Bremworth launches $6M expansion of cyclone-damaged Napier plant
Listed carpet manufacturer, Bremworth is undertaking a $6 million expansion at its Napier plant more than two years after the site was heavily damaged by Cyclone Gabrielle.
Scientists from Plant & Food Research have been collecting data from apple orchards in Hawke’s Bay to better understand the impact of Cyclone Gabrielle.
The Soil Health - Assessment and Recovery Project, which got underway two weeks after Cyclone Gabrielle, has involved working with about 30 orchard owners and managers to study the effects of silt and waterlogging on apple blocks. Working with industry body New Zealand Apples and Pears Inc, the aim is to develop resources that will be shared industry wide and help optimise grower’s spend on recovery efforts.
“This has been an extraordinary event and the industry has done a fantastic job of getting through the harvest under extremely challenging conditions,” says New Zealand Apple and Pears chair Richard Punter.
“Heading into winter, there are more complex decisions to be made and our focus is on keeping information flowing through to growers.”
Project leader, Dr Stephen Trolove from Plant & Food Research says while damage in the region varies significantly, it’s estimated that the cyclone has cost the Hawke’s Bay horticulture industry about $1.5 billion. This is in terms of both lost production and replanting costs.
Around 4000 hectares of apple orchards alone have been affected by silt or the waterlogging following the cyclone.
He adds that with winter pruning around the corner, growers will be considering where to focus their recovery efforts, with the hope of nursing any stressed trees back to good health and ensuring they can deliver a crop in coming seasons.
“Waterlogging can suffocate trees, and extremely wet soils can lead to serious root disease issues. We want to get more information on the implications for longer term tree survival,” Trolove explains.
“The data we collect will improve our understanding of the issues presented in the different blocks and which management practices were more effective, enabling growers to make better decisions when floods occur in the future.”
Plant & Food Research has partnered with horticultural consultants AgFirst and Fruition Horticulture on the project, who have used their networks and expertise to help identify orchards for the study and assist with data collection and interpretation.
The first round of surveying on orchards took place two weeks after the cyclone and orchard blocks are now being revisited for the second time, to reassess the condition of trees and groundcover.
Dr Jim Walker, who has led Plant & Food Research’s industry engagement since the cyclone, says other projects aimed at supporting the recovery of the horticultural sector in the aftermath of the February storm are also underway.
“We are listening carefully to feedback from industry partners and growers with a focus on building back even better,” he says.
“These initial projects and the data collection that’s underway could also help inform future research, such as orchard design for a changing climate, as well as the work we do with developing new rootstocks and apple varieties.”
According to the most recent Rabobank Rural Confidence Survey, farmer confidence has inched higher, reaching its second highest reading in the last decade.
From 1 October, new livestock movement restrictions will be introduced in parts of Central Otago dealing with infected possums spreading bovine TB to livestock.
Phoebe Scherer, a technical manager from the Bay of Plenty, has won the 2025 Young Grower of the Year national title.
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.
Award-winning boutique cheese company, Cranky Goat Ltd has gone into voluntary liquidation.
As an independent review of the National Pest Management Plan for TB finds the goal of complete eradication by 2055 is still valide, feedback is being sought on how to finish the job.
OPINION: For years, the ironically named Dr Mike Joy has used his position at Victoria University to wage an activist-style…
OPINION: A mate of yours truly has had an absolute gutsful of the activist group SAFE.