Bikinis in cowshed
OPINION: An animal activist organisation is calling for an investigation into the use of dairy cows in sexuallly explicit content posted on social media and adult entertainment subscription site OnlyFans.
A warning is sounding to dairy farmers that environmental policy is likely to restrict cow numbers.
The Ministry for Primary Industry says in its March update on the primary sector that environmental policy is likely to restrict cow numbers and the land available for dairy farming in the future. It predicts the sector’s growth coming more from productivity increases and higher value products.
MPI predicts dairy will hold its own this season and into next season. It says dairy exports in 2017-18 will earn $16.7 billion, not $16.8b as it forecast in December 2017.
It predicts milk production overall will be 1% lower this season due to the 2017 wet spring weather and then December drought. That bizarre weather hit all New Zealand, and especially Taranaki, Manawatu, West Coast, Central Otago and Southland.
The report highlights a continuing decline in cow numbers -- down by about 220,000 since 2016. But this is seen as unlikely to impact production due to farms getting more efficient and better genetics improving per-cow performance.
Good news, MPI says, is that strong export prices are expected to offset the decline in milk production this season. Average butter prices are up almost 50% on the previous year, and whole milk powder prices are at least 10% higher than in 2017.
MPI sees manufacturers increasing the proportion of high value products they make from farmers’ raw milk, so driving a higher value dairy exports. And China’s demand for imported milk powder and infant formula remains strong.
But some caveats appear in the MPI report. It notes that if M.Bovis gets entrenched it will harm dairy production, and farm management costs may increase. It also warns that continuing growth in European dairy production will tend to depress international dairy prices.
Because the overall outlook for primary product exports for 2018 is strong, MPI has revised its earnings forecast upwards to $42.23b instead of the $41.35b it predicted in December 2017.
This results from better dairy prices, rising red meat prices and record forestry volumes.
All sectors are performing well, MPI says.
Two butcheries have claimed victory at the 100% New Zealand Bacon & Ham Awards for 2025.
A Taupiri farming company has been convicted and fined $52,500 in the Hamilton District Court for the unlawful discharge of dairy effluent into the environment.
The Climate Change Commission’s 2025 emissions reduction monitoring report reveals steady progress on the reduction of New Zealand’s climate pollution.
Another milestone has been reached in the fight against Mycoplasma bovis with the compensation assistance service being wound up after helping more than 1300 farmers.
The Government’s directive for state farmer Landcorp Farming (trading as Pamu) to lifts its performance is yielding results.
The move to bring bovine TB testing in-house at Ospri officially started this month, as a team of 37 skilled and experienced technicians begin work with the disease eradication agency.