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Sunday, June 8, 2025

The milk industry

by

355 days ago
20240618
Dr David Bratt

Dr David Bratt

Mil­kalco­holic is the term in­vent­ed by our first pae­di­a­tri­cian, Dr Bruce Symonds, to de­scribe a type of ba­by he was see­ing on the wards of the San Fer­nan­do Gen­er­al in the 70s. They were fat, anaemic and slug­gish with proud par­ents who con­fused fat­ness with well­ness and milk with healthy food.

The fact that cow’s milk or “for­mu­la” ac­quired a unique­ly ex­alt­ed sta­tus as a life-giv­ing proxy for moth­er’s milk is quite ex­tra­or­di­nary. It’s an idea that has noth­ing to do with healthy nu­tri­tion. That and the be­lief that milk is good for adults is one of the biggest mis­takes in the his­to­ry of mod­ern nu­tri­tion.

Hu­mans are the on­ly species that reg­u­lar­ly drink the milk of an­oth­er species, and worse, drink milk past in­fan­cy. Cow’s milk is de­signed for calves and, there­fore, has a com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent nu­tri­ent pro­file from hu­man breast milk. Mod­i­fy­ing it slight­ly and call­ing it a for­mu­la makes lit­tle dif­fer­ence.

The act of drink­ing milk be­comes even weird­er when one con­sid­ers the dis­eases milk caus­es. Lac­tose in­tol­er­ance (gas, di­ar­rhoea and bel­ly pain) is found in 75 per cent of the world’s pop­u­la­tion and even high­er among brown-skinned peo­ples. About five per cent of in­fants are al­ler­gic to the pro­tein in cow’s milk. It caus­es con­sti­pa­tion, ab­dom­i­nal dis­com­fort and vom­it­ing.

Milk dam­ages the in­tes­tine in ba­bies and adults. It caus­es bleed­ing. The blood loss caus­es iron de­fi­cien­cy anaemia which, among oth­er things, caus­es tired­ness, weak­ness, de­pres­sion, amen­or­rhoea and headache.

Be­cause of ex­ces­sive in­take, high cho­les­terol and fat con­tent, milk is im­pli­cat­ed in the de­vel­op­ment of obe­si­ty and its com­pan­ion dis­eases, heart at­tacks, strokes and di­a­betes. The cost of tak­ing care of these dis­eases in T&T has been es­ti­mat­ed at over $8 bil­lion a year.

High milk con­sump­tion dur­ing ado­les­cence is as­so­ci­at­ed with a high­er chance of old-age frac­tures. Eu­ro­peans, who drink the most milk, have the high­est rate of hip frac­tures, where­as per­sons from Asia hard­ly ex­pe­ri­ence sim­i­lar frac­tures.

In­ter­est­ing­ly, the dai­ly rec­om­mend­ed re­quire­ment for cal­ci­um in­take is much low­er in Eu­rope than in the USA, where the US De­part­ment of Agri­cul­ture (US­DA) has an ob­ses­sion with cal­ci­um in­take, dri­ven by their con­tacts in in­dus­try.

Apart from the health con­se­quences, milk’s im­pact on cli­mate and the en­vi­ron­ment is sim­ply stag­ger­ing. There are al­most 1.5 bil­lion cows in the world. A sin­gle cow pro­duces about 65 pounds of ma­nure dai­ly. The stom­achs of cat­tle were meant to di­gest grass, not grain. Cows pro­duce any­where from 500–1,000 litres of methane per day, com­pa­ra­ble to the pol­lu­tion pro­duced by a car a day. Cat­tle ac­tu­al­ly ac­count for 20 per cent of glob­al methane.

Thir­ty per cent of the earth’s land is in­volved in live­stock pro­duc­tion. Half of all the fresh­wa­ter on the plan­et is used for live­stock. It takes 3,000 gal­lons of wa­ter and 14 pounds of feed (main­ly corn) to pro­duce one pound of beef. It takes 1,500 gal­lons of wa­ter to pro­duce one gal­lon of milk.

Dairy pro­duc­tion de­stroys land and pol­lutes air and wa­ter. Land used for pas­tures of­ten comes from clear­ing forests, a prac­tice that erodes and de­pletes the soil. Cow ma­nure and urine pol­lute rivers and ground­wa­ter, while ni­trate fer­tilis­ers used to grow feed for dairy cows leach in­to rivers and wa­ter.

Milk is an un­sus­tain­able prod­uct, both en­vi­ron­men­tal­ly and fi­nan­cial­ly. In Eu­rope in 2015, a stag­ger­ing 71 per cent of dairy farm­ers’ rev­enue was de­pen­dent on gov­ern­ment sup­port. Add in the health costs.

Yet, it goes on and on. Why?

The milk in­dus­try is fab­u­lous­ly well-or­gan­ised. It is so suc­cess­ful that it must be re­gard­ed as one of the won­ders of the mod­ern era. In the last 100 years, it trans­formed an un­need­ed and harm­ful food in­to a must for every­one, re­gard­less of its dread­ful con­se­quences to cli­mate and health.

In busi­ness, the ide­al sit­u­a­tion is where your com­pa­ny con­trols the move­ment of your prod­uct from pro­duc­er to con­sumer. And broth­er, does the milk in­dus­try do this ever so well. They man­age the move­ment of milk from the cow’s ud­der to your stom­ach. They own the farms. They in­vest in cows. They pro­duce the ma­chines that milk the cows. They con­trol the trans­port and stor­age sys­tems. They sup­ply the su­per­mar­kets. They are every­where.

Com­pe­ti­tion is the heart­beat of busi­ness. A mo­nop­oly serves on­ly the in­ter­ests of one group. Milk in­dus­try gi­ants have far too much con­trol over their prod­uct. When they move to le­galise their con­trol as they have done in the USA, where it is US­DA pol­i­cy that “schools must of­fer stu­dents a va­ri­ety (at least two dif­fer­ent op­tions) of flu­id milk” or suf­fer a fine, it be­comes in­tol­er­a­ble.

The fi­nal in­sult is that they con­trol con­sumer be­hav­iour shaped by dig­i­tal and so­cial me­dia ad­ver­tis­ing so sweet­ly, that the con­sumer nev­er re­alis­es what is hap­pen­ing and con­tin­ues to be­lieve the out­dat­ed phrase, “Milk, good for you.”


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