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Davidstow Creamery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Davidstow Creamery
Seen in March 2008
Location within Cornwall
Former namesDairy Crest Davidstow
General information
TypeCheese factory
Architectural styleFactory
AddressDavidstow, Cornwall, PL32 9XW
Coordinates50°39′00″N 4°37′59″W / 50.65°N 4.633°W / 50.65; -4.633
Elevation300 m (984 ft)
Current tenants200 staff
Construction started1950
Completed2005
Cost£55m (2005)
OwnerSaputo Dairy UK

The Davidstow Creamery is a manufacturing plant in Cornwall; it makes Cathedral City mature Cheddar cheese. It is the largest cheese factory in the UK, and the largest mature cheddar plant in the world.

History

The site is on a windswept hill top, and began in 1950. The site was started by Dried Milk Products Ltd, in Camelford Rural District. [1] Another site was at Newcastle Emlyn, in West Wales, which closed in 1983. After the formation of Unigate in 1959, further afield there were creameries in Dorrington, Shropshire and St Erth (former United Dairies) in west Cornwall.

The site competed at the Royal Dairy Show in London, and the International Cheese Awards at Acton, Cheshire

Under Dairy Crest Foods, other creameries were at Sturminster Newton, which closed in 2000, and at Cannington, Somerset, which now makes yoghurt for Yeo Valley, and a site at Ellesmere, Shropshire, which made Cheshire cheese until 1987; the area around North Shropshire is also a main dairy industry supplier, with St Ivel making cheese at Whitchurch, Shropshire. By the late 1980s Dairy Crest Foods made a quarter of all the cheese eaten in the UK.[2]

The site was bought by the Milk Marketing Board in 1979; in 1980 the processing division was divested as the new company Dairy Crest.

In 2002 the site employed 174.

In 2019, Dairy Crest was bought by the Canadian company Saputo Inc.[3]

Environmental concerns

On 22 June 2022, Dairy Crest was found guilty of environmental offences over a five-year period and fined £1.5 million. This is the largest fine ever awarded for an Environment Agency conviction in the South West of England. The pollution affected the River Inny, Cornwall and included releasing a harmful biocide into the river on 16 August 2016, killing thousands of fish over a 2-kilometre stretch, and coating the River Inny with a noxious, black sludge for 5 kilometres in 2018, through a release of a mass of suspended solids in July and August 2018.[4]

Construction

The boiler house was added in 1968. The site was expanded in 1984 and 2001.

A £55m redevelopment opened in 2005.[5]

Visits

  • In October 1976, the Unigate factory was featured in a documentary by Desmond Hawkins, about the Waldegrave Dairy in Chewton Mendip, called 'The Man who Thought Of It', who was Joseph Harding.[6]
  • Prince Charles visited the site on Tuesday 12 July 2011 to open a new £4.2m biomass plant.[7] It is a waste wood biomass plant for high pressure steam. Two Byworth boilers produce 7000 kg/hr of steam at 23 bar, with Endress+Hauser energy monitoring. The boiler plant was built by Leadbitter from May 2010 to April 2011.

Structure

It is situated at the junction of the A39 and A395 in northern Cornwall.

Production

It makes 45,000 tonnes of cheese a year.[8]

The cheese is taken from Davidstow to the national distribution centre at Nuneaton in north-east Warwickshire, where it is stored for 12 months to mature.[9]

Dairy Crest also had made Cathedral City at its Maelor Creamery cheese packing plant, which opened in 1976 at Marchwiel in north Wales, which was sold (with other sites that made supermarket cheese) to First Milk in 2006, then closed in 2014. The Maelor site was the largest cheese packer in Europe producing 80,000 tonnes per year. Cathedral City cheese packing moved to Nuneaton in 2009. Dairy Crest also had a former cheese plant at Johnstown, Carmarthenshire.

Around 400 farmers supply milk to the site. Cheese made includes Cathedral City Cheddar and Davidstow Cheddar.

See also

References

  1. ^ Cornish Guardian Thursday 6 November 1958, page 7
  2. ^ Western Daily Press Thursday 6 October 1988, page 22
  3. ^ dairyreporter.com. "Dairy Crest becomes Saputo Dairy UK". dairyreporter.com. Retrieved 2020-07-07.
  4. ^ "Archived copy". www.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 24 June 2022. Retrieved 30 June 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ Times Monday 4 May 2009, page 47
  6. ^ Cheddar Valley Gazette Thursday 30 September 1976, page 15
  7. ^ Times Wednesday 13 July 2011, page 53
  8. ^ Times Monday 26 September 2011, page 47
  9. ^ Times Friday 19 April 2013, page 44
This page was last edited on 11 April 2024, at 15:51
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