No Panic Buying Please, There's Plenty of Fuel Around - Feds
Farmers want more direct, accurate information about both fuel and fertiliser supply.
KPMG's Ian Proudfoot says significant change is coming to New Zealand's primary sector and "farmers that ignore it do it at their peril".
Proudfoot was speaking this morning at Federated Farmers' National Conference Meat and Fibre AGM.
The world was on the cusp of a fourth industrial revolution and this would mean thinking more globally.
Kiwi farmers who could tell their unique story would prevail as the global consumer became more discerning about what they eat and where it came from.
"There is a fusion happening where digital, physical and biotechnological products will redefine how we live and farm," he says.
Still, the primary sector was up to meeting these challenges as changing market forces and conditions was something it was familiar with.
Being a developed country that relied heavily on agriculture, New Zealand's primary produce had to be better than anywhere else and the meat sector had to be prepared to invest in its future.
Better red meat industry collaboration would present opportunities but also the likelihood of some unavoidable lessons.
"We have to be prepared to share the risks of upsides and downsides. Too often we are quick to punish those that fail."
"Farmers need to get closer to the consumer and understand their lifestyles and aspirations," he says.
ANZ rural economist Con Williams says the technology is available but farmers needed a cultural shift in behaviour. With the global food chain increasingly going online farmers had greater access to understand their consumers and what they were willing to pay for and why.
John Loughlin from the Meat Industry Association (MIA) who opened the panel discussion says New Zealand meat farmers should stick to their principles of acting smart, being innovative and working hard to succeed.
"It's about targeting the affluent consumer and using the modern technological advances to our benefit."
The recent Brexit referendum in the United Kingdom would change market access with new players coming on the scene which would intensify competition.
This was also an example of how international market disruption can at any time influence our markets, he says.
Federated Farmers Meat & Fibre Chair, Rick Powdrell summed up the session: "Farmers need to accept change is inevitable and the speed is rapid. We need to use all the available tools to adapt to the future environment," he says.
AgriZeroNZ has invested $5.1 million in Australian company Rumin8 to accelerate development of its methane-reducing products for cattle and bring them to New Zealand.
Farmers want more direct, accurate information about both fuel and fertiliser supply.
A bull on a freight plane sounds like the start of a joke, but for Ian Bryant, it is a fond memory of days gone by.
Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has announced changes to the ministerial lineup, including a new Minister for the Environment and a new Associate Agriculture Minister.
Farmers are being offered help to protect themselves and their people while using quad bikes and side-by-side vehicles on farm.
Two major acquisitions in the New Zealand dairy sector were completed this week.