fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 01 July 2016 10:55

Apprenticeship to lift pumping expertise

Written by 
More apprentices will boost the level of service available for farm pumping and effluent systems. More apprentices will boost the level of service available for farm pumping and effluent systems.

Dairy farmers will benefit from a new apprenticeship whose tradesmen will better design, install and maintain their milking, pumping and effluent systems.

The New Zealand Apprenticeship in Dairy Systems (Engineering), a partnership of the industry training organisation Competenz and the New Zealand Milking & Pumping Trade Association (NZMPTA), will help businesses lift employees' skills, offer long-term career paths and support farmers in keeping their equipment working year-round.

"The NZMPTA has championed an apprenticeship for the dairy industry for many years and we're thrilled that, with the expertise of Competenz, it's now in place," says NZMPTA president and country manager of Grundfos Pumps, Simon Fletcher.

The apprenticeship will lead to a national qualification which "addresses the shortage of skilled tradespeople in the milk harvesting, pumping and water application sectors of the industry," Fletcher says.

"While it's largely engineering based, the apprenticeship is in a range of skills, knowledge and workmanship. It will help the industry attract new people and offer them career paths, lift the industry's skill levels and set consistent standards.

"Employers, employees and the farming clients we work with will all benefit."

NZMPTA member Steve Bromley, of Bromley Dairy & Pumps, Feilding, says his business will sign four staff members as apprentices and recruit a new apprentice.

Competenz industry manager Peter Ferguson says the NZMPTA has helped Competenz understand the technical skills dairy technicians need to work productively and safely, and to agree on the qualification's structure and content.

Ferguson comments that apprenticeships are a structured, proven way to build skills, in which "most learning takes place on the job".

"So apprentices are gaining practical skills directly relevant to the job they're doing."

More like this

NZ's handbrake

OPINION: Your old mate gets the sinking feeling that no matter who we vote into power in the hope they will reverse the terminal slide the country is in, there will always be a cohort of naysayers determined to hold us back.

NZEI unhappy with funding cut for teachers

Education union NZEI Te Riu Roa says that while educators will support the Government’s investment in learning support, they’re likely to be disappointed that it has been paid for by defunding expert teachers.

Featured

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards, providing the opportunity to honour both rising talent and industry stalwarts.

B+LNZ launches AI assistant for farmers

Beef + Lamb New Zealand has launched an AI-powered digital assistant to help farmers using the B+LNZ Knowledge Hub to create tailored answers and resources for their farming businesses.

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.