Editorial: Battle lines drawn
OPINION: Climate change is shaping up to be one of the major issues at next year's general election.
There are massive market opportunities for the horticulture sector in southeast Asia, according to Nicola Grigg, the Associate Minister for Horticulture and also Minister of State for Trade, with a focus on southeast Asia.
She's just back in Parliament after six months on maternity leave but is quickly setting her sights on how to open new markets and expand others for our booming horticulture sector.
To that end she is hoping to visit Laos in the coming months to assess market opportunities for NZ.
She says this is part of her and the Government's strategy of getting on planes and meeting people in key target countries at all levels to build relationships that will lead to trade. She points to the recent trip by Prime Minister Luxon to the Philippines, Singapore and Malaysia, and the fact that Agriculture Minister Todd McClay and Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters are on a plane every couple of weeks. All this is about relationship building.
While there is much talk that the golden days of ambitious, comprehensive FTAs such as the one with the UK are over, Grigg believes there are other ways and forums that can produce good outcomes for NZ.
For example, she says there are sectoral relationships and multilateral relationships such as the CPTPP which other nations are excited about joining, and the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council) which NZ is working on.
"While an FTA is a dream outcome, there are many other ways to do trade," she told Rural News.
As far as India is concerned, Grigg says there is a premise that it's not worth chasing an FTA because of dairy.
"But I say that's rubbish. We have kiwifruit, apples, education services, genetics and whole range of other goods and services going there and we can do trade with India," she says.
But to get deals, Grigg says NZ can't wait for countries to come knocking at the bottom of the Pacific, we need to be constantly banging on doors of potential trading partners.
There's been widespread support from the primary sector for the Government's move to put the brakes on local authorities to do any more work on planning changes ahead of major changes to the Resource Management Act (RMA).
Rural health advocates say the Government's decision to establish a new medical school at the University of Waikato augurs well for the rural sector.
People affected by the recent two severe flood events in the Tasman district are weary and exhausted trying to deal with the devastation on their farms and orchards, according to the head of the Rural Support Trust (RST) in the region.
New Zealand milk production is off to a strong start, with the first month of the 2025/26 dairy season recording a whopping 17.8% jump in milk production, compared to the previous season.
With adverse weather set to rain down on the Top of the South, the Bay of Plenty and parts of Northland, Agriculture Minister Todd McClay says farmers, foresters, and growers need to prepare for possible challenges.
Keep up with innovation and e-commerce in China or risk losing market share. That was the message delivered at the China Business Summit in Auckland this month.