
Butter's global price surge hits croissants and kitchens alike
The bakery's regular supplier can no longer provide a steady flow of French beurre de tourage, a type of flat butter used to make the pastries. Mamiche has gone searching elsewhere to ensure the steady flow of sweet treats from its ovens, but it's coming with a cost.
Butter prices in most of the world are lingering near record highs, with little end in sight to the surge. It's the result of a complex interplay of factors — challenges faced by dairy farmers from France to New Zealand, changes in Asian consumers' appetites that's spurring global demand, and commercial decisions by milk processors defending their bottom line.
The end result is more cost pressure on consumers' favorite foods.
"When we have to change supplier, we can really see the difference' said Robin Orsoni, commercial operator for Mamiche. Other providers are charging prices 25% to 30% higher, but Mamiche has to absorb the cost because "we want to make our customers happy, we need the butter.'
Around 70% of the butter exported around the world comes from two places — Europe and New Zealand. Each began 2025 with historically low stockpiles, and this supply tightness has caused prices to spike to a record, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization.
The roots of the squeeze can be traced back to 2022, when the price of milk in Europe peaked as inflation and fuel costs hit farmers hard, pushing dairy processors to look at the best way to maximize profits.
Butter is made by removing cream from raw milk and churning it. Once the process is complete, you are left with butter and buttermilk, the latter of which "has some industrial uses, but those are relatively limited,' said Monika Tothova, an economist at the FAO. It's used for some cooking, to make other dairy products, and for livestock feed.
In contrast, "if you make cheese, you process the entire volume of milk,' said Tothova. Even the by-product from cheese-making, called whey, is in high demand from commercial food makers for flavoring and nutrition, or gym enthusiasts to bulk out the protein in their diets.
Sourdough egg tarts for sale at Bakehouse in Hong Kong |
Bloomberg
European Union dairy processors have been making more and more cheese. As a result, the bloc's butter production has steadily declined and is expected to hit an eight-year low this season, according to estimates from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Milk production, itself, is also becoming more challenging. In Europe, farmers' herd sizes are shrinking due to financial pressures, and they now face added risks to their cows from bluetongue virus, said Jose Saiz, a dairy market analyst at price reporting agency Expana. Lumpy skin disease, which can curb an infected cows' milk yields, is also making its way into Italy and France.
Just as butter has fallen out of favor with dairy processors, consumers are developing a stronger taste for it, particularly in Asia.
Global consumption of butter is expected to grow 2.7% in 2025, outpacing production, according to the USDA. In China, demand has already grown by 6% in just one year. Usage in Taiwan between 2024 and 2025 rose 4%, while in India, the world's largest consumer, it is up 3%.
Hong Kong's French bakery chain, Bakehouse, has been tapping into Asian consumers' changing tastes. Its annual butter use is currently about 180 tons, an increase of 96 tons from the prior year after they opened two new stores, in addition to another 180 tons of cream, according to co-founder Gregoire Michaud. The firm only buys from well established suppliers — New Zealand has a top-tier reputation, but China isn't good enough yet, he said.
In New Zealand, which is a major dairy exporter and produces about 2.5% of global milk supply, butter production has yet to return to prepandemic levels, fluctuating around 500,000 tons a year since 2020.
As in Paris, supply scarcity and high butter prices have forced Hong Kong's Bakehouse to cycle through three different providers in just a short period — from Australia, to New Zealand and then Belgium. Now, they're potentially looking for a fourth.
Western consumers are also eating more butter, which for years was shunned for being unhealthy, as they look to cut ultra-processed foods out of their diets.
Purchases of pure block butter in the U.K. have grown, said Susie Stannard, lead dairy analyst at the U.K. Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board. "Consumers who can afford it will still buy butter,' she said, but they aren't immune from price pressures.
At the newly opened Morchella restaurant in London's Clerkenwell district, the brown butter and bread that was so popular at its sister eatery, Perilla in Newington Green, has been replaced with olive oil.
Before the recent price hikes, "you'd put a lot of butter into the pan to base that piece of fish and meat,' said Ben Marks, who heads up the kitchens at Perilla. "Now, you've just got be much cleverer.'
City workers outside an ice cream kiosk at lunchtime during a heat wave in London on July 1. |
Bloomberg
Relief for consumers isn't expected to come any time soon. Butter prices are also affected by the global conflicts, supply chain disruptions and tariff wars that have roiled every other commodity.
Amid this "very hot market,' Hong Kong's Bakehouse is now prioritizing butter from closer providers to avoid a loss of supply, said Michaud.
