Bulk wine exports surpass packaged wine volumes
Data from February 2025 shows volumes of bulk wine exports exceeded packaged wine.
There has been a flood of overseas visitors this summer, but stronger border biosecurity defences have stopped hitchhiking pests and diseases from entering NZ.
This is the message from the Ministry for Primary Industries.
"It has been a summer of action for MPI biosecurity staff who have faced record numbers of arriving passengers," says Steve Gilbert, MPI border clearance services director.
"Despite the huge numbers, we've kept processing times down for passengers. And most importantly, our compliance statistics show we are blocking the things that pose biosecurity risk to New Zealand.
"More than 99% of passengers that went through our border checks arrived in New Zealand without any risk goods."
He says there were 14 interceptions of organic material containing fruit fly.
"Stopping fruit fly from entering New Zealand is a big focus for us. So it is good to know that we have prevented at least 14 incursions of this destructive pest this summer."
Last year MPI introduced 90 new frontline officers and 24 new detector dog teams to strengthen biosecurity at the border.
"We have also upped our risk assessment levels, invested heavily in building awareness about New Zealand's biosecurity rules and introduced a mobile x-ray scanner to help clear cruise ship passengers.
"To ensure the biosecurity message gets through, officers have been taking a stricter approach with fining passengers who break the rules. This can be seen in the number of infringement notices this summer. We issued 2288 fines, a rise of 41 percent from last year.
"The new measures have made it harder for air and cruise passengers to accidentally or deliberately carry risk goods into New Zealand."
Border biosecurity statistics from the 2015/16 summer:
· Arriving airport passengers reached 1.58 million, a 9% increase from the previous summer.
· MPI issued 2288 infringement notices ($400 fine), an increase of 41% from the previous summer.
· MPI seized 4148 undeclared items from air passengers, an increase of 28% from last year. Undeclared fresh produce was the most common risk item.
· Air passengers showed a 99.2% compliance rate with New Zealand's biosecurity requirements after passing through MPI's biosecurity checks.
· Average passenger processing time for passengers arriving at Auckland Airport (New Zealand's biggest airport) was shorter than last year.
· 374 cruise vessels visited New Zealand.
· MPI intercepted 1109 risk items from cruise vessels, an increase of 84% from last year.
After 20 years of milking cows, Northland farmer Greg Collins is ready to step into the governance side of dairy.
For some Canterbury teenagers, their career is being shaped by hands-on experience in a sector they are passionate about - dairy farming.
Dairy farmers will be paying a new levy rate of 4.5c/kgMS - an extra 0.9c/kgMS - to industry-good body DairyNZ from June 1 this year.
The 'atmospheric river' of rain that swept down the country last week almost completely avoided one of the worst drought-affected regions in the country – coastal Taranaki.
Much-needed rain finally arrived in Northland, giving many farmers breathing space to get themselves back on track for next season.
Despite the turmoil in global markets, Fonterra is continuing with a dual track process to divest its multi-billion dollars consumer businesses.