Dairy Farmers of Canada is aware of the recent reports regarding fat supplementation in the dairy sector.
Cows’ diets can differ throughout the country, based on seasonality and regional differences in soil conditions and climate. While farmers grow the majority of the crops they feed their cows, a number of common feeds like flax, canola, corn, and other plants have been used for decades in a targeted way to ensure cows are meeting their energy requirements. Exact cow feed rations are determined at the farm level in consultation with veterinarians and animal nutrition experts.
Palm products, including those derived from palm oil, are sometimes added to dairy cows’ rations in limited amounts to increase the energy density of cow diets if needed. Dairy farmers in other countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia also use this supplement. They can help provide energy to cows and no undesirable effects have been identified arising from its use in cows’ feed rations.
Palmitic acid, which is different from palm fat, is a naturally occurring part of the fat of many plants and animals in various levels. When supplements of palm fats are given to cows in Canada, the amount typically provided in their feed is small, and has a very limited impact on the palmitic fatty acid profile of their milk. It is estimated that the increase in the palmitic fatty acid profile of dairy fat linked to this feeding practice is less than 3%.
Daniel Lefebvre, the Chief Operating Officer from Lactanet, the Canadian dairy centre of excellence, stresses that the inclusion of palm fat supplements in the cow’s nutrition is not a health or safety concern.
We do not have data to assess the extent to which this type of feed supplement is used on Canadian dairy farms, but the use of palm oil, from a feed perspective, is safe and an approved by-pass fat.
All milk sold in Canada is nutritious and safe to consume, and still subject to Canada’s rigorous health and safety standards.
Dairy farmers are uncompromising when it comes to quality and follow some of the most stringent standards in the world to uphold that commitment
Source : Dairy Farmers of Canada