Orsoni said Mamiche will absorb the higher cost of butter to keep French staples affordable for its customers, but Perilla's Marks said it's "inevitable' that diners will face higher prices.
The heat wave seen in Europe in recent weeks could also exacerbate the situation. High temperatures can reduce yields from dairy cows, while also pushing up demand for other products that compete with butter for the fatty cream taken off the top of milk.
Tennis fans reaching for cream to accompany their strawberries as they watch Wimbledon, or workers cooling down with an ice cream in city plazas, "can only hold butter prices up,' said Stannard.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Diplomat
2 days ago
- The Diplomat
FATF is Behind the Curve on Cambodia's Cyber-scam Compounds
According to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, Cambodia-based scamming operations are generating billions of dollars in illicit profits each year. The global Financial Action Task Force (FATF) watchdog has yet to publicly grasp the dangers posed by the growth of cyber-scam compounds, including converted casinos, in Cambodia since the COVID-19 pandemic. Financial controls at Cambodian casinos were identified as an area of concern by the Paris-based FATF in a mutual evaluation report as far back as 2017. The report found that the Cambodian sectors most vulnerable to money laundering were casinos, along with the real estate, legal, and remittance and banking sectors, due to a lack of regulatory supervision. The FATF added Cambodia to its 'grey list' in February 2019, but removed the country from the list in February 2023. Yet a further mutual evaluation report in August 2023 found that: 'Weaknesses remain with fit and proper tests of casinos, lawyers, and accountants.' This was no simple loophole. The U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) estimates that cyber-enabled fraud caused financial losses of between $18 billion and $37 billion in 2023, most of it due to scams by organized crime groups in Southeast Asia. Cambodia, along with Myanmar, is a major scamming hub. UNODC in January 2024 reported that COVID-19 led to the repurposing of Cambodian casinos into cyber-scam compounds as regular business dried up. Yet Cambodia and other countries in the region, according to UNODC, 'pay virtually no attention' to casino junket operators, despite 'widespread misuse of these businesses for large-scale money laundering and underground banking by transnational organized crime groups.' I recently interviewed FATF president Elisa de Anda Madrazo for the Financial Times publication 'Banking Risk and Regulation.' She pointed to cases of the authorities in Cambodia and Malaysia cooperating to make arrests of members of organized crime gangs suspected of human trafficking. Such arrests have not been enough to dent the capacity of the compounds. In April 2025, the UNODC found periods of increased law enforcement activity in Cambodia have 'dampened the expansion of these industries in some more visible and accessible locations' but have also prompted 'significant expansion in more remote locations.' De Anda Madrazo said that Cambodia's next assessment will start 'in the next few years' and will assess how it is dealing with 'emerging threats.' Cyber-scam compounds in Cambodia and the region could fairly be classified as an established, rather than an emerging, danger. De Anda Madrazo herself said that 'cyber-enabled fraud is a major transnational organized crime that has grown exponentially in recent years.' Nigel Morris-Cotterill, a financial crime risk strategist based in Malaysia, argues that routine corruption needs to move up the agenda. Financial crime, he says, 'happens in large part because of corruption. And it persists because of lack of resources, especially in countries which have poorly paid law enforcement.' The basic police salary in Cambodia in 2024 stood at 1,306,550 riel ($326) per month. As in many other poor countries, bribes of all kinds are routinely taken to increase income. Police corruption in Cambodia is part of the much broader issue of the rule of law. The 2024 World Justice Project Rule of Law Index puts Cambodia at 141 out of 142 countries globally. The existence of industrial-scale cyber-scamming increases the possibilities for police on low pay. Amnesty International last month documented 20 cases of compounds in Cambodia which were the subject of one or more police and/or military interventions, but found that human rights abuses continued at the compounds even after the visits. When the police or military intervened, they would rescue only a small number of individuals in response to specific requests for help. The 'rescues' were largely controlled by scamming compound bosses, and were nothing like a 'raid.' The police would typically meet a boss at the gate, who would hand over the pre-requested individual. Amnesty also found evidence of collusion between police and compound bosses prior to the raids. In one case, two trafficked victims were moved immediately before a government 'crackdown' in Sihanoukville. There was no rush by the police to help the 'rescued' victims. Most survivors of scamming compounds interviewed by Amnesty spent two to three months in police detention centers, without being questioned in detail about their experiences. Some victims have reported that the police were willing to sell them back to the compounds for the right price. Low-level corruption, Morris-Cotterill says, receives little attention from the FATF. The reason, he says, is that 'there's no money in pursuing it: the entire counter-money laundering approach changed in the early 2000s from being a crime reduction measure to being about confiscation.' 'If policing is all about expenditure and revenue, which is what confiscation has come to be about, then policing has become a business, not a public service. This, as much as corruption, is a reason that crime is not deterred or detected.' De Anda Madrazo argued that being taken off the grey list doesn't make a country immune to financial crime. Morris-Cotterill sees a need for the FATF to rethink how it approaches the problem. 'The little stuff doesn't matter in the big policy-making forums,' he said. 'I find that disturbing.'


