New scholarship to grow female leaders in dairy
A new $50,000 scholarship fund designed to support and empower women in the New Zealand dairy industry through leadership development has been launched.
Two dairy women – “humble and leading from the heart” – are among nominees in the Westpac ‘Women of Influence’ awards scheme.
Dairy Womens Network trustees Pamela Storey and Tracy Brown are contesting the Women of Influence award in the rural category.
Storey, an electrical engineer, has been in governance in the Energy Management Association of NZ, Waikato Environmental Centre, the Council for Women in Energy and Environmental Leadership and most recently Primary ITO.
Brown, formerly an economist, chairs the Dairy Environment Leaders Programme and the Ballance Farm Environment Awards Alumni. She is involved in the dairy industry’s strategy refresh and the dairy environment leadership group which oversees the Sustainable Dairying: Water Accord initiative.
DWN chair Cathy Brown says the two ambassadors for dairy women are “humble, lead from the heart and have a roll-up-their-sleeves attitude”.
“They give a lot of time to the rural sector and are doing amazing things in environmental sustainability.
“These nominations recognise the hard work dairy women put into the industry -- often behind the scenes and not immediately recognisable.”
Storey says it’s “empowering to see dairy women being profiled at this level”.
And Tracy Brown sees this as “an opportunity to show an urban audience the meaningful work -- most of it voluntary -- women in the rural sector do so well”.
Storey and her husband own and run a 500 cow farm in Te Hoe, in North Waikato, with her husband. They breed high BW animals and have a flexible approach to farming systems to suit changes in the economy.
Tracy Brown and her husband own a 700 cow farm, ‘Tiroroa’, near Matamata. They won the Waikato Ballance Farm Environment award in 2010.
Cathy Brown says DWN members are more involved in farm management and operation than when she joined in 2009, when it had 2500 members.
“Now it’s closer to 10,000 and we’re catering… to dairy women in the business side of farming. As the business of dairy becomes more complex, our members are [learning] how to run a farming business in today’s economic, environmental and compliance-driven climate.”
The Westpac Women of Influence Awards will be announced on September 7 at a dinner at SkyCity, Auckland.
Applications have now opened for the 2026 Meat Industry Association scholarships.
Bank of New Zealand (BNZ) says it is backing aspiring dairy farmers through a new initiative designed to make the first step to farm ownership or sharemilking easier.
OPINION: While farmers are busy and diligently doing their best to deal with unwanted gasses, the opponents of farming - namely the Greens and their mates - are busy polluting the atmosphere with tirades of hot air about what farmers supposedly aren't doing.
OPINION: For close to eight years now, I have found myself talking about methane quite a lot.
The Royal A&P Show of New Zealand, hosted by the Canterbury A&P Association, is back next month, bigger and better after the uncertainty of last year.
Claims that farmers are polluters of waterways and aquifers and 'don't care' still ring out from environmental groups and individuals. The phrase 'dirty dairying' continues to surface from time to time. But as reporter Peter Burke points out, quite the opposite is the case. He says, quietly and behind the scenes, farmers are embracing new ideas and technologies to make their farms sustainable, resilient, environmentally friendly and profitable.