The cooperative idea and organization of the Danish cooperative movement has made a large and lasting impact on the farming and industrial sector in Denmark and has also inspired other groups to form cooperatives independently of the original movement. Notable examples of the legacy of the Danish cooperative movement includes the following:
Dairies In the 1950s, a joint stock company was formed out of a series of dairies, uniting into two rivals
Mejeriselskaberne Danmark and
Kløver who later merged to found MD Foods (now
Arla Foods) which controls almost all of the Danish milk market. The
Danish Crown meat processing company also owes its existence to the cooperative movement.
Co-op shops The cooperative movement have also resulted in a series of co-op retail chains, now known as
Coop Danmark (formerly FDB), which are administered by
The Danish Consumers Co-operative Society. The stores keeps a large share of the Danish consumer goods market and had 1.4 million members as of 2017.
Wind mills The cooperative ownership model for wind mills was developed in Denmark. First for smaller wind mills, later for wind farms. One of the biggest cooperatively owned wind farms is at
Middelgrunden in Copenhagen and at the
Samsø island.
Communities In the late 70's early 80's,
collective lifestyle, including
cooperative production, became very popular in Denmark. Some of the
intentional communities that emerged from that era, still exist, such as the
Svanholm community, started in 1978.
Freetown Christiania was established in 1971, when a group of young hippies occupied abandoned military grounds in Copenhagen, and several collectives also emerged from the Danish fraction of the
squatting movement ("BZ" in Danish) of the 80's. People living in these communities often practice
environmental consciousness, and some have joined the Danish Ecovillage Network.
Co-housing Living in
co-housing groups with a
common area and community house is relatively common in Denmark. The community house is used for gatherings, common eatings, common washing machines, meetings and celebrations. There are three types of co-housing groups: • One type, where the flats or houses are financed and built by one of the Danish housing associations, subsequently renting out to members only. The co-housing organisation Lejerbo with 37,000 apartments across Denmark is one example. In English, this type of housing is often referred to as
social co-housing. • Another, where residents are collectively owning the homes, the land and the initial financing loan. In Danish, this kind of co-housing is called "
andelsbolig". • A third type, where people own the community house and the land collectively, but each family finances and individually owns the house they build and live in. The AiH community in
Hjortshøj is one example. ==References==