Pair sentenced over illegal slaughter and sale of pigs
An Auckland woman has been fined $25,245 and an Auckland man has been ordered to do 300 hours of community service for the illegal slaughter and sales of pigs.
World antimicrobial resistance (AMR) Awareness Week begins today, and New Zealand Food Safety (NZFS) says you too can do your part.
“AMR or antimicrobial resistance is a global health and development threat, with the World Health Organization declaring that AMR is one of the top 10 global public health threats facing humanity,” says NZFS deputy director-general Vincent Arbuckle.
“AMR is what happens when germs develop the ability to resist the medicines designed to kill them, which can happen due to misuse and overuse of antimicrobials. So, the more we can reduce our use of antibiotics, the more effective they will remain for us for generations to come.”
To help tackle this challenge, NZFS works with the veterinary and primary industry sectors to promote careful use of antibiotics and encourage infection-prevention strategies, such as good hygiene and vaccination.
“We undertake a range of surveillance and monitoring activities, which include auditing the sectors and the sale of antibiotics. The most recent report shows that sale of antibiotics used in animals and plants is down for the sixth year running,” says Arbuckle.
“That’s an encouraging sign, but there is more to do, and it will take a co-ordinated effort to reduce the threat. As part of this, we work closely with Ministry of Health and international regulators in an effort to manage AMR.”
This year, NZFS published the New Zealand Animal and Plant Sectors' AMR Implementation Plan to underpin joint work being undertaken to implement a refreshed National AMR strategy.
“While the use of veterinary antibiotics in NZ is low compared with other countries, the continued vigilance of veterinarians, farmers and other industry stakeholders, as well as our ongoing monitoring and support, are all vital to minimise the incidence of AMR,” says Arbuckle.
If you have pets, or animals on a lifestyle block or farm, there are things you can do to join the fight against AMR:
This year’s theme for World AMR Awareness Week is: “Educate. Advocate. Act Now.”
“We’re all in this together, so we will keep educating and advocating – and we hope you will help us ‘act now’,” says Arbuckle.
The 2025 South Island Agricultural Field Days (SIAFD) chairman, Rangiora farmer Andrew Stewart, is predicting a successful event on the back of good news coming out of the farming sector and with it a greater level of optimism among farmers.
WorkSafe New Zealand is calling on farmers to consider how vehicles move inside their barns and sheds, following a sentencing for a death at one of South Canterbury’s biggest agribusinesses.
Now is not the time to stop incorporating plantain into dairy pasture systems to reduce nitrogen (N) loss, says Agricom Australasia brand manager Mark Brown.
Building on the success of last year's events, the opportunity to attend People Expos is back for 2025, offering farmers the chance to be inspired and gain more tips and insights for their toolkits to support their people on farm.
Ballance Agri-Nutrients fertiliser SustaiN – which contains a urease inhibitor that reduces the amount of ammonia released to the air – has now been registered by the Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI). It is the first fertiliser in New Zealand to achieve this status.
Precision application of nitrogen can improve yields, but the costs of testing currently outweigh improved returns, according to new research from Plant and Food Research, MPI and Ravensdown.
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