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Why margarine, butter prices jumped 32%


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Cue the collective gasp of chefs, bakers and foodies: Food prices are up considerably — but none more so than for butter and margarine.

Prices for these ingredients and spreads jumped 32% in September versus a year ago, the most among all grocery categories, according to consumer price index data issued Thursday.

Specifically, margarine prices popped by 44% and butter rose nearly 27% — substantially more than the 13% annual increase for the overarching “food at home” category, according to the CPI, a key inflation measure.

And those prices may well remain elevated at least through the rest of the year, according to experts.

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So, what gives?

The sharp rise is partly attributable to the same factors nudging up prices across the grocery aisle, like elevated costs for labor and distribution, according to economists.

But it’s also due to global geopolitical events — like the war in Ukraine — as well as weather and other phenomena affecting the dairy industry and the market for vegetable oils, a key input for margarine.

“All the costs that go into producing a stick of butter, all those costs have risen,” said Matt Herrick, a spokesman for the International Dairy Foods Association, a group representing dairy producers.

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Margarine: It’s all about the vegetable oil

Vegetable oil — including soybean, palm, sunflower and rapeseed (also known as canola) oils — is the most important ingredient in margarine by volume, according to Mac Marshall, vice president of market intelligence at the United Soybean Board.

Prices for those commodities tend to move together — meaning a supply disruption for one commodity affects vegetable oil as a group, Marshall said.

Several recent factors have fueled tighter supplies of the commodities, and therefore higher prices. By March this year, the price of all vegetable oils had spiked by 53% over its average in 2021 and by 153% over 2020, according to a United Nations food price index.

A farmer collects oil palm seeds in Indonesia on Aug. 19, 2022.

Aman Rochman/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Global commodity prices have since retreated from those highs, but it may take a while before consumers feel the impact. Margarine on the shelves now was likely made with oils that manufacturers bought at higher price levels months ago, Marshall said.

Margarine prices swelled by about 4% in the month from August to September, meaning they’ve continued to trend upward in the short term.

The war in Ukraine, a major global food producer, has been perhaps the most significant driver of the price increase over the past year, economists said.

Why the war in Ukraine is affecting margarine prices

A destroyed Russian vehicle lies in a sunflower field in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine.

Maxym Marusenko/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Palm oil accounts for 35% of all vegetable oil made globally, the largest share relative to the aforementioned oil commodities.  

Indonesia — which alone accounts for over half the world’s palm oil — imposed a temporary ban on exports in April. That ban lasted three weeks, though other restrictions like an export levy were kept in place longer.

A severe drought in Canada’s prairies also led to a 35% drop in canola-oil production during 2021 and 2022, according to the Agriculture Department. Canada is the world’s biggest exporter of canola oil. Indeed, the word “canola” is a combination of “Canada” and “ola,” referring to oil.

And Brazil, the world’s biggest soybean producer and exporter, saw yields fall 14% last year due to weather conditions caused by the La Niña oceanic and atmospheric phenomenon, according to Gro, a data provider.

‘Slightly bizarre’ mix of factors raises food prices

The impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine extends much more broadly than sunflower-oil exports: It has disrupted supply lines and raised costs across the global energy and food complex.

Annual oil prices — and those of its byproducts, like gasoline and diesel — skyrocketed as a result. Inflation for the overarching “energy” category is up 20% in the past year, leading to higher production and distribution costs to bring food from farm to table.

All the costs that go into producing a stick of butter, all those costs have risen.

Matt Herrick

spokesman for the International Dairy Foods Association

‘Global milk supplies have tightened’

Hauke-Christian Dittrich/Picture Alliance via Getty Images

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