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		<title>MUGGED BY MILK</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Aug 2009 20:32:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[
 Is Milk Too much to swallow?
Once upon a time… opening my first grade reader cast a spell that never went away. Enthralled by the smooth seduction of words, I sat oblivious to a desk-and-chair contraption that confined me like a torture rack, absolutely stunned by the raw power, brazen clarity and heart-stopping eloquence of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="margin:0 auto;float:left;padding-right:5px"><img src="http://thm-a02.yimg.com/image/ec9cfce239f7d78c" width="250" height="180" alt="MUGGED BY MILK"></div>
<p> <strong>Is Milk Too much to swallow?</strong></p>
<p>Once upon a time… opening my first grade reader cast a spell that never went away. Enthralled by the smooth seduction of words, I sat oblivious to a desk-and-chair contraption that confined me like a torture rack, absolutely stunned by the raw power, brazen clarity and heart-stopping eloquence of &#8220;See Dick run.&#8221; </p>
<p>Haltingly, I followed Jane, Dick and Spot &#8220;up the hill&#8221;&#8230; and saw a<span id="more-71"></span> cow.</p>
<p>I knew what moo meant. &#8220;Moo&#8221; was the milk in the thermos in my lunchbox next to a cheese and lettuce sandwich. It was the milk in the big glass and the bowl of Cheerios I’d gulped for breakfast, the glass I’d have when I got home, the glass at dinner later, and maybe even a warmed-up cup of milk at bedtime. Best of all was the mid-morning chocolate milk break – which should not be long now. And if I was really lucky, ice cream for desert. If CNN had interviewed me on the spot, I would have blinked and said, &#8220;Milk? Everybody drinks milk. It tastes good, and my dad says it makes you healthy.&#8221;</p>
<p>I drank lots of milk. Maybe you did too. Maybe you still believe all those mass-marketing mantras constantly telling us to drink milk so we &#8220;stay healthy&#8221; and our bones won’t melt. Or maybe you don’t drink it, but you give it to your own kids and their friends. </p>
<p>I hope not. I pray that you gently take the glass away from every child you see drinking the stuff. Give the little whippersnappers almost anything else. But please… Not Milk!</p>
<p>DOWNERS<br />Click on notmilk.com and the next time little moonbeam in her highchair makes a face, tips her cereal bowl onto the floor and laughs &#8211; you will rush to praise her perspicacity and wit. Because by then you will know (if you’d dared follow the links) that instead of standing around chewing their cud like slow philosophers, almost all of America’s 96 million cattle are transported, penned and persecuted like inmates at Guantánamo.</p>
<p>Swollen by high-protein, soy-based feeds, cows immersed in crowding, confusion, pain and fear have become milk machines. With each nipple grasped by a mechanical tentacle as swollen pituitaries painfully pump three-times more milk than normal, cows produce like Chinese sweatshop girls until they wear out. Just as these young women are discarded as broken hulks &#8211; burned out by too many Wal-Mart shipments &#8211; broken-down cows are chopped up and fed to other cows. It’s not supposed to happen. But hardly anyone official is checking. So it’s more than very likely that the hamburger you’re chewing came from a cannibal cow fed the brains and other parts of sick cows, sheep and other four-leggeds. Along with their discarded offal. </p>
<p>How gross is that? </p>
<p>GERMS<br />To keep concentration camp cows alive in cramped, feces-filled stalls long enough to produce 155 billion pounds of milk a year in the United States requires constant doses of antibiotics. The consequences of steadily drinking milk &#8211; as well as eating farm fish laced with antibiotics &#8211; are already showing up in &#8220;Superbugs&#8221; that have rapidly evolved to thrive on the antibiotics they’ve adapted to. [mercola.com]</p>
<p>In addition, organophosphate pesticides derived from chemical warfare &#8211; such as Malathion and Phosmet &#8211; are sometimes poured directly over the spines of cows, where these poisons are absorbed into the meat and milk that end up accumulating in your own tissues – particularly in the lymph nodes of female breasts. [Minnesota Statutes 1998]</p>
