Former Beef+Lamb NZ CEO appointed head of Foundation for Arable Research
Former chief executive of Beef+Lamb New Zealand Scott Champion will head the Foundation for Arable Research (FAR) from July.
A new communications initiative from Beef + Lamb New Zealand got off to a modest start last month with "about 30" callers dialling into its first Scene + Herd conference call. That tally included media, but excluded BLNZ personnel.
On the call BLNZ chief executive Scott Champion spoke on four topics: the coming year, environment and water including One Plan, best practice on farm, and market access and shifting markets.
Second speaker was Andrew Burt, BLNZ's new chief economist, who spoke on North America, which was where he was based for BLNZ until recently.
"New Zealand [sheep] farmers aren't the only ones facing difficult times... there's been what they call a train wreck in the lamb market there in the last few months," he told callers.
That was forecast and US industry leaders' response is "encouraging", says Burt. A decade or two ago they'd have blamed imports, but now they're saying the market will adjust and they'll get through, he explained.
Given US lambs average a 35-36kg carcase, they're in a different market to New Zealand's imports. "A 25kg carcase is considered small in the US."
Champion and Burt faced questions from callers on levy rates, public expectations of farmers, and the US drought.
The call was facilitated by senior extension manager Aaron Meikle who told Rural News the 51 registrants for this first call "was about our aim" but the number that actually dialled in to the 7.30am session was disappointing. "I want to grow this [monthly call] to at least several hundred online each time."
Encouragingly some callers were farmers who aren't regular participants in other BLNZ activities.
"I really hope this can grow that angle."
Meikle says the cost of the initiative is minimal – "the only charge is the call line" – but some advertising for the next call, October 17, is planned.
"This first call was only [promoted by] email/internet. We're stepping up numbers slowly, just making sure the technology and our systems work smoothly."
The Envrionmental Protection Authority (EPA) has welcomed the deicsion by the Environmental Law Initiative (ELI) to withdraw its appeal of the High Court's decision confirming the Authority had acted lawfully when deciding not to reassess glyphosate.
Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ) is inviting applications for scholarships places on its 2026 Leadership Programme.
More than 640 dairy farmers and industry leaders gathered together at Rotorua's Energy Events Centre on Saturday night to celebrate the New Zealand Dairy Industry Awards where Southland couple Scott and Stacey Mackereth were named Share Farmers of the Year.
Āta Regenerative is bringing international expertise to New Zealand to help farmers respond to growing soil and water challenges, as environmental monitoring identifies declining ecosystem function and reduced water-holding capacity across farms.
Yili's New Zealand businesses have reported record profits following a major organisational and strategic transformation.
Owners and lessees of certain Hino Trucks New Zealand diesel vehicles have just 10 days remaining to register or opt out of a proposed $10.9 million class action settlement.