NHK
2 days ago
- NHK
UK, Germany sign friendship treaty to boost ties, counter Russian threat
The British and German leaders have concluded a pact aimed at boosting their security, diplomacy and other collaboration in the face of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The treaty on friendship and bilateral cooperation was signed by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in London on Thursday. The pact identifies the Russian aggression as "the most significant and direct threat" to the security of Britain and Germany. It says the two countries "affirm as close Allies their deep commitment to each other's defence." It adds that the two "shall assist one another, including by military means, in case of an armed attack on the other." The treaty also says Britain and Germany shall work to strengthen resilience and build capacity and capability against malicious cyber activity. Starmer told a news conference that his country and Germany are "side by side, delivering growth and security." He added that the treaty "is an expression of our shared aims and values." Merz stressed the importance of the pact, saying the two countries have never had such a treaty over the past decades. In October last year, Britain and Germany signed a defense treaty to fortify their deterrence against Russia. The latest pact between the two countries is an apparent effort to tighten their solidarity through a treaty that covers a broader range of fields.


Japan Times
2 days ago
- Japan Times
Ukraine reshuffles Cabinet with wartime economy struggling
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivered the biggest government shake-up since Russia's full-scale invasion as the country faces a pressing need to find more money for its defense following failed diplomatic efforts to end the war. Deputy Prime Minister and Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko was appointed as the new premier in a Cabinet stacked with presidential loyalists, many with experience of working with the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump. Svyrydenko helped broker a landmark minerals deal with Washington earlier this year. Ukrainian lawmakers approved Svyrydenko's nomination and will vote on the entire Cabinet overhaul later on Thursday. Serhiy Marchenko and Andrii Sybiha were nominated to continue their roles as finance minister and the country's top diplomat. The reshuffle reflects Ukraine's effort to increase spending on its war effort and to strengthen — at times — strained relations with Trump administration. "The two main challenges are weapons and money,' said Volodymyr Fesenko, head of the Penta Research Institute in Kyiv. "How effectively the government can respond to them will largely determine whether we can withstand the Russian invasion next year.' Trump this week pledged fresh weapons supplies to Kyiv that would be paid for by NATO allies, mainly from Europe. He also threatened harsh economic penalties on Russia if President Vladimir Putin doesn't end his war within 50 days. The announcement offered hope of stronger support following a series of massive Russian drone and missile strikes on Ukrainian cities. On Wednesday, Ukraine's parliament backed a bill amending the 2025 budget to boost defense spending by 412 billion hryvnia ($10 billion) this year. The country faces a $40 billion shortfall to cover social spending, including next year's salary and pension payments, for which it needs external financing. Svyrydenko has gained clout from previous work with the U.S., which puts her in a good position to spearhead Ukraine's drive for more economic support, Fesenko said. Zelenskyy also proposed Olha Stefanishyna as envoy to the U.S., praising her "successful work' in building ties with Washington in her role as Deputy Prime Minister in charge of European and Euro-Atlantic Integration. Like Svyrydenko, she also worked on the minerals deal with the U.S. The reshuffle regroups Ukraine's arms industry under the Defense Ministry, which will now be led by former Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal. The newly expanded Defense Ministry remit reflects the growing importance of Ukraine's domestic arms production, which currently covers 40% of what its forces use on the battlefield. While defense procurement budget is around $12 billion, the country's industry has the capacity to produce military hardware worth three times that amount. But it lacks sufficient funding. Ukraine's domestic weapons production must increase to make up 50% of the military's equipment during the first six months of the new government, Zelenskyy said in a social media post on Wednesday. Weapons production will remain a key driver of growth, but a major challenge will be to stimulate economic growth in non-military sectors during wartime, said Olena Bilan, chief economist at the Kyiv-based investment bank Dragon Capital. "I view it positively that technocrats who have proven their effectiveness in previous roles are being promoted,' Bilan said of the government's reshuffle, pointing to the urgent need to guarantee continued external financing.