fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 00:00

‘They’re killing Rotorua’

Written by 
Lachlan McKenzie Lachlan McKenzie

THERE’S FIGHTING talk by Rotorua dairy farmer and former Federated Farmers Dairy chairman Lachlan McKenzie over proposed nitrogen limits on dairy farmers in the Rotorua Lakes catchment.

He told Dairy News some council staff are “fixated”on reducing nitrogen, an approach he insists is wrong and not backed up by science. 

 The Bay of Plenty Regional Council is running a consultation process on setting new N leaching limits in the Rotorua Lakes catchment and farmers including McKenzie are not happy.

“The regional council is still wedded to the notion that they’re going to fix Lake Rotorua by significantly reducing the amount of nitrogen that enters it. But the science is telling us the lake is now phosphate-limited – a lack of phosphate in the lake is [inhibiting algae growth].”

McKenzie says the council wants to restrict dairy farms to a loss of 35kgN/ha/yr and drystock farms to 13kgN/ha/yr. He says such restrictions will lead to destocking on all properties including lifestyle blocks and uneaten grass will introduce a risk of fire in summer.

He says the catchment is a complicated one with vastly different soil types and variances in the amount of rain that falls, all of which affect N leaching.  

“The council staff detest me because I go to public meetings and when they’re economical with the truth I stand up and challenge them. At the last meeting when I challenged some of their ‘facts’ they backed down. But they continue to perpetrate myths to support their beliefs and wishes for what should happen in the catchment – not what is going to achieve the values and desires of our community.”

McKenzie says councils too often focus on environmental issues and not on the other three pillars of the RMA – social, cultural and economic. People need jobs and farming provides these, McKenzie says. 

 “Rotorua is in a state of decline. There are 100 empty shops in the middle of town and that’s a sign of a dying community. The regional council with its proposals on nitrogen are determined to shut down agriculture – not just dairying. 

“I’m not going to stand around and let some bureaucrat in the regional council destroy my community.”

 

More like this

No handbrake on dairy

The Government will not stifle the growth of the dairy industry to limit its impact on the environment, says Deputy Prime Minister Bill English.

$3.3m fund seeks land use solutions

The Bay of Plenty Regional Council is asking for help to come up with solutions to reduce the amount of nitrogen entering Lake Rotorua from land use activities.

Overseer too ‘blunt’ of an instrument

The first-ever warning to a sheep and beef farmer on exceeding nitrogen caps shows that Overseer is a “blunt instrument”, says Rick Powdrell, Federated Farmers meat and fibre chair.

Sheep and beef farmer in the gun with council

Holding on to stock longer after a drought in the hope they would reach higher weights contributed to a Taupo farmer becoming the first sheep and beef farmer warned by the Waikato Regional Council for breaching nitrogen caps.

Featured

Feds make case for rural bank lending probe

Bankers have been making record profits in the last few years, but those aren’t the only records they’ve been breaking, says Federated Farmers vice president Richard McIntyre.

MPI cuts 391 jobs

The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) has informed staff it will cut 391 jobs following a consultation period.

National

Canada's flagrant dishonesty

Deeply cynical and completely illogical. That's how Kimberly Crewther, the executive director of DCANZ is describing the Canadian government's flagrant…

Regional leader award

Eastern Bay of Plenty farmer Rebecca O’Brien was named the 2024 Dairy Women’s Network (DWN) Regional Leader of the Year.

Machinery & Products

Tractor, harvester IT comes of age

Over the last halfdecade, digital technology has appeared to be the “must-have” for tractor and machinery companies, who believe that…