No more tears for onion exporters
Onion exports to the lucrative Indonesian market are resuming after officials negotiated an end to costly pre-export methyl bromide fumigation.
Where the Trans Pacific Partnership goes from here will be very interesting, says Onions NZ chief executive Michael Ahern.
The grower organisation says onion exports have had an immediate $1 million win with the prospect of eliminating tariffs on products into Japan. The annual sales to Japan are almost $10 million and the tariffs are almost 10%.
"But in the case of the onion industry, where [does] TPP go from here?" Ahern said to Rural News. "We've got a particular interest in the South Korean market which at the moment we don't have access to. We need an overarching trade agreement such as TPP to have any chance of success for our individual item.
"We see some ongoing benefits out of TPP. We are really interested in where it goes from here."
They hope to see more countries come into the trade agreement, such as South Korea. "We are expecting they may arrive.
Vietnam is also in the mix. Once the headline deal is done -- the government to government basis -- the officials then go to work on the deal. Our job as an industry body is to make sure we are on the agenda. We are arguing our own case on the detail."
From 85-90% of New Zealand's annual crop is exported. The main markets are Europe -- mainly France, Germany and some of Scandanavia -- UK, Japan, Indonesia and Malaysia; overall they export to 45 countries.
The prospect of a free trade agreement with the European Union could deliver Onions NZ $4 million straight away. Annual free-on-board (FOB) earnings for Onions NZ members are about $80-$100m on a tonnage of 150,000-180,000 tonnes.
Minister for Primary Industries Nathan Guy, who met with Onions NZ on October 9 to sign a Government Industry Agreement on biosecurity, said the TPP was immediately worth $20m on entry for the wider horticulture industry.
Meat co-operative, Alliance has met with a group of farmer shareholders, who oppose the sale of a controlling stake in the co-op to Irish company Dawn Meats.
Rollovers of quad bikes or ATVs towing calf milk trailers have typically prompted a Safety Alert from Safer Farms, the industry-led organisation dedicated to fostering a safer farming culture across New Zealand.
The Government has announced it has invested $8 million in lower methane dairy genetics research.
A group of Kiwi farmers are urging Alliance farmer-shareholders to vote against a deal that would see the red meat co-operative sell approximately $270 million in shares to Ireland's Dawn Meats.
In a few hundred words it's impossible to adequately describe the outstanding contribution that James Brendan Bolger made to New Zealand since he first entered politics in 1972.
Dawn Meats is set to increase its proposed investment in Alliance Group by up to $25 million following stronger than forecast year-end results by Alliance.