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Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

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Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013. Randy Green Watson Green LLC. Agenda. Regulatory Environment Role of Dairy in Federal Nutrition Programs School Food Regulations Dietary Guidelines for Americans Focus on Sodium Potential FDA Actions Local and State Issues. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013 Randy Green Watson Green LLC
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Page 1: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Randy GreenWatson Green LLC

Page 2: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Agenda• Regulatory Environment

• Role of Dairy in Federal Nutrition Programs

• School Food Regulations• Dietary Guidelines for Americans• Focus on Sodium• Potential FDA Actions• Local and State Issues

Page 3: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Building Demand: Vital to FarmersDairy Sector Stressed

• Price volatility • Income over feed costs has fallen

Demand is Part of Solution

• Growing demand = growing income

• Consistent with public health– Many Americans under-

consume dairy

Page 4: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy in USDA School Meals Programs, Fiscal Year 2011

School Breakfast Program• 88,769 Schools

• Avg. Daily Participation = 12.1 Million Students

National School Lunch Program• 100,715 Schools

• Avg. Daily Participation = 31.8 Million Students

Special Milk Program• 66.6 Million Half Pints Served

Summer Food Service Program• 39,000 Sites

• Peak Participation = 2.3 Million • 140.3 Million Meals Served

Milk in Schools$1.50 Billion

Cheese in Schools*$379 Million

~466 MM gallons of Milk (4.0 billion pounds)

~ 214 MM pounds of Cheese (2.18 billion lbs milk

equivalent)

Sources: School feeding programs data – USDA; USDA milk & cheese volumes – NMPF; Milk & cheese expenditures – Watson/Mulhern estimates, based on USDA data; Purchased dairy product data – USDA School Food Purchase Study III

Yogurt & Other Dairy Products in Schools*

$141 Million

~ 106 MM pounds of Yogurt & Other Dairy Products

Total Dairy in School Meals: $2.02 Billion

• Purchased food data are from SY 2010

Page 5: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy in All USDA Food Assistance Programs, Fiscal Year 2011

Special Supplemental Program for Women, Infants and Children

• Average Participation = 9.0 million• Dairy Share of Food Costs = $1.45 billion

SNAP/Food Stamps• Average Participation = 44.7 million• Dairy Share of Food Costs = $8.6 billion

Child and Adult Care Food Program•Average Daily Attendance = 3.39 million• Dairy Share of Food Costs = $385 million

Total Dairy in Federal Non-School Food Programs:

$10.4 Billion in FY11

Total Dairy in School-Related Food Programs:$2.02 Billion in

FY11

Total Dairy in Food Assistance

Programs: $12.4 Billion

Sources: Federal food programs data – USDA; CACFP milk volume – NMPF; Milk & cheese expenditures –Watson/Mulhern estimates, based on USDA data

11% of All U.S. Dairy Sales

or

Page 6: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

The EnvironmentObesity and Overweight• Focus on children & youth• Fitness, nutrition Better academic outcomes

Political Gridlock• Makes legislation unlikely• Regulation is alternative

Limits of Individual Action• May require food supply changes instead• Sodium prime case

Page 7: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

The EnvironmentNon-Government Actors & Partnerships•Foundations, public-private partnerships•Growing role of IOM

States, Localities Move Ahead•Sometimes frustrated with federal inaction•Inconsistent regulatory patchwork could result

Arguing the Science•Disputes on fat, sodium, etc.•“Nanny State” vs. “Evil Industry”

Page 8: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

The Environment

Consumer Interest, Attitudes•Where does our food come from?•Less reliance on authority figures

Non-Traditional Issues•Sustainability, environmental impact, animal welfare – momentum building•Interest from activists, customers, consumers

Page 9: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

School Foods• 2 Sets of Standards– Federal meal programs (lunches,

breakfasts)– “Competitive” foods (vending, a la

carte)• Meal program rules in effect• Competitive foods rules proposed,

not final

Page 10: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy Impact – Meal Rules• Only low-fat, fat-free milk

– Schools moving this direction for years

• Flavored milk must be fat-free– Effect unclear so far

• Recent changes may favor yogurt– More flexibility to serve– Greek yogurt pilot project

• Schools have struggled with “smoothie” rules– Difficult to use yogurt

• Calorie limits on meals for first time– May limit cheese in some items– May also encourage reformulations

Page 11: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy Impact – Competitive Food Rules• Only low-fat, fat-free milk

– No 22 g sugar limit, despite IOM view

• Reduced-fat cheese exempt from fat rules– But not sodium rule (200 mg for snacks)

• Low-fat, fat-free yogurt exempt from sugar limits– If <30 g sugar / 8 oz

• NSLP entrees may be exempt from fat, sodium rules– May be limited to day served– Implications for pizza, ethnic dishes

• Rules reflect USDA view of dairy’s value– Under-consumed by many youth– One of DGA foods to encourage

Page 12: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dietary Guidelines• Official federal diet advice• Every 5 years– Next in 2015

• Advisory committee named soon?–Much public, private activity already

• Shape federal programs–WIC, school meals

Page 13: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy Impact – 2015 Dietary Guidelines

• Dairy major component of federal programs– WIC, school meals, CACFP

• Guides messages from federal agencies– And producer checkoffs

• Recent DGA editions encouraged dairy– 3 servings for most age groups– “Food Group to Encourage”– Advised low-fat or fat-free

Page 14: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Focus on Sodium• Most efforts voluntary

– National Salt Reduction Initiative• But emerging view suggests regulation

– Food supply changes, not individual actions• Some challenges to scientific orthodoxy

– IOM committee considering different views• Significant challenges to food functionality,

taste– Possible impacts on consumption of other

nutrients such as potassium

Page 15: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy Impact – Sodium Initiatives

• Dairy checkoff-related groups focused on sodium reduction– Product analytics, food safety curves, low-sodium research

• Some initiatives: Early targets feasible; ultimate targets difficult– NSLP rules

• Salt fundamental to cheese-making process, taste, safety, functionality– Area for pre-competitive industry work, innovation, research– Success stories: “Smart Slice” school pizza

• Cheese is #2 calcium source in American diet– More easily tolerated by lactose maldigesters than milk

• Dairy is leading food source of potassium, phosphorus, etc.

Page 16: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

On the FDA Horizon …• Nutrition Facts Panel– DVs, RACCs

• Dietary Guidance Statements– Definition for label use

• Front of Pack Labeling– Stop lights?

• Agency agenda predicts action in 2013– But delays may be likely

Page 17: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy Impact – Potential Regulations

• Do FOP labels highlight positive nutrients?– Or warn against negative ones?

• Will change in Daily Values or RACCs affect …– “Good” or “excellent” source claims?– Perceptions of importance of calcium, other nutrients?

• Exact impact unknown until regulations published – (If they are)

Page 18: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

At the State, Local Level …

• Where states lead, feds often follow– Competitive foods, food safety

• Raw milk debates– Food safety vs. consumer choice– Public health issue

• NYC procurement guidelines– Dairy criteria similar to new USDA rules

• NYC soda size limit

Page 19: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Dairy Impact – State, Local Actions

• Pros and cons of multiple standards– Local control, flexibility– Challenges for national or regional manufacturers

• Do standards recognize dairy’s positive contribution?– Flavored milk: Great nutrient package, 3% of sugar in kids’ diets– Studies show major milk consumption fall when flavored milk

removed from schools• Challenges for national groups to respond to multiple local actions

Page 20: Nutrition Policy & the Dairy Industry 2013

Questions?

Randy [email protected]

202-384-1840


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