fbpx
Print this page
Wednesday, 23 July 2014 10:55

Fonterra plans Canpac changes

Written by 

FONTERRA PLANS to realign its packing operations at Canpac, in the Waikato, to focus more on paediatric nutritionals.

 

The proposal would see Canpac move to operating 24 hours a day, Monday-to-Friday, instead of the current seven days a week operation. The proposed changes could mean around 110 roles may not be required at the site which currently employs 330.

Fonterra director of NZ operations, Robert Spurway says Fonterra is proposing to resize the operation to better align with Fonterra's paediatric nutrition strategy.

"We've undertaken a thorough review of the site and looked at where to focus the business after some of Canpac's volume was reduced, and have been considering options to make the site run more efficiently and a better fit with our strategy," he says.

"Canpac already has high quality and food safety standards to meet the needs of paediatric customers.

"This is not a decision we have taken lightly and we are working through a consultation process with our people around the proposal. This will be a blow for our people and we will do everything we can to work with them to find new opportunities at our other sites in the Waikato and further afield should they need them.

"As we move into the start of our busy milk processing season we will have more job opportunities at our other sites and we will aim to fill with those impacted at Canpac."

Spurway says the Waikato is a vital region for Fonterra, and the cooperative employs about 2000 people there and has invested more than $150 million in the area in the past three years.

"We are continuing looking at where we can further invest in the Waikato, but have to make decisions based on what aligns with Fonterra's strategy and will drive the greatest returns to our farmer-shareholders.

"We have invested heavily in our foodservice business, spending $120 million on a new UHT plant at our Waitoa site and $30 million on a cream cheese plant at Te Rapa, which combined have created 90 permanent jobs, on top of the hundreds involved in the construction," he says.

"We have also recently lodged consents to build a new milk powder drier at Lichfield and if this expansion goes ahead it would mean another 50 processing jobs."

More like this

Farmers' call

OPINION: Fonterra's $4.22 billion consumer business sale to Lactalis is ruffling a few feathers outside the dairy industry.

Wasted energy

OPINION: Finance Minister Nicola Willis could have saved her staff and MBIE time and effort over ‘buttergate’ recently by not playing politics with butter prices in the first place.

Featured

Dr Mike Joy says sorry, escapes censure

Academic Dr Mike Joy and his employer, Victoria University of Wellington have apologised for his comments suggesting that dairy industry CEOs should be hanged for contributing towards nitrate poisoning of waterways.

People-first philosophy pays off

The team meeting at the Culverden Hotel was relaxed and open, despite being in the middle of calving when stress levels are at peak levels, especially in bitterly cold and wet conditions like today.

Farmer anger over Joy's social media post

A comment by outspoken academic Dr Mike Joy suggesting that dairy industry leaders should be hanged for nitrate contamination of drinking/groundwater has enraged farmers.

From Nelson to Dairy Research: Amy Toughey’s Journey

Driven by a lifelong passion for animals, Amy Toughey's journey from juggling three jobs with full-time study to working on cutting-edge dairy research trials shows what happens when hard work meets opportunity - and she's only just getting started.

National

Machinery & Products

JDLink Boost for NZ farms

Connectivity is widely recognised as one of the biggest challenges facing farmers, but it is now being overcome through the…

New generation Defender HD11

The all-new 2026 Can-Am Defender HD11 looks likely to raise the bar in the highly competitive side-by-side category.