<p>When it comes to regulations and corporate profits, everything makes a circle. The US government agencies that certify milk and meat &#8220;safe&#8221; without really looking have long been in violation of World Health Organization standards of beef production. [corpwatch.org; Green Party USA 12/03]</p>
<p>GROW UP<br />Banned in Canada and Europe, the Bovine Growth Hormone forced into American cows shows up in milk as an insulin growth factor (IGIF-1). Surviving pasteurization and human digestion, IGF-1 is absorbed directly into the human bloodstream – especially in infants, who are not calves meant to suckle udders. </p>
<p>As Dr. Joseph Mercola, author of Total Health Program points out, it is &#8220;highly likely&#8221; that the same BGH that gives cows breast infections &#8220;promotes the transformation of human breast cells to cancerous forms.&#8221; After all, he adds, IGF-1 is a known accelerator of breast and colon cancer cells, &#8220;promoting their progression and invasiveness.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another big BGH bummer is that it also decreases the body fat in cows. Contaminated with an unappetizing stew of pesticides, dioxins, and antibiotic residues, the poisons accumulated in cow fat are passed into the cows’ milk – and the carton in your fridge. [Green Party USA 12/03]</p>
<p>Why are American and Japanese kids so much taller than their grandparents or parents? Follow the milk. Scientists who did found that &#8220;Milk intake was positively associated with IGF-I concentrations and height.&#8221;</p>
<p>Consumption of milk and dairy products can raise IGF-I levels in children by a factor of 30%. In adolescents creaking from rapid growth, BHG acts like rocket fuel. It has a similar effect on cancer cells. Pointing to voluminous documentation on his Not Milk website, Robert Cohen observes that &#8220;IGF-I is also a key factor in the proliferation and growth of every human cancer.&#8221; [American Journal of Clinical Nutrition Aug/04]</p>
<p>MAKING THINGS WORSE<br />Forget pasteurization. High heat destroys the lactase, calcium and dozens of other enzymes needed for milk’s digestion and assimilation. A stressed-out pancreas trying to produce these missing enzymes can lead to diabetes – currently at epidemic levels in sugar-and-milk consuming cultures. Milk is also hard on the heart. &#8220;Compelling research demonstrating clear associations with this absorbed enzyme and increased risks of heart disease,&#8221; Dr. Mercola asserts.]</p>
<p>Drinking skim milk is disastrous. Without the missing butterfat, our bodies cannot absorb and use the vitamins and minerals found in watery skim milk. The vitamin D complex lost with the butterfat is replaced in skim milk with synthetic vitamin D known to be toxic to the liver. And according to Dr. Mercola, the cholesterol found in the non-fat dried milk used in 1% and 2% milk &#8220;is rancid and promotes heart disease.&#8221; Like all spray-dried products, skim milk powder is also high in nitrite. [mercola.com]</p>
<p>A REALLY BIG MILK GROSS OUT<br />Robert Cohen helpfully reminds us that dairy cows filter blood through their udders all day. Dead white blood cells – pus, in other words – help them make all that milk. &#8220;Udders bleed discharges, including bacteria and blood drip into the milk,&#8221; Cohen shares. </p>
<p>It’s still legal to sell if the cup of milk you’re drinking contains less than 50 million pus cells. </p>
<p>If you can stomach the medical evidence, MD Michael Greger cites nine single-spaced pages of medical references to show conclusively that the lifetime scourges of Paratuberculosis and Crohn’s Disease have &#8220;got milk.&#8221; Awarded the equivalent of journalism’s Pulitzer Prize, Greger’s &#8220;Project Censored Award&#8221; for one of the most suppressed stories of 1999 resulted from his expose showing the connection between Crohn’s disease and the ParaTB gems swimming in your daughter’s glass of milk. </p>
<p>&#8220;Described as a human scourge, over a half million Americans suffer from this devastating, lifelong condition with annual US medical costs in the billions,&#8221; Doctor Greger says. For Crohn&#8217;s contemplators, he invites non-sufferers to &#8220;think of the worst stomach flu they ever had and then try to imagine living with that every day.&#8221;</p>
<p>Slurping from a nationwide epidemic of cattle diseases, milk-guzzling Americans are coming down with the highest rate of Crohn’s ever recorded anywhere, after ingesting the Paratuberculosis mycobacterium (MAP) from infected cows.</p>
