whom the Yerevan
    markets are merely minutes away. Thus, what are sorely needed in
    the Berd area are centers to collect the locally grown crops. If
    such centers were built it would greatly reduce the unemployment now
    afflicting the border regions of Tavush and other marzes. Then too,
    the exodus of people from these sensitive border regions would also
    be slowed.

    With the assistance of CARD (Center for Rural and Agro-Business
    Development) a milk collection units were set up in the villages of
    Tavush, Varagavan, Navour and Nerkin Garmiraghbyur. A similar unit
    was launched in the village of Norashen. This unit was established
    in the framework of the Small Commercial Agricultural Development
    Program. Pavel Tsutsoulyan, who heads the program's support team in
    Tavush, says that this milk collection unit was put into operation
    last year at the cost of 15 million AMD. The Norashen unit was
    envisaged to serve the communities of Norashen, Tchoratan and Verin
    Garmiraghbyur. It was established in collaboration with the firm
    Ashtarak Milk. The company supplied the unit with the necessary
    technical equipment. For the most part, all the units in the area
    supply Ashtarak Milk with the raw milk they've collected.

    On August 7, during a speech at a session of the Tavush Regional
    Council, Vahan Karapetyan, Director of the Tavush Regional Center for
    Agricultural Assistance, directed the attention of Tavush Regional
    Administrator Armen Ghularyan and regional community leaders to an
    issue of major concern - that the milk collection units in the Berd
    district have basically ceased to operate due to low milk prices. It
    turns out that villagers aren't willing to sell their product at such
    ridiculously low prices.

    Pavel Tsutsoulyan says that Ashtarak Milk pays 80-85 AMD on average for
    one liter of milk produced in the Berd district. The company only buys
    milk at this price if the fat content meets its standard of 3.8%. For
    milk with a higher fat content, the company pays 90-95 AMD per liter.

    Hratzin Grigoryan, a Tavush village resident and agro-advisor to
    the Tavush Agricultural Assistance Center has an explanation for the
    local milk collection unit's practices. He says that Ashtarak Milk
    imports inexpensive dried milk from overseas which it uses to produce
    its liquid milk, thus having no need to collect milk in Tavush. When
    demand exists, villagers can sell their milk at a higher price to
    fellow residents or turn the milk into fat or cheese. The number of
    those buying milk in the villages isn't great, however, and the milk
    collection units built with credit or other means along the border
    areas are doomed to stand idle.

    On August 12, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan met with editors of
    regional papers in the Government Building. Taking advantage of the
    opportunity we asked PM Sargsyan to speak about the low prices paid
    by Ashtarak Milk and the fact that the collection units are going idle.

    "The milk issue is of major concern today. One of the theories
    making the rounds is that milk prices have dropped because fried
    milk powder is being imported in great quantities to Armenia. During
    the first six months of this year, twice as much dried milk has been
    imported to Armenia than last year. Naturally, many plants prefer to
    use the powered milk since it's cheaper. Now we have decided to keep
    the same customs value on powdered milk as last year. This can only
    have a positive impact on the conditions faced by our domestic milk
    producers. I hope that we can feel the effects of this decision in
    the next few months," answered PM Sargsyan.

    When we asked Tatevik Ghabazyan, Ashtarak Milk's Public Relations
    Director, why the company was paying such low prices for milk produced
    in the Berd district and whether it was due to the cheap milk powder
    being imported, she answered that the company has never imported
    milk or milk powder from overseas. Ashtarak Milk has its own plant
    to produce milk powder. During the summer, some of the fresh milk is
    made into powder.

    Director Ghabazyan assured us that prices paid at the collection
    units were based on market conditions.

    Director Ghabazyan also informed us that on average the company
    sells every liter of milk it produces for 300-350 AMD. After being
    reprocessed, milk can be sold at 4x the price. But isn't it true that
    the by-products of reprocessing, such as whey, which is a good way to
    fatten pigs, also has a certain price and can bring in supplemental
    revenue to the reprocessing plants?

    Presently, a half liter of regular spring water is sold in stores
    for about 100 AMD. In bigger plastic containers, a half liter of
    non-carbonated spring water sells for 120 AMD. The container itself
    has a cost attached to it, which includes the wages paid to workers,
    production costs and taxes. If we deduct these costs from the price
    it turns out that regular spring water isn't cheaper than the milk
    being collected.

    At the above mentioned Tavush Regional Council session, Regional
    Administrator Armen Ghularyan promised that he'd meet with the
    executive director of Ashtarak Milk in the near future and that they'd
    discuss the issue of low milk prices in the district.
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