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If you’re curious whether a dairy brand is made with 100% Canadian Dairy, and zero imports, click here:

dairyfarmersofcanada.ca/en/can…

#Canadiandairy #buycanadian #boycottUSdairy #canada #noUSimports

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in reply to Deborah Hartmann Preuss, pcc

@Deborah Hartmann Preuss, pcc Keep in mind, while all the brands in DFC’s list are made with 100% canadian dairy, they are not all 100% Canadian. Most appear to be, while some have parent companies in the US or France, and few are owned by an American company. Example: Fairlife is a US company, but they recently set up shop in Canada and source their products 100% from Canadian dairy farmers.
The same for A2, which is a New Zealand company, but they source their A2/A2 dairy from Canadian dairy farmers.

Where I have the option, I choose fully-canadian first. Second option is canadian company with non-canadian parent company, if it’s also not a US parent company. Third, non-US company that sources 100% from canadian dairy farmers.

in reply to Deborah Hartmann Preuss, pcc

@Deborah Hartmann Preuss, pcc you may also notice, there are lots of grocery store brands’ products missing here. For example, many dairy products sold by Loblaws’ No Name are not a product of Canada, do not carry DFC’s blue cow logo, cannot be found on the DFC’s company products list, nor does the packaging specify where they source their resources from. However, the store fronts are quick to label their products with “prepared in canada” along with a maple leaf.
in reply to Laura Anna

yep. For a few days Voila.ca was labelling products with a "canadian" icon ... I suspect there were objections about accuracy, because they stopped that fast. I've asked them for actual (regulated) "made in canada" and "product of canada" tagging. 🤞