fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 24 October 2023 08:55

Dairy boss backs HWEN

Written by  Sudesh Kissun
New DairyNZ chief executive Campbell Parker expects his and other industry-good bodies will continue to work with the incoming government on emissions pricing. New DairyNZ chief executive Campbell Parker expects his and other industry-good bodies will continue to work with the incoming government on emissions pricing.

DairyNZ's new chief executive Campbell Parker says the dairy sector should take lessons from the stalled primary sector climate action partnership He Waka Eke Noa (HWEN) and move forward.

Parker, who took up his role this month, believes there is no need to start from scratch.

HWEN was a collaboration between the agriculture sector organisations, the Federation of Maori Authoritie, and the outgoing Government to set up a framework by 2025, allowing farmers to measure, manage and reduce on-farm emissions and include an appropriate pricing mechanism.

However, the process stalled and no agreement was reached before the end of this month's general election.

The incoming National-led Government has signalled working more closely with farmers on emissions pricing and mitigation.

Parker told Rural News that a lot of really good work has gone into the HWEN process and he believes the intent was good.

"There was good alignment with industry and trying to shape with Government what the ouctome should be," he says. "Unfortunately, it stalled for a period. Then there was late engagement around it and now it's sitting in limbo.

"I think what's really important is that we take the learnings from that process and move forward: we don't want to start from scratch."

Parker says from his early observation at DairyNZ, many people put a lot of effort into HWEN to try and get the engagement right.

However, farmers - both dairy and sheep and beef - have expressed opposition to the outgoing Government's proposal around the pricing mechanism and entry into the NZ Emissions Trading Scheme.

Parker says farmers are looking for more clarity "around what the guardrails are and the timeframes and the mechanisms." He expects DairyNZ and other industry-good bodies will continue to work with the incoming government on emissions pricing.

With the formation of the new government still being worked out, farming groups are preparing to engage with whoever will hold the key agriculture, climate change and environment portfolios.

With the formation of the new government still being worked out, farming groups are preparing to engage with whoever will hold the key agriculture, climate change and environment portfolios.

"We are already working on a plan on how we engage with the government on important issues," says Parker.

More like this

DairyNZ board sets new levy rate

DairyNZ has set a new levy rate of 4.5c/kgMS from 1 June 2025 and aims to keep the levy at no more than this rate for a minimum of three years.

Dairy power

OPINION: The good times felt across the dairy sector weren't lost at last week's Beef + Lamb NZ annual meeting.

Featured

Awards celebrate rural sports talent

At a gala evening held at Palmerston North in March, the sporting and rural communities came together to celebrate the Ford New Zealand Rural Sports Awards.

New CEO for FAR

The Foundation for Arable Research (FAR) has appointed Dr Scott Champion as its new chief executive.

New genetic tool for beef farmers

Beef + Lamb New Zealand (B+LNZ) has launched a powerful new tool to help commercial beef farmers select the best bulls for their farm businesses.

Bremworth CEO departs

Three weeks on from Bremworth’s board overhaul, the carpet maker’s chief executive Greg Smith is stepping down.

National

Machinery & Products

Buhler name to go

Shareholders at a special meeting have approved a proposed deal that will see Buhler Industries, the publicly traded Versatile and…

Grabbing bales made quick and easy

Front end loader and implement specialist Quicke has introduced the new Unigrip L+ and XL+ next-generation bale grabs, designed for…