<p>As you might expect from their living conditions, there are a lot of sick cows staggering from feedlots to dinner tables. Dr. Greger cites the USDA’s latest figures showing three quarters of a million US cattle infected with ParaTB. Up to 40% of US dairy herds are already infected, he says. &#8220;The infection rate is expected to reach 100%.&#8221;</p>
<p>Since MAP bacteria live inside pus cells, in a nation with double the allowed limit of pus cells in milk as anywhere else, American milk drinkers are playing with pathogens. Right now, US federal laws protecting the Dairy Mafia allow Grade A milk to contain more than a drop of pus per glass of milk. </p>
<p>TB MILK<br />When researchers in Ireland grew live Paratuberculosis bacteria from almost one in five tested cartons of retail pasteurized milk, they blew the whistle so loud, corporate spin specialists lamented &#8220;enormous&#8221; and &#8220;horrific&#8221; losses – not in human lives, but in diary profits! Milk Science International, an industry mouthpiece, worried that telling customers they were drinking cow pus and giving it to their children would prove &#8220;potentially catastrophic for the dairy industry.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Despite headlines splashed throughout Europe, not a word crossed the Atlantic,&#8221; Dr. Greger groans. Just like &#8220;the media blackout in the U.S. in the early years of the mad cow disease crisis.&#8221;  </p>
<p>The USDA has rejected a proposal by a Crohn’s patient advocacy group to conduct a similar test for Paratuberculosis in U.S. dairy products. John Hermon-Taylor, chairman of a London medical school surgery, and an internationally recognized expert on Crohn’s and Paratuberculosis, says, &#8220;There is overwhelming evidence that we are sitting on a public health disaster of tragic proportions.&#8221; </p>
<p>Every few seconds, some child or infant is hit with another dose of chemically treated cow’s milk. Every few hours, Dr. Greger points out, &#8220;another child in this country is diagnosed with Crohn’s disease and may be condemned to a life of chronic suffering.&#8221;</p>
<p>As for the milk causing all this mayhem, his prescription is simple: &#8220;The consumer movement needs to move it to the front burner and turn up the heat.&#8221;</p>
<p>JUST SAY YUK<br />&#8220;Don’t drink your milk,&#8221; urges Dr. Joseph Mercola. &#8220;Milk and refined sugar make two of the largest contributions to food- induced ill health in our country.&#8221; [mercola.com/artcle/milk/no_milk./htm] </p>
<p>Specifically, moo juice has been shown to cause in diarrhea, cramps, bloating, gas, gastrointestinal bleeding, iron-deficiency anemia, skin rashes, arteriosclerosis, and acne. The journal Pediatrics has also found, &#8220;Babies who are fed whole cow’s milk during the second six months of life may experience a 30% increase in intestinal blood loss and a significant loss of iron.&#8221;</p>
<p>HOW DICK AND JANE GOT SICK<br />In September 2004, DairyMAX hailed GW Bush’s &#8220;Child Nutrition Reauthorization Act&#8221;, which prohibits schools from restricting sales of milk products at any time on school premises or at school-sponsored events. </p>
<p>The National Dairy Council, which is funded by dairy producers, &#8220;provided information on milk’s nutritional importance to America’s children and youth,&#8221; DairyMAX reported. Their lobbying was so powerful, &#8220;Congress rejected an aggressive effort by soy interests to make their beverages fully substitutable for milk in school meal programs.&#8221; </p>
<p>U.S. schools are now required to adopt &#8220;wellness policies&#8221; – in part by providing flavored milk and cheese through vending machines laden with antibiotics, ParaTB, Bovine Growth Hormone and Crohn’s disease. </p>
<p>Aggressively pushed by the NFL and Wendy’s food chains – and widely promoted by celebrities and &#8220;healthy living&#8221; websites – milk drinking is also linked to insulin-dependent diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, infertility, and leukemia. [dairymax.org; notmilk.com]</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Dick and Jane have succumbed to the modern plague of asthma. &#8220;Cow’s milk is the number one allergic food in this country,&#8221; Dr. Mercola maintains. &#8220;Cow’s milk allergy is one of the most common food allergies in young infants,&#8221; agrees the September-October 1995 issue of W V Medical Journal.</p>
