DairyNZ chair wants cross-party deal
New DairyNZ chair Tracy Brown says bipartisan agreement among political parties on emissions pricing and freshwater regulations would greatly help farmers.
Former Meat and Wool NZ director Tom Mandeno believes despite the roadshow meetings organised by B+LNZ and DairyNZ on the He Waka Eke Noa (HWEN) proposals farmers find it all pretty complicated.
He says the meeting he attended posed more questions than answers and he still doesn't have a clear picture of what the answer should be in terms of how the scheme should be funded.
"Like many others, [I] don't think the legislation is practical and there hasn't been enough discussion on it to satisfy farmers," he told Rural News.
Mandeno says, as someone who's farmed the land for many years, he wants the next generation to come onto the land - in this case his two daughters and their families.
"It would be lovely for the land to handed down to them and have it continuing to produce what it produces now - or even better - with younger people bringing new ideas," he says. "But I also want it to be sufficiently viable so that they can make it work."
Mandeno says the challenge for him and other farmers is whether the Government is prepared to soften its ideological stance and allow farming in NZ to be profitable and sustainable.
On Friday, Gisborne played host to the inaugural Citrus New Zealand Awards dinner, where more than 140 growers, industry leaders and guests from across the country gathered to celebrate excellence in the sector.
An independent report, prepared for Alliance farmer shareholders is backing the proposed $250 million joint venture investment by Irish company Dawn Meats Group.
Whangarei field service technician, Bryce Dickson has cemented his place in John Deere’s history, becoming the first ever person to win an award for the third time at the annual Australian and New Zealand Technician of the Year Awards, announced at a gala dinner in Brisbane last night.
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.