Arla Aylesbury

Arla Aylesbury is the largest dairy in the UK; at opening it was the world's biggest dairy,[1] processing over 1.75 billion pints (1 billion litres) of milk per year, around 10% of the milk in the UK.

Arla Aylesbury
Arla Aylesbury is located in Buckinghamshire
Arla Aylesbury
General information
TypeDairy
AddressBuckland, Buckinghamshire, HP22 5EZ
CountryEngland
Coordinates51.812°N 0.73°W / 51.812; -0.73
Elevation90 m (295 ft)
Current tenants700 staff
Construction startedFebruary 2012
Inaugurated28 May 2014
Cost£150m
ClientArla Foods UK
OwnerArla Foods UK
Technical details
Floor area36 acres
Design and construction
Main contractorCaddick Construction
Website
Arla Aylesbury

It is owned by Arla Foods UK which is a subsidiary of Arla Foods, a large producer of dairy products in Scandinavia.

History

The first investment proposal for the dairy came in November 2009. Planning permission was submitted in September 2011. Construction started in February 2012, by Caddick Construction. The plant was officially opened on 28 May 2014, with Åke Hantoft, the Chairman of Arla Foods, in attendance.

The UK dairy industry is worth around £3.7bn.

Production

It can process up to 420,000 pints (240,000 litres) of milk per hour. Arla Foods UK processes 6.1 billion pints (3.5 billion of litres) of milk per year, turning over £2.2bn. It has eight processing lines, with eight bottle sizes. Around 900 farmers supply milk to the site; Arla UK represents around 2,800 British dairy farmers.

It produces about five bottles per second and makes around 400 deliveries from the site each day. In despatch, all the milk is transported by robots - it is the only dairy in the UK like this, working with RFID technology. Without robots, it would require around 300 workers in despatch. Around 30% of UK dairy farms have robotic systems.

Arla in the UK makes around 43% of Britain's butter.

Structure

It is situated north of the A41 in Aylesbury Vale, and between this to the south and the Aylesbury Arm of the Grand Union Canal to the north. The total site is 70 acres.

See also

References

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