Irrigation NZ seeks new CEO
Irrigation New Zealand chief executive Vanessa Winning is stepping down after four years in the role.
IrrigationNZ has released its election manifesto, calling for policies that secure water for growing food.
IrrigationNZ chief executive Vanessa Winning says that keeping food affordable requires that farmers and growers have access to reliable water at the right time in the growing cycle.
“About 90% of New Zealand’s fruit and vegetables rely on irrigation, as does 26% of our milk-based products, and around 10% of our meat,” she says. “To grow this food we irrigate about 5.4% of farmland and use less than 5% of annual freshwater.”
Winning says that reliable water for growing food is accessed by capturing rainwater and snowmelt, storing it, and then making it available when it is needed.
“But this is being hindered by restrictive policy, legislative barriers, and a lack of intent by the current Government, which in turn stalls investment in much-needed water storage infrastructure,” she says.
“As a result, food production is increasingly at risk, particularly in regions which have volatile or very dry weather.”
Winning is calling for a new Minister for Water role to be established in cabinet as well as a cross-agency strategy to ensure appropriate water storage is available to provide security for food production.
“There is a misconception that irrigation equates to animal agriculture and results in dirty rivers,” says IrrigationNZ chair Keri Johnston.
Johnston says it is this narrative that is preventing New Zealand from taking a future-focused view on how water storage can support communities, the environment, and the economy.
“New Zealand has the opportunity to be a world leader in water management – for wellbeing, the environment, resilience, self-sufficiency, to support trade, and for climate change mitigation and adaptation techniques. Let’s move forward with a plan,” Johnson says.
IrrigationNZ’s requests for the next Government
NZPork has appointed Auckland-based Paul Bucknell as its new chair.
The Government claims to have delivered on its election promise to protect productive farmland from emissions trading scheme (ETS) but red meat farmers aren’t happy.
Foot and Mouth Disease outbreaks could have a detrimental impact on any country's rural sector, as seen in the United Kingdom's 2000 outbreak that saw the compulsory slaughter of over six million animals.
The Ministry for the Environment is joining as a national award sponsor in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards (BFEA from next year).
Kiwis are wasting less of their food than they were two years ago, and this has been enough to push New Zealand’s total household food waste bill lower, the 2025 Rabobank KiwiHarvest Food Waste survey has found.
OPINION: Sir Lockwood Smith has clearly and succinctly defined what academic freedom is all about, the boundaries around it and the responsibility that goes with this privilege.