<p>Anemia is another legacy of milk. Robert Cohen reports that after more than 150,000 Vietnamese relocated in Australia, for the first time in their lives nearly every child became afflicted with asthma, diabetes, earaches and iron-deficient anemia. Though sugar and beef were strongly implicated, the primary assailant was cow’s milk. Daily drinking 650 milliliters of milk is a &#8220;risk factor for iron deficiency,&#8221; according to another pediatric journal. [Pediatrics 1982, 1989; Journal of Pediatric Child Health Aug/04] </p>
<p>STOP EAR INFECTIONS NOW<br />Dr. Mercola adds that milk is &#8220;the primary cause of recurrent ear infections in children.&#8221; The $3,000 surgery that inserts tubes into the eardrums of infants to treat recurrent ear infections is now the leading surgical procedure in the USA. &#8220;Most children who have this procedure will suffer long term hearing losses,&#8221; Dr. Mercola says. &#8220;Over 50% of these children will improve and have no further ear infections if they just stop drinking their milk.&#8221; </p>
<p>Like Big Tobacco, the Big Dairy Board spends hundreds of millions of dollars every year convincing Americans we will drop dead if we do not keep suckling like calves on a manufactured product our bodies cannot digest that makes many of us so chronically ill we think our constant aches and exhaustion are normal. The propaganda has worked so well, many adults believe they need to consume daily hits of milk to &#8220;stay healthy&#8221; and keep their bones from snapping like dried pretzels. </p>
<p>&#8220;NOTHING could be further from the truth!&#8221; Cohen shouts. He’s right. If your fondest desire is to remove lots of calcium from your body, drink lots of milk. The high levels of phosphorous in each glass prevent your body from absorbing the calcium in the milk. And since milk does not contains comparable amounts of magnesium needed to utilize calcium, milk drinkers are twice out of luck. </p>
<p>Even worse, the unfamiliar protein in cow’s milk leaches calcium from the bones you thought you were protecting by drinking all that milk. All that unusable cow calcium builds up on arterial walls, choking the blood supply to your heart and brain. It also contributes to arthritis, and can even be converted into kidney stones. </p>
<p>So if you are a post-menopausal woman determined to experience Osteoporosis, drink milk. Its unusable protein will draw the calcium right out of your bones. We’re talking amounts massive enough &#8220;to trigger a 50% loss of calcium in the urine,&#8221; Cohen has found. </p>
<p>One option is to take properly balanced, high-quality calcium-magnesium supplements. And eat your veggies. &#8220;It is possible to obtain all your calcium from dark green vegetables,&#8221; says Dr. Mercola. &#8220;Where do you think the cows get their’s from?&#8221; </p>
<p>The darker the veg, the better. </p>
<p>MAD COWBOY AT THE OPRAH <br />Oprah Winfrey will no longer touch burgers or beef. Not after interviewing ex-cattle rancher Howard Lyman &#8220;live&#8221; on one of the most popular shows in the galaxy. </p>
<p>&#8220;Being from Montana, I would have rather been caught riding a stolen horse than be called a vegetarian,&#8221; Lyman told Oprah’s audience. Instead of selling hamburgers, Lyman talked about E. coli, salmonella and mad cow disease. As Ellen White explains in Ministry of Healing, &#8220;People are continually eating flesh that is filled with tuberculosis and cancerous germs.&#8221; </p>
<p>And as Ans Gail Eisnitz elaborates in Slaughterhouse: &#8220;Federal records show that major meat packers smoked rancid meat to cover foul odor, or marinated it to disguise slime and smell&#8230;hams were soaked in chlorine baths to remove slime and odor, and red dye was added to beef to make it appear fresh. Plant managers repeatedly fought to allow ‘some contamination’ such as feces, grease, hydraulic oil, maggots, metal, floor residue and rancid meat&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>After hearing Lyman lasso facts like these, Oprah stunned tens of millions of viewers by declaring, &#8220;I’ve eaten my last hamburger.&#8221; </p>
