Tuesday

16th Apr 2024

EU milk-for-migrants scheme not ready before 2016

  • The Commission promised in September to buy around €30 million worth of dairy products for refugees, but is still working on the plan's details (Photo: European Commission DG ECHO)

An EU plan to buy dairy products from economically struggling European farmers and distribute them to refugees will not be implemented before the year 2015 ends, a spokesperson for the European Commission told this website Monday (21 December).

Agriculture commissioner Phil Hogan announced the plan in September, as part of an aid package for the EU's agriculture sector. He promised the Commission would buy around €30 million worth of milk products and give them to refugees.

Read and decide

Join EUobserver today

Get the EU news that really matters

Instant access to all articles — and 20 years of archives. 14-day free trial.

... or subscribe as a group

But three months later the programme has not started yet.

Replying to an e-mail with basic questions about the scheme – such as how the Commission will select which farmers to buy from, and in what countries the dairy products will be distributed – a spokesperson for the European Commission did not give any concrete answers.

“The details of this measure are currently being worked on. We will know more in early 2016,” the spokesperson said.

Her comments came well over a month after Commission spokesperson Daniel Rosario told this website on 12 November the plan was “still being worked out”, but was “being finalised”.

The plan was a rather novel idea for the Commission, to link two policy areas usually not connected: agriculture policy and migration.

EU commission Jyrki Katainen said in early September, filling in for his colleague responsible for agriculture, Phil Hogan, that both the economic troubles of the farmers and the refugee crisis “must be addressed at a European level”.

The Finnish commissioner spoke of “synergies between responses” and a “strong will within the commission that those two issues should be linked together as well as possible”.

Eight days later, Hogan presented the €500 million agriculture aid package. From a budgetary perspective, the €30 million milk-to-migrants plan was a small part of the package.

In his presentation of the plans, Hogan reminded agriculture ministers that considering the refugee crisis, €500 million for the farm sector was “a decisive and robust response”.

“In identifying appropriate measures for the benefit of farmers, we cannot ignore the impact of this unprecedented humanitarian challenge, and we must see how our actions to stabilise the market can contribute to our solidarity efforts,” said Hogan.

"For this reason, I intend to ensure that a measure of around €30 million will be devoted to ensuring that EU milk will made available for the nutritional needs of refugees, in particular those displaced in difficult conditions in our neighbouring countries," the Irish politician added.

He spoke as already half a million people had reached Europe up to September that year – since then the figure has almost doubled.

At the time, food supply to refugees from Syria was particularly vulnerable. Around 229,000 of them at a camp in Jordan were cut off from food aid that month.

According to the World Food Programme, it needs to raise $25 million (€23 million) every week “to meet the basic food needs of people affected by the conflict”.

The €30 million may be small in comparison to what is needed, and compared to the €200 million top-up in humanitarian aid the EU also announced in September. But at the current average milk price the Commission could buy almost ten million litres of milk for the refugees.

Agriculture ministers accept Commission aid plan

Most of the EU's agriculture ministers were cautiously optimistic about the EU Commission's €500 million aid package for Europe's struggling farmers, after receiving additional details.

EU still not delivering on milk-for-migrants

The European Commission floated the idea in September of buying dairy products from struggling European farmers to distribute to refugees, but the scheme is not yet up and running.

EU 'ready' to support Cyprus on Lebanon migration

The EU is ready to offer extra support to Cyprus as the Mediterranean island faces a sharp increase in refugees arriving from Lebanon, a spokesperson for the EU executive told reporters on Thursday (4 April).

Latest News

  1. Police ordered to end far-right 'Nat-Con' Brussels conference
  2. How Hungary's teachers are taking on Viktor Orban
  3. What do we actually mean by EU 'competitiveness'?
  4. New EU envoy Markus Pieper quits before taking up post
  5. EU puts Sudan war and famine-risk back in spotlight
  6. EU to blacklist Israeli settlers, after new sanctions on Hamas
  7. Private fears of fairtrade activist for EU election campaign
  8. Brussels venue ditches far-right conference after public pressure

Stakeholders' Highlights

  1. Nordic Council of MinistersJoin the Nordic Food Systems Takeover at COP28
  2. Nordic Council of MinistersHow women and men are affected differently by climate policy
  3. Nordic Council of MinistersArtist Jessie Kleemann at Nordic pavilion during UN climate summit COP28
  4. Nordic Council of MinistersCOP28: Gathering Nordic and global experts to put food and health on the agenda
  5. Friedrich Naumann FoundationPoems of Liberty – Call for Submission “Human Rights in Inhume War”: 250€ honorary fee for selected poems
  6. World BankWorld Bank report: How to create a future where the rewards of technology benefit all levels of society?

Stakeholders' Highlights

  1. Georgia Ministry of Foreign AffairsThis autumn Europalia arts festival is all about GEORGIA!
  2. UNOPSFostering health system resilience in fragile and conflict-affected countries
  3. European Citizen's InitiativeThe European Commission launches the ‘ImagineEU’ competition for secondary school students in the EU.
  4. Nordic Council of MinistersThe Nordic Region is stepping up its efforts to reduce food waste
  5. UNOPSUNOPS begins works under EU-funded project to repair schools in Ukraine
  6. Georgia Ministry of Foreign AffairsGeorgia effectively prevents sanctions evasion against Russia – confirm EU, UK, USA

Join EUobserver

EU news that matters

Join us