Intervention storage

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Contents

[edit] History

The creation of the EU's Common Agricultural Policy was the trigger for the creation of Europes intervention storage. In an attempt to stabilise markets, and set prices across the EU member states, the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) allowed the states to place huge reserves of produce into intervention storage in an attempt to iron flat the natural supply & demand curves.

[edit] 1980's

During the 1980's, especially in Britain, the farming community received large monetary incentives to reduce production of certain crops. The establishment of milk quotas was one mechanism employed to enforce production limits on farmers. A particularly good run of summers during the period 1985-86 saw a large surfeit of produce coming onto the market and the first intervention stores.

One such store run by "High Post Grain Silos " leased 18 disused aircraft hangers at the former Bitteswell airfield and filled them with over 250,000 tonnes of feed wheat. The storage solution was simple, the grain was tipped into the hangers directly from the farm, having first passed a testing criteria. The stored grain was cooled by forcing air through the grain stack, this processed aided the longevity of the grain.

[edit] Modern Day

The is still some intervention storage being conducted in the EU, although it is not to the scale of the 1980's, some people consider the storage as an essential part of securing the food chain in the event of a porr harvest.

[edit] What is stored

[edit] Grain

[edit] Milk

Short term intervention in the EU, is made beween March and August to maintain market prices [1]

[edit] Butter

[edit] Sugar

Sugar production in the EU is also subject to intervention policies. Stocks as at January 2006 [2] exceeded 1.5 million metric tonnes.

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.defra.gov.uk/foodrin/milk/intervention.htm
  2. ^ EU Sugar Stock as of January 2006