<p>As that magic moment, cow futures – even the future of cows – plopped. Moments later, the panicked purveyors of mountains of rotten meat, along with their milk-mustachioed cohorts, sued the famous TV host and her ex-steak eating guest for damages exceeding the budgets of entire nations as viewers recoiled in horror and revulsion from Lyman’s revelations and Oprah’s advice.</p>
<p>As Cohn comments: &#8220;You consume those diseased animals that no longer produce enough milk to guarantee a profit to the dairy farmer. Every cow milked in America ends her life in a slaughterhouse, her broken and diseased body contaminated with virus and bacteria. Such is the nature of the stressed life she lives. When cows are diseased with cancer or Paratuberculosis, leukemia or other sicknesses, that’s when they are sent to their final fate. Your dinner plate. The living tumors are cut from the dying animal and reserved for food which you feed your cats and dogs.&#8221;</p>
<p>It is still illegal in 13 states to criticize an agricultural product. </p>
<p>HURRICANE WINDS OF CHANGE<br />Can we afford to keep swallowing such lethal lies as factory meat eating and milk drinking? Look around. See how fast climate change is drying up and washing away the croplands that manage to survive new pests bulking up on genetically-modified plants hit with ever-stronger applications of pesticides. </p>
<p>Now do the math: It takes 70 calories of energy to produce one calorie of meat. It also takes 16 pounds of grain – enough to feed 32 people – to produce one pound of meat. Since there are currently more cows on Earth than people, it stands to reason that if there were no cows, everyone could eat well. I’m not suggesting an immediate cull of what Ed abbey termed, &#8220;slow elk.&#8221; I am proposing we stop eating cows. And cellblock chickens.</p>
<p> <!--more--> <H3>Watch the video related to dairy milk</H3>
<div align="center">
<p><!-- Smart Youtube --><span class="youtube"><object type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="355" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/t0SchmcLXMQ&amp;rel=&amp;color1=0x666666&amp;color2=0xD3D3D3&amp;border=&amp;fs=&amp;autoplay=&amp;loop=&amp;disablekb=&amp;egm=&amp;border=&amp;showsearch=&amp;showinfo=&amp;iv_load_policy=&amp;cc_load_policy=&amp;fmt="><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/t0SchmcLXMQ&amp;rel=&amp;color1=0x666666&amp;color2=0xD3D3D3&amp;border=&amp;fs=&amp;autoplay=&amp;loop=&amp;disablekb=&amp;egm=&amp;border=&amp;showsearch=&amp;showinfo=&amp;iv_load_policy=&amp;cc_load_policy=&amp;fmt="></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent" /></object></span></p>
</p></div>
<p>www.adme.com.br Agency Fallon, London Executive Creative Director: Richard Flintham Creative Directors: Chris Bovill &amp; John Allison Art Director: Nils-Petter Lovgren Copywriter: Nils-Petter Lovgren Agency Producer: Olivia Chalk Production Company: MJZ, London Director: Tom Kuntz Executive Producer: Debbie Turner Producer: Suza Horvat Director of Photographer: Mattias Montero Editor: Steve Gandolfi Post-production: The Mill Audio post-production: Zoo/Jungle MUSIC : &#8216;Don&#8217;t Stop the Rock&#8217; by &#8230;  <H3>Help answer the question about dairy milk</H3>What is a good brand of non-dairy milk?<br />Dairy products are upsetting my stomach. I&#039;m going to try drinking a non-dairy milk, but I don&#039;t know which brand to try first. I&#039;ve seen Silk advertised a lot. I don&#039;t want something twangy. I want something that tastes like milk, but isn&#039;t! Any preferences on certain brands?<br />
 <H3>About Author</H3>
<p></strong>
<p>WHO IS WILLIAM THOMAS?</p>
<p>I am an award-winning Canadian author, reporter, photographer and filmmaker. A former Vancouver Sun “photog” – his feature writing and accompanying photographs subsequently appeared in more than 50 publications in eight countries, including translations into French, Dutch and Japanese. </p>
<p>My 30-minute video documentary Eco War won the 1991 US Environmental Film Festival award for “Best Documentary Short”. Excerpts from this “front-lines” chronicle of a three-man environmental emergency response team in Kuwait aired in an eight-part CBC Gulf War mini-series, and have been shown on CNN and NBC television, as well as Noam Chomsky’s feature film, “The Corporation”.</p>
<p>During and immediately after the Gulf War, I served five months in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait as a member of a three-man environmental emergency response team. </p>
