fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 02 March 2012 15:09

Backing for DIRA 'conditional'

Written by 

Federated Farmers has conditionally backed changes to the Dairy Industry Restructuring Act (DIRA) and its Raw Milk Regulations. Its submission stresses that any change to the DIRA for Fonterra's TAF (trading among farmers) hinges on supplier-shareholder endorsement.

"We're largely backing changes to the DIRA and Raw Milk Regulations but we also have suggestions that will substantially improve them," says Willy Leferink, Federated Farmers Dairy chairperson.

"Any change to the DIRA, in respect of Fonterra's Trading Among Farmers, must wait until Fonterra shareholders have seen and endorsed the value proposition offered by Fonterra's capital restructure.

"Farmer-shareholders are the real stakeholders. Legislation must not lead Fonterra's capital restructure and its shareholders must be left to determine the process without interference.

"If Fonterra is legislated to provide a 'fair value share', then we believe the other dairy co-operatives must be made to do the same. Otherwise, Westland and Tatua will be handed an unfair advantage when it comes to the share price.

"It's why getting the milk price right is imperative. It's the cornerstone of a web made up of the share price, Raw Milk Regulations, TAF and of course, the price independent processors offer at the farm gate.

"We cannot end up with a milk price model that can be tampered with. We need certainty to make investment decisions.

"Consumers also have a right to see that the milk price is not only set correctly, it is transparent too. Federated Farmers agrees the milk price manual should be publically available.

"We are so confident we even believe the Commerce Commission should review the milk price manual. In the interests of transparency, we believe the Commission should also audit the base milk price at the beginning of the season.

"This will provide a very public check of predictions before and at the end of the season. It will greatly help to restore trust by removing much of the mythology. It will also help focus attention where it ought to be too.

"Our submission also makes it clear independent processors who have their own supply need to be weaned off regulated milk. It's perverse they'll be allowed to take the full quantity of regulated milk for three seasons, even after new regulations take effect.

"Independent processors with their own supply and formed before June 2008, should instead have their 50 million litre allocation ramped down in thirds. If that started in the 2013/14 season for instance, it would transition to zero by the 2015/16 season."

More like this

Featured

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards, providing the opportunity to honour both rising talent and industry stalwarts.

B+LNZ launches AI assistant for farmers

Beef + Lamb New Zealand has launched an AI-powered digital assistant to help farmers using the B+LNZ Knowledge Hub to create tailored answers and resources for their farming businesses.

National

Machinery & Products

Tech might take time

Agritech Unleashed – a one-day event held recently at Mystery Creek, near Hamilton – focused on technology as an ‘enabler’…

John Deere acquires GUSS Automation

John Deere has announced the full acquisition of GUSS Automation, LLC, a globally recognised leader in supervised high-value crop autonomy,…

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards,…