Ahuwhenua Trophy 2025: Northland winners take top Māori sheep & beef awards
Northlanders scooped the pool at this year's prestigious Ahuwhenua Trophy Awards - winning both the main competition and the young Maori farmer award.
Ahuwhenua Trophy management committee chair, Nukuhia Hadfield (pictured) says the finalists represent a cohort of Māori growers who are playing an important role in horticulture.
Two kiwifruit orchards in the Bay of Plenty and one in Northland are this year's finalists for the Ahuwhenua Trophy competition.
The three finalists are Mātai Pacific Iwi Collective based at Te Puke, Otama Marere Trust from Paengaroa just out of Te Puke and the Ngāti Hine Forestry Trust whose orchards are based near Kerikeri.
The finalists will fight for the top Māori horticulture property title.
The finalists were announced last week by the Minister of Māori Development Tama Potaka at a special event at Parliament, attended by politicians, including Agriculture Minister Todd McClay, diplomats, central and local government officials and industry leaders.
Mātai Pacific are a collective of three iwi and have a total of 158ha. of kiwifruit spread over three orchards. They are Zespri's largest single Māori shareholder with a combined asset value is over $130 million.
Otama Marere Trust's operations include more than 21 hectares of kiwifruit, avocados and native plantings. Their land was originally leased to the local golf club before being developed by the trust in the 1980s. Today they have 11.87 hectares in Haywards, 2.21ha in Sungold G3 and 7.8ha in Sungold organics.
Ngāti Hine, based at Kerikeri, has six kiwifruit orchards including 32 hectares of Zespri Sungold G3 under cover. All the orchards have lease and supply agreements with Seeka. Although the main assets of the trust are forestry, the kiwifruit orchards was a deliberate move to diversify their asset base.
Ahuwhenua Trophy management committee chair, Nukuhia Hadfield says the finalists represent a cohort of Māori growers who are playing an important role in horticulture - the fastest growing of all the primary export industries.
Rural Women New Zealand (RWNZ) says it welcomes the release of a new report into pay equity.
Red meat exports to key quota markets enjoyed $1.4 billion in tariff savings in the 2024-25 financial year.
Remediation NZ (RNZ) has been fined more than $71,000 for discharging offensive odours described by neighbours as smelling like ‘faecal and pig effluent’ from its compositing site near Uruti in North Taranaki.
Two kiwifruit orchards in the Bay of Plenty and one in Northland are this year's finalists for the Ahuwhenua Trophy competition.
The Government's chief science advisor, Dr John Roche says the key objective for the science sector in the coming year is bedding down the reforms which sees the merger of the previous entities.
Hawke's Bay apple grower Taylor Corporation says a standout 2026 season, coming after a few difficult years, is boosting optimism among growers.