Massive disposal of unsold milk and surging retail prices spotlight supply–demand imbalances in Russia’s dairy sector.
Russia’s dairy sector is facing an acute overproduction crisis, with authorities reportedly dumping 73,500 tonnes of unsold milk produced in 2025 as domestic demand weakens and inventory accumulates, a stark signal of structural imbalance in one of Eastern Europe’s largest dairy markets.
The disposal of milk reflects deeper supply–demand mismatches: while production remains robust owing to established supply chains and cattle herds, consumption has lagged, leaving processors and distributors with large volumes of unsold fresh milk that cannot be economically stored or processed.
Paradoxically, meanwhile, Russia has seen retail dairy prices climb by as much as 23 percent, exerting pressure on household budgets and complicating market dynamics for dairy buyers and processors who must navigate rising costs even as excess liquid milk floods the system.
The surge in consumer prices has prompted a government pricing investigation, highlighting concerns over inflationary trends in essential food sectors and inviting scrutiny of price formation mechanisms across regional dairy supply chains.
For international dairy producers, analysts and value chain managers, Russia’s situation underscores the risks of unchecked milk output growth without commensurate domestic demand or export outlets, offering a cautionary example of how overproduction can distort markets and impose welfare losses on both producers and consumers.
Source: Dairy news7x7 Feb 24th 2026 Shared article by Channel partner edairynews and First Published at IntelliNews