Restaurants must register to obtain lower mozzarella cheese price Thursday, May 2, 2013 by SUSAN MANN Processors, restaurants and cheese distributors must register with the Canadian Dairy Commission to participate in a program offering lower priced mozzarella cheese for use on fresh pizzas. The Canadian Dairy Commission announced the creation of a new milk class, called Class 3d, for mozzarella cheese to use on fresh pizzas starting June 1. The Canadian Milk Supply Management Committee approved the new class. The committee is chaired by the dairy commission and is the permanent body created by the provincial signatories to the National Milk Marketing Plan. It’s responsible for determining policy and supervising the plan’s operation. The Canadian Restaurant and Foodservices Association has been calling on the dairy industry for the past 15 years to introduce lower priced mozzarella cheese for the fresh pizza market. The dairy commission is a crown corporation that coordinates federal and provincial dairy policies. Commission spokesperson Chantal Paul says processors that make mozzarella for the fresh pizza market must sign an agreement with the Canadian Dairy Commission “if they want to participate in this program.” Cheese distributors must also sign an agreement but only the processors will get a rebate on the protein in the new class. The current 3c price farmers get paid for protein is $14.07 per kilogram, while the price in the new 3d class for protein is $10.56 a kilogram, she says. Processors will get the $3.51 per kilogram rebate on the protein in the new Class 3d compared to the current Class 3c protein price, Paul says. “That’s where the CMSMC (Canadian Milk Supply Management Committee) put the rebate.” The butterfat and other solids prices are the same in the new Class 3d as the Class 3c. Whether or not the savings is passed on to restaurants depends on the processor. That’s because only farmers have regulated prices for the milk classes they sell; processors can set their own prices, as can others farther along the dairy industry’s value chain. Canadian-produced milk is sold to processors through a milk classification system for the manufacture of products in various classes outlined by the dairy industry. The current Class 3c is for all types of mozzarella and other cheeses, such as brick, asiago, feta, Gouda, Havarti, Swiss and Parmesan. Paul says restaurants using the cheese made from milk in the new class must also register with the commission. But it will be on-line and be a one-time registration. “We’re trying to make it as easy as possible for them,” she notes, adding “they’re going to get a registration number and that’s what they’re going to use when they buy their cheese.” The registrations are needed so the commission can do audits. “We have to know who’s participating,” she says. In a May 1 dairy commission press release, Dairy Farmers of Canada president Wally Smith says farmers hope the new class will boost sales of restaurant pizza cheese. But Paul says they don’t know how much the sales will increase. “They’re doing this to see if it’s going to work,” she says. “The producers really want to see if this is really going to make a difference.” At some point, the milk supply management committee will review the program to determine if there was market growth, she says. BF Behind the Lines - May 2013 Europe's beekeepers take on the big agrochemical companies
A new front in the repair access debate Friday, March 6, 2026 Iowa lawmakers have pushed the right‑to‑repair conversation into new territory with House File 2529, a bill that focuses specifically on diesel exhaust fluid (DEF) systems—the single most common cause of emissions-related downtime on modern farm machinery. The bill would require... Read this article online
March 8 is International Women’s Day Friday, March 6, 2026 Across the United States and Canada, women are taking on increasingly visible roles in agriculture—managing farms, leading ag-tech startups, advancing research, and strengthening the rural economies that feed both nations. Their work reflects a shift in an industry once defined... Read this article online
Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry to Visit Toronto and Southwestern Ontario Tuesday, March 3, 2026 The Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry will be in Toronto and Southwestern Ontario later this week as part of its ongoing study on the role of Canada’s agriculture and agri‑food sector in strengthening national food security. The fact‑finding mission is scheduled for... Read this article online
AgriStability Program Updated to Include Pasture-Related Feed Costs Beginning in 2026 Monday, March 2, 2026 In case you missed it last week, the Honourable Heath MacDonald, Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food, announced that pasture-related feed costs will be added as an allowable expense under AgriStability starting with the 2026 program year. The update addresses rising operational... Read this article online
Bringing more Food and Ingredient Processing Back to Canadian Soil Monday, March 2, 2026 Protein Industries Canada has announced the second cohort of nine companies participating in its Program, an initiative designed to bring more food and ingredient processing back to Canadian soil and expand the nation’s value‑added agriculture sector. The selected companies span the... Read this article online