x

Society

Cypriot Farmers Furious Over New Halloumi Cheese Guidelines

December 3, 2019

NICOSIA – A Cypriot government move to protect the island’s renowned halloumi cheese – a staple for frying, especially in the United Kingdom – has apparently backfired with farmers complaining the requirements would be too stringent.

Cyprus has since 2014 been attempting to register halloumi cheese as Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) – the name of a geographical region or area recognized by official rules to produce certain foods with special characteristics related to location. 

That’s similar to what Greece did to protect its famous feta cheese but Cypriot farmers say what would officially designate halloumi goes too far, said The Cyprus Mail, with the farmers associations PEK, EKA, Panagrotikos, New Agricultural Movement and Euro Agricultural Organisation claim the specifications will cut production by 50 percent.

The new requirements would say that cheese could only be designated as halloumi if it consists of 51 percent sheep and goats’ milk and 40 percent cow’s milk instead of the current standard of 20 percent sheep and goat’s milk.
With cow’s milk more plentiful on the island the producers say they wouldn’t have enough supplies of sheep and goats milk to make what would be officially designated as halloumi and that 8,000 of 13,000 workers in cheese making would lose their jobs.

Halloumi is a major export for Cyprus – bringing in around 234.8 million euros ($258.41 million) a year, which would also be cut in half if the national cheese is registered as a PDO, the British newspaper The Express reported.

In a joint statement, they also said the new policy held a large share of the European Union budget while contributing strongly and substantially to the development of the standard of living of European citizens.

They wrote: “It is for this reason that farmers in Cyprus will protest. We are calling on the EU to adhere to the regulations regarding quality standards and, after completing all the technical aspects of the dossier we submitted for PDO registration of halloumi, to sign it and make it official,” defining their reasoning.

“Unless this is done very soon, farmers in Cyprus will park their tractors outside the EU offices in Cyprus,” they warned.

Agriculture Minister Costas Kadis had blamed the lack of progress with the European Commission on political reasons, and said the government was trying to protect halloumi as a unique product of Cyprus.

RELATED

NICOSIA, Cyprus  — The United Nations' refugee agency said Friday that Cypriot efforts at sea to stop numerous Syrian refugee-laden boats departing Lebanon from reaching the European Union-member island nation mustn’t contravene international human rights laws or put passengers at risk.

Top Stories

Columnists

A pregnant woman was driving in the HOV lane near Dallas.

General News

NEW YORK – Meropi Kyriacou, the new Principal of The Cathedral School in Manhattan, was honored as The National Herald’s Educator of the Year.

Video

A Palestinian Baby in Gaza is Born an Orphan in an Urgent Cesarean Section after an Israeli Strike

RAFAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Sabreen Jouda came into the world seconds after her mother left it.

NEW YORK  — Monday's opening statements in the first criminal trial of a former American president provided a clear roadmap of how prosecutors will try to make the case that Donald Trump broke the law, and how the defense plans to fight the charges on multiple fronts.

ASTORIA – The singer Anastasia visited St.

CHICAGO, IL – This spring, Wrightwood 659 hosts Chryssa & New York, the first museum exhibition in North America in more than four decades to focus on the Greek-born artist Chryssa (1933–2013).

NEW YORK – Greek-American George Patrikis, owner of Ditmars Flower Shop in Astoria, was featured in the New York Times on April 15 about the rise in the cost of a dozen red roses from $60 in 2019 to $72 today.

Enter your email address to subscribe

Provide your email address to subscribe. For e.g. [email protected]

You may unsubscribe at any time using the link in our newsletter.