fbpx
Print this page
Thursday, 05 October 2017 10:55

Time to end cartoon days for meat industry

Written by  Pam Tipa
Sir Graeme Harrison. Sir Graeme Harrison.

Meat Industry veteran Sir Graeme Harrison reckons the sector was summed up by a 1994 cartoon captioned, ‘we can’t see, we don’t hear and we don’t talk’.

“I think that is pretty typical of a lot of New Zealand’s export sector to be frank,” the ANZCO Foods Ltd founder and chairman told the recent ExportNZ conference in Auckland.

“Really what we’ve got to do is join hands and collaborate. That is certainly what ANZCO has done in its business relationships around the world.”

Harrison also gave a plug for the NZ International Business Forum that started in 2007, which he chaired for its first seven years.

“This group of likeminded organisations, like Business NZ and NZ chambers of commerce, worked together to try to build NZ’s business case and market access,” he says.

They have a good working relationship with government and appreciate the efforts of trade ministers.

“As an export sector you should be willing to collaborate, and put the pressure on government and make sure the political parties - no matter what their colour - finally realise how important agriculture, the agri-food sector and the wider export sector is to the NZ economy,” he says.

ANZCO is the new player in the top four big meat companies, Harrison says – alongside Silver Fern Farms, AFFCO and Alliance Group. These four companies handle at least three quarters of the total production. ANZCO sits at 20% of beef and 10% of sheep meat. Its turnover is just under $1.5 billion.

Its growth trajectory has risen almost continuously throughout the years. But NZ livestock numbers have been declining and its business direction has changed.

The company’s 11 sites are not what people imagine of the meat industry. “It is a mass of stainless steel, not too different from the NZ dairy industry.

“It is in a range of products - blood products to animal tissues to various food solutions, proteins, etc. That is our direction.”

When they started contract processing in Korea in the 1980s, Koreans were still very poor. Yet at the time of the signing of the NZ Korea free trade agreement in March 2015, our per capita income was almost the same - US$33,000.

“We are now on a path to having our tariffs removed over 15 years from 40% down to zero. It was a good trade agreement for the NZ beef sector, and it was good overall for all sectors in NZ.

“The growth of the middle class in Asia is there for all of us to note. The Economist summed it up well last year, saying that before the late 1990s China barely had a middle class; whereas in 2000, five million households earned between US$11,500 and US$43,000 a year in current dollars. Today 225 million earn that much.

More like this

ANZCO return good result

Meat processor ANZCO Foods has reported an annual turnover for 2022 of $1.90b - compared with $1.64b for 2021 - and net profit before tax of $147.7m (2021 $75m) for the 2022 financial year.

50 GHG workshops in 30 days

Beef + Lamb New Zealand (B+LNZ) has joined forces with Silver Fern Farms, Alliance, Greenlea Premier Meats, ANZCO and Deer Industry New Zealand (DINZ) to deliver 50 Greenhouse Gas workshops over the course of 30 days.

ANZCO posts record profit

Meat processor and exporter ANZCO Foods has joined other NZ agri-sector businesses and reported a record net profit of $75m for the 2021 year.

Featured

National

Bremworth CEO departs

Three weeks on from Bremworth’s board overhaul, the carpet maker’s chief executive Greg Smith is stepping down.

Machinery & Products

Buhler name to go

Shareholders at a special meeting have approved a proposed deal that will see Buhler Industries, the publicly traded Versatile and…

Grabbing bales made quick and easy

Front end loader and implement specialist Quicke has introduced the new Unigrip L+ and XL+ next-generation bale grabs, designed for…