Hamdi Ulukaya has also committed another $500 million to expanding his operation in Idaho—and says he is just getting started.
Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chloesorvino/2025/04/22/why-chobanis-billionaire-hamdi-ulukaya-founder-is-investing-12-billion-in-a-state-of-the-art-new-york-dairy/
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Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chloesorvino/2025/04/22/why-chobanis-billionaire-hamdi-ulukaya-founder-is-investing-12-billion-in-a-state-of-the-art-new-york-dairy/
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LifestyleTranscript
00:00Today on Forbes, why Chobani's billionaire founder is investing $1.2 billion in a state-of-the-art
00:08New York dairy. Chobani's billionaire founder is going all-in on being American-made. CEO Hamdi
00:16Ulukaya broke ground last week on a new state-of-the-art facility in upstate New York
00:21that will produce 1 billion pounds of Chobani's yogurts, creamers, and other products. Ulukaya
00:28says he will invest $1.2 billion in all, and the plan comes just a month after he also
00:34revealed he is spending $500 million to expand Chobani's plant in Idaho, and he says this
00:39is just the start. Speaking about the expansion, the 52-year-old Ulukaya tells Forbes, quote,
00:46A lot of good food hasn't been made accessible to all, and if you figure out how to make
00:51it accessible to all, the hardest part is how do you make sure that you actually have the
00:55manufacturing capability to do it. We do everything in-house, 100% of the products we make. It's hard
01:02to do because that means plants. As America's top-selling yogurt brand with $3 billion in
01:09annual revenue and yogurt sales up 20% last year, Chobani is in a position most food companies would
01:15envy. Chobani, which acquired La Cologne Coffee for $900 million in 2023, is one of the largest
01:23independent and privately held brands in the consumer packaged goods industry. And it's made
01:29Ulukaya, an immigrant from Turkey who owns the majority of the business, worth an estimated $2.4
01:35billion. Now, Ulukaya is using his clout to double down on the Northeast at a time when the region has
01:43faced an exodus of dairy farmers. Chobani and the New York governor's office are calling the
01:48investment the nation's largest in natural food manufacturing. The new plant will be financed
01:54through Chobani's cash on hand. A Chobani spokesperson said, quote,
01:58These projects are multi-year projects that do not require the company to take on any additional
02:03debt at this time. In addition, incentives from New York State include $73 million in tax credits
02:11over 10 years and $22 million from an economic development shovel-ready grant program, FastNY.
02:17The new facility will be designed to process up to 12 million pounds of milk each day, which means
02:24Chobani, already New York's largest milk purchaser, will increase its spend by an estimated 6 billion
02:30pounds annually. That will be a huge boon for the surviving dairy farmers in the region, many of whom
02:36have struggled as volatile prices and industry consolidation have driven many farms out of
02:41business, while major competitors like Danone have cut contracts or left the region entirely.
02:48Gary Hirshberg, the founder of Stonyfield Organics, cites the Northeast's higher costs for energy
02:54as well as feed for dairy cows. He says, quote,
02:58Our region has really unique challenges. Investment is badly needed. We've lost a lot of the dairy
03:04infrastructure, so any significant investment in upstate New York dairy, it's only a good thing.
03:09But Hirshberg adds that sourcing additional conventional milk is, quote,
03:15not really solving the problem, because the milk sells for such low prices.
03:20Organic milk is better for farmers, especially those in the Northeast, where the farms are far
03:25smaller than on the West Coast, he notes, because farmers need the premium price that organic milk
03:30fetches to ensure that a small family farmer can still make enough money to sustain their business
03:35and withstand shocks to the industry. And there's currently an organic milk shortage.
03:41He says, quote, That's really where investment is needed.
03:46Instead, Chobani has gone mass market. When completed, the 1.4 million square foot facility
03:52in Rome, New York, will be capable of handling up to 28 production lines.
03:57Sitting on 150 acres across the site of the former Griffiths Air Force Base,
04:01the new plant will be Chobani's second in the state and is expected to create 1,000 full-time
04:07jobs in the area. Ulukaya says, quote, Big food has plants, infrastructure, all that stuff,
04:14and that is very hard to build. We spend more time on the fundamentals of the business,
04:19which is making it. To make it to the next level, it's about the fundamentals.
04:23For full coverage, check out Chloe Sorvino's piece on Forbes.com.
04:30This is Kieran Meadows from Forbes. Thanks for tuning in.