<p>Winner of four Canadian feature-writing awards, I am the author of Days Of Deception: Ground Zero and Beyond; All Fall Down: The Politics of Terror and Mass Persuasion, Scorched Earth, Bringing The War Home, Alt Health, Stand Down, Dialing Our Cells:  Cell Phone Health Hazards and the recently updated Chemtrails Confirmed. </p>
<p>A former pilot, ocean sailing master and frequent radio talk-show guest, I currently live and work in the Gulf Islands off Canada’s west coast.</p>
<p>Visit my investigative reporting website: willthomasonline.net</p>
<p>Visit my photography website:            willthomasphotography.com</p></p>
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		<title>The Top 10 Dairy Companies</title>
		<link>http://www.cpmdairy.com/2008/01/the-top-10-dairy-companies/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Jan 2008 20:23:37 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[
 Increasing prices of raw materials, demand for dairy products in emerging markets and the drive for health and wellness, are putting pressure on dairy manufacturers to develop innovative but cost effective products. Key growth strategies for many of the top companies include strengthening brand portfolios and expansion in growth markets such China and India.
The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="margin:0 auto;float:left;padding-right:5px"><img src="http://thm-a01.yimg.com/image/18c596b0d28bbac8" width="250" height="180" alt="The Top 10 Dairy Companies"></div>
<p> Increasing prices of raw materials, demand for dairy products in emerging markets and the drive for health and wellness, are putting pressure on dairy manufacturers to develop innovative but cost effective products. Key growth strategies for many of the top companies include strengthening brand portfolios and expansion in growth markets such China and India.</p>
<p>The Top 10 Dairy Companies is a report that analyzes the innovation and growth<span id="more-6"></span> strategies of the top 10 players in the dairy industry. This report identifies the product areas that the top 10 players are seeking to develop and also highlights the respective markets where each individual company is looking to grow. It also examines the comparative strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats facing the world’s leading dairy companies. Benchmark your performance against the leading dairy companies using market share and financial data in this report&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>Key findings from this report&#8230;</strong></p>
<ul>
<p></p>
<li>The global dairy industry is highly fragmented, with the top 10 companies representing about 22.4% of the total market size in 2006.</li>
<p></p>
<li>The global dairy market reached $402.5bn in 2006, representing a five-year CAGR of 3.7% and it is forecast to reach about $487.2bn in 2011, representing a five-year CAGR of 4.9%.</li>
<p></p>
<li>The leading dairy companies are focussing innovation on organic and functional dairy. Other latest developments have included products that are low fat, contain natural ingredients and no preservatives.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Nestlé was the global industry leader with a 5.0% market share in 2006, followed by Danone (2.5%) and Dean Foods (2.4%).</li>
<p></p>
<li>Parmalat’s dairy business recorded revenues of R3,546m ($4,861m) for the fiscal year ended December 2007, an increase of 6.1% over 2006. Higher revenues in fiscal 2007 were mainly due to higher sales volume in Canada and Italy. The dairy revenues accounted for 91.8% of its consolidated revenues in 2007.</li>
<p>
</ul>
<p></p>
<p> </p>
<p><strong>Some key issues answered by this report&#8230;</strong></p>
<ul>
<p></p>
<li>Growing demand for dairy products in Asia is driving global milk prices. The increase in demand has been fuelled by population growth, increases in personal income and Western-style influences on the Asian diet (demand for non-native foods such as cheese slices, yogurt and skimmed milk among young urbanites).</li>
<p></p>
