fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 02 December 2014 10:28

Co-op gets new international farming head

Written by 

FONTERRA HAS welcomed Alan van der Nagel as their new managing director of international farming.

 Chief executive Theo Spierings says van der Nagel has considerable experience in internationally integrated dairy companies in emerging markets, working with multi-cultural teams, and managing large-scale international joint ventures.

“Alan has held senior executive roles with Parmalat in China, and more recently with Almarai Company in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest fully integrated branded dairy operation which has a farming operation with 145,000 cows,” says Spierings.

Van der Nagel started his dairy career in New Zealand, before taking up his first senior operational role within the Parmalat Group in Australia in 1989.  He remained with Parmalat for 14 years, with several years spent in China where he was the country manager/managing director from 2001 – 2003. 

In 2004, van der Nagel moved to Saudi Arabia to work for Almarai Company, where he has been group general manager for operations since 2008.

According to Spierings, van der Nagel’s role will be vital in providing a high quality, safe and traceable supply of milk as part of Fonterra’s integrated supply chain in key markets. A key strategic focus in the short to medium-term is China.

Spierings also thanked Henk Bles whom Van der Nagel replaces. Bles has served as interim managing director since April and will remain in an advisory role for up to six months, to ensure a smooth transition.

More like this

Fonterra R&D: Innovation needs more than just PhDs

Common sense and good human judgement are still a key requirement for the super highly qualified staff working at one of New Zealand's largest and most important research facilities - Fonterra's R&D Centre at Palmerston North.

Misguided campaign

OPINION: Last week, Greenpeace lit up Fonterra's Auckland headquarters with 'messages from the common people' - that the sector is polluting the environment.

Featured

Horticulture exports hit $8.4B, surge toward $10B by 2029

A brilliant result and great news for growers and regional economies. That's how horticulture sector leaders are describing the news that sector exports for the year ended June 30 will reach $8.4 billion - an increase of 19% on last year and is forecast to hit close to $10 billion in 2029.

National

Machinery & Products

Farming smarter with technology

The National Fieldays is an annual fixture in the farming calendar: it draws in thousands of farmers, contractors, and industry…