“As a nation, we are blessed to have an abundance of dairy available, even during this difficult time. Taking steps to share that abundance with the world will provide a lifeline for regions where food is needed while supplying an additional outlet for American farmers to share their abundance of dairy products,” wrote Michael Dykes, Jim Mulhern and Tom Vilsack, the respective presidents and CEOs of three leading U.S. dairy organizations, in the letter dated May 18.
“We encourage a focus in particular on countries that have indicated a food or nutrition deficit in their country during these times and that lack the infrastructure or resources to reliably deliver dairy supplies through robust commercial channels.”
Dairy farmers are facing some of the steepest losses of all major U.S. agricultural producers – potentially $8.2bn, based on a comparison of current USDA projections with pre-crisis estimates. US dairy supplies available for international distribution remain ample, making targeted food-aid shipped worldwide a promising avenue for helping populations struggling with localized hunger and the coronavirus crisis.