<li>Contracting European supply of milk. The milk quota system (introduced in 1984) has placed a limit on the amount of milk produced each year by EU dairy farmers. EU-25 milk production declined 0.3% during September 2004-07 and 1.4% in September 2007.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Adverse climatic conditions in Australia and New Zealand. Australia and New Zealand are the two major milk exporters in the world. In 2005, both countries witnessed a drop in milk productiondue to adverse climatic conditions, with Australia’s output falling 0.3% and New Zealand down 4.0% year-on-year. Decline in output of world’s major milk exporters will impact the global milk supply and therefore, will lead to a rise in milk prices.</li>
<p>
</ul>
<p></p>
<p> </p>
<p><strong>Some key questions answered by this report&#8230;</strong></p>
<ul>
<p></p>
<li>What are the trends in the global dairy industry?</li>
<p></p>
<li>Who are the top 11 to 20 companies?</li>
<p></p>
<li>Which regions and segments offer the leading dairy companies the greatest growth opportunities?</li>
<p></p>
<li>How do the leading dairy companies compare in terms of financial performance and coverage by country and category?</li>
<p></p>
<li>What are the key strategies of the leading dairy companies and how do these strategies drive revenue and market share?</li>
<p>
</ul>
<p></p>
<p> </p>
<p><strong>This new report will enable you to&#8230;</strong></p>
<ul>
<p></p>
<li>Benchmark the world’s leading dairy companies with this report’s ranking of the top 10 companies, detailing their financial performance and future prospects.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Identify and target future growth areas from this report’s analysis of the acquisitions and divestments made by leading dairy companies and their strategies for growth.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Understand the key trends in the dairy market and the impact that they are expected to have, using this report.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Enhance your product development strategies with this report’s analysis of the leading dairy companies’ innovation and NPD strategies and recent product launches.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Create more effective competitive strategies based on this report’s SWOT analyses of the top dairy companies.</li>
<p></p>
<li>Assess the performance of leading dairy companies, identify their strengths and weakness and learn about their growth strategies with this report&#8230;</li>
<p>
</ul>
<p></p>
<p> </p>
<p>For more information plz visit &#8211; <a rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.bharatbook.com/detail.asp?id=82548"><a target="_blank" rel="external nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.bharatbook.com/detail.asp?id=82548">http://www.bharatbook.com/detail.asp?id=82548</a></a></p>
<p> <!--more--> <H3>Watch the video related to dairy</H3>
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</p></div>
<p>La tavoletta di cioccolato inglese è tornata con una nuova campagna televisiva che vede due perfidi bambini esibirsi in una bizzarra danza con le sopracciglia al ritmo electro-funk di &#8216;Don&#8217;t stop the rock&#8217; by Freestyle, sound elettronico degli anni 80. Fallon London l&#8217;agenzia che ha firmato la creatività del film, terzo nella saga prodotta da &#8216;A Glass and a Half Full Productions&#8217; e nota al pubblico per il pluripremiato &#8216;Gorilla&#8217; e &#8216;Airport Truck&#8217;. Questa volta, al posto di un gorilla che &#8230;  <H3>Help answer the question about dairy</H3>What are the rubber flooring effects on dairy production?<br />I&#039;d like to know how rubber flooring affects dairy production. Most of people who answered me this question just told me its good to cows don&#039;t slip and that its good for their feet, but I need to know how it affects the dairy product&#039;s quality and price. I need numbers, and for me it&#039;s really hard to find, as I don&#039;t know too much about cows. =D<br />
Please, it has been months I&#039;m researching about it, so I will give 10 points for the most useful question.<br />
 <H3>About Author</H3>
<p></strong>
<p>About Bharatbook.com:<br />
Bharat Book Bureau facilitates companies to take the lead of their industry with best practice business strategies and intelligence, through a unique combination of published reports, databases, country reports, company profiles and customized research services. Bharat Book Bureau provides strategic information tools to the executives, business analysts, and knowledge managers that will help them to probe into and support critical, timely business decisions and strategies.</p></p>
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