Red meat rebound
The red meat sector is poised for a strong rebound this season, with export receipts forecast to top $10 billion and farm profitability to almost double.
BEEF + Lamb NZ chairman James Parsons is confident farmers will vote to keep paying the levy that funds the organisation.
BLNZ launched its referendum this week in Wellington; voting will continue to mid-September.
Parsons says voting by farmers over the years has shown at least 90% of them support paying the levy. “So, we are confident farmers will support our levy referendum,” he told Rural News.
Parsons confirmed there will be no change to levy rates – 60c/head for sheepmeat and $4.40/head for beef.
Market development funding will remain $5.5 million for 2015-16. Parsons says BLNZ would have asked farmers for more money if a joint marketing initiative with the industry had gone ahead. But NZ meat processors last month rejected a proposal by BLNZ to set up a 50/50 funded market development entity for country-of-origin promotion. BLNZ had spent two years trying to gather support for the idea.
He says the proposal could have built “a really significant programme around the NZ story, but that did not eventuate so we are seeking no change to the levies”.
BLNZ will review its market development programme after the referendum. “We will go out to farmers and have a good look under the hood to see where we go with market development,” he says.
“We are doing some work; management is looking at options. After the referendum we will have a good discussion with farmers about those options.”
Parsons says there is no ill-feeling about the failure to get the joint marketing proposal off the ground.
“Clearly the meat industry has said they would rather invest their funds individually in their own brands; we respect that. There has been good discussion; we have flushed out a bunch of things that would not have been flushed out.”
Together with the market development review, BLNZ will also review its constitution after the referendum.
Parsons says the review findings will be tabled at its annual meeting in March next year before farmers make a final decision.
According to the most recent Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey, farmer confidence has inched higher, reaching its second highest reading in the last decade.
From 1 October, new livestock movement restrictions will be introduced in parts of Central Otago dealing with infected possums spreading bovine TB to livestock.
Phoebe Scherer, a technical manager from the Bay of Plenty, has won the 2025 Young Grower of the Year national title.
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.
Award-winning boutique cheese company, Cranky Goat Ltd has gone into voluntary liquidation.
As an independent review of the National Pest Management Plan for TB finds the goal of complete eradication by 2055 is still valide, feedback is being sought on how to finish the job.