Strong wool market shows signs of recovery after prolonged slump
The strong wool market has improved in the past six months, despite drops in production over recent years.
The New Zealand Merino Company (NZM) is expanding its collaboration with TextileGenesis to deliver full traceability for 100% of ZQ certified wool and ZQRX regenerative wool.
The move is said to give brand partners further verified farm-to-product data, enabling authenticated sourcing claims.
The expansion builds on a successful pilot with three global brands, building on ZQ’s track record of traceability and transparency, and marks a major step forward in aligning ethical and regenerative wool sourcing with digital traceability at scale.
Using TextileGenesis’s proprietary Fibercoin™ technology, the solution creates a secure, end-to-end digital chain of custody for all ZQ and ZQRX wool – from farm to finished product.
With this expansion, traceability will be provided as a standard feature for all brand partners sourcing ZQ and ZQRX wool, with no additional cost.
In the coming months, NZM brand partners will be invited to set up access to the TextileGenesis platform.
Henry Tallott, NZM's general manager integrity systems, says the expansion marks a step-change in how regeneratively grown and ethical wool is tracked and trusted.
“Brands working with ZQ and ZQRX wool now have access to real-time, verified supply chain data – helping them meet rising consumer and regulatory expectations," Tallott says.
ZQ and ZQRX represent NZM’s commitment to the highest standards of animal welfare, environmental care, and grower wellbeing.
ZQ and ZQRX wool are only supplied via direct contracts and approved supply chain partners. ZQ has always been fully traceable, offering visibility back to the supplying farm via a manual chain of custody traceability model. Now, with digital traceability embedded across 100% of ZQ and ZQRX wool supply, NZM is enabling brands to validate their sourcing practices with precision and transparency.
"Traceability underpins every claim our customers make about their sourcing," says Tallott. "By embedding Textile Genesis' technology across all ZQ and ZQRX fiber, we're not just meeting expectations - we're raising the bar."
"This ensures growers are visible and valued, while brands get the data they need to support credible product claims."
NZM says the expansion responds to growing industry and regulatory expectations around material traceability, including upcoming frameworks like the EU Digital Product Passport and global greenwashing laws.
By making traceability the default, NZM and TextileGenesis are setting a new benchmark – where traceable sourcing is the baseline, not the exception.
“New Zealand Merino is leading the way in aligning regenerative sourcing with digital traceability at scale,” says Amitr Gautam, founder and chief executive of TextileGenesis.
“Together, we’re building a more resilient, transparent wool supply chain – one that empowers growers and gives brands the verified data they need.”
Tech savvy Huntly farmer Rhys Darby believes technology could help solve one of the dairy industry's pressing problems - how to attract more young people into farming.
Fonterra farmers will be smiling all the way to the bank next month.
Exporters of live animals by sea say the decision by the coalition Government to go back on its word to reinstate the live export trade is "mysterious and disappointing".
Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ) has released its 2026 election manifesto, outlining priorities to support the sector’s growth, resilience, and contribution to New Zealand’s food security and export revenue.
Farmers have voted to continue the Milksolids Levy that funds DairyNZ.
Fonterra chief executive Miles Hurrell has resigned after eight years in the role.