BRUSSELS, Jan 15 (Reuters) - The European Union will reactivate export subsidies for a series of dairy products to help struggling exporters compete better on the depressed world market, Europe's farm chief said on Thursday.
Suspended since 2007, export subsidies would now be reinstated for butter, cheese and skimmed milk powder (SMP) via a series of regular tenders and trade bids, EU Agriculture Commissioner Mariann Fischer Boel said in Berlin. In June 2007, during a period of sustained high prices, the EU set export subsidies for all dairy products at zero for the first time, aiming to make EU dairy exports less attractive for producers and thereby ensure adequate domestic supply.
Since then, however, increased world supply and reduced EU demand had forced internal prices down close to or even below intervention levels, she said. To help the dairy sector, EU countries would be asked to approve extra butter and SMP volumes that could be bought into public intervention stores via regular tenders, she said.
At present, the EU has annual intervention ceilings set at 30,000 tonnes of butter and 109,000 tonnes of SMP. Under the EU's intervention system, a commodity is "bought in" to stores, either private or public, until prices rise again to a level attractive enough for it to be sold into EU local markets. (Reporting by Jeremy Smith, editing by Dale Hudson)