
The Forum was opened by Agnieszka Maliszewska, organizer and Director of the Forum, who emphasized the impact of regulatory decisions from Warsaw and Brussels, as well as the pressure of Eastern markets on the operating models of cooperatives and dairies. Day one featured macroeconomic analyses, sessions on cooperatives, and workshops on cybersecurity, reporting, and taxonomy.
It was a map of pressures — but also a map of decisions. From Warsaw to Brussels, regulations are reshaping market entry rules. Export rewards predictability and compliance. Every weak link — from energy parameters to packaging seals — quickly turns into cost. Polish cooperatives spoke with one voice: hard indicators matter.The content of the Forum had direct operational dimensions. Market analyses clarified price chaos (session led by Dr. Eng. Andrzej Gantner), supply chain charts mapped out real points of loss (including insights from Mariusz Sobalski), and cybersecurity stopped being a “footnote” in presentations (panel with Dr. Karolina Rudnicka). The common denominator? Advantage belongs to those who can switch to “measure–standardize–execute” mode before the competition.

Day two focused on sustainable dairying and international trade.
Among the speakers were Peggy Lantzsch and Simona Caselli (standards and implementation), as well as Elli Tsiforou and Laurens van Delft (trade and market demands). Development workshops such as “Dairy Woman Leader” — with the participation of Justyna Wysocka Golec — closed the program with a focus on leadership and diversity.
In this landscape, packaging is no longer a cost item — it is an element of operational strategy. It connects product safety, line efficiency, and financial performance. A well-designed paper sack with the right barrier layer is no longer an “add-on.” It is a guarantee of repeatability: reducing rejects, shortening changeovers, and stabilizing quality across long supply chains.
Sustainability was not presented as a slogan but as a standard. ESG has moved into the category of tender and reporting requirements. In practice, this means better material pathways, full batch traceability, transparent environmental accounting, and readiness for audits — from the production line to the warehouse. Seeing this only as “cost” means missing the game in which investors, retailers, and customers weigh compliance as heavily as price.

The international panels added realism: markets with long transport routes and demanding climate profiles reward standardization and consistency. This is not a trend. It is the only way to reduce claims and retain buyer loyalty in an increasingly competitive region.
Białystok 2025 closed the chapter of talking about trends. It opened the chapter of execution. The winners will not be the biggest players, but the most predictable and fastest to adapt. In dairy, 2026 will be decided by details: parameter consistency, data resilience, implementation speed. That is where margins are created that survive any headline.

Torpol Sp. z o.o.
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