The cost of raising dairy replacement calves is a significant cost on Wisconsin dairy farms in the
production of milk. Calculating the costs associated with raising dairy calves is an essential part
of dairy business management. To augment individual dairy calf cost of production analysis, the
dairy industry also requires a set of benchmark costs whereby individual business costs and labor
and management efficiencies can be compared.
In 2017 UW-Extension Dairy Team conducted an on-farm survey on the cost and labor efficiency of raising dairy replacements individually or through an automated group feeding system. Highlights of the findings include:
- Operations using automated feeders had higher liquid feeding costs than individual
systems due to their ability to easily feed higher milk amounts. Use of pasteurized whole
milk reduced costs when feeding higher milk volumes even when partially using salable
milk. - Labor costs were lower for farms using automated feeding systems than individual
systems and compensated for the higher milk feeding amounts. Unpaid labor costs were
higher for individual fed operations with these operations generally being smaller and
having less hired labor. - Management costs were similar between operation types emphasizing the importance of
calf management in either system. - Housing costs were higher for those using automated feeding due to newer, larger
facilities. This difference may normalize as depreciation will occur as facilities age.
Operations with the highest housing cost also had the highest total allocated costs.
Planning for sufficient but not excessive facility space save costs of raising calves. Use
of a renovated facility also may be an option for certain operations. - Variation exists for labor and housing costs for farms using automated feeding systems;
therefore, suggesting different strategies to manage calves and improve employee comfort.
Source: UW-Extension