Bremworth launches $6M expansion of cyclone-damaged Napier plant
Listed carpet manufacturer, Bremworth is undertaking a $6 million expansion at its Napier plant more than two years after the site was heavily damaged by Cyclone Gabrielle.
Agriculture Minister Damien O'Connor is defending the time it's taking to produce a long-term recovery package for Hawke's Bay.
O'Connor told Hort News the Government has already made $75 million available for the clean-up. But he says it would be highly irresponsible of the Government to 'throw out money without a proper plan' and says this (plan) is now being worked through.
O'Connor says suggestions that a plan similar to what was rolled out in the 2004 Manawatu floods is no longer valid.
"Times have shifted and the challenges facing us now are quite different from that event in the early 2000s," he claims. "It is important that the recovery package in now is appropriate, fair and is actually sustainable."
O'Connor adds that the Government is very aware of the biological issue facing the hort sector and that time does not stand still and is moving as quickly as it can. However, he points out that ultimately the recover in some areas will be dependent on insurance companies' appetite for risk and on the banks' preparedness to fund.
"Any government support must be complementary to, and not instead of, those other parties."
O'Connor says the Government has been working with regional councils and grower organisations on how to deal with what he describes as a complex disaster in many parts of the country.
These involve dealing with silt, reinstating infrastructure, long term river protection and the options for overall recovery.
"Announcements on some of these are due in the near future," he says.
O'Connor adds that one has to remember that other parts of the country have also been affected such as Dargaville where the kumara crop was virtually wiped out. He says there is huge demand on the Government at the moment with people losing homes in other regions.
Two Waikato dairy farmers and Federated Farmers leaders have thrown their hats in the ring for this year's Waikato Regional Council elections.
Buying a farm is challenging but still achievable according to research recently carried out by Smaller Milk and Supply Herds (SMASH).
A world-first public-private joint venture helping farmers cut emissions is set to have the first product from its investment portfolio - a methane-reducing bolus - available for beef farmers early next year.
Donald Trump's uncompromising tariff policy is set to put New Zealand dairy exports to the US under huge pressure.
Two large milk processing plants in New Zealand are changing hands.
Sheep and beef farmers are urging the Government to do more to stop productive farmland overrun by pine trees.