HortNZ opens 2026 scholarship applications
Applications are open for Horticulture New Zealand's (HortNZ) 2026 scholarship programme, with 20 funding opportunities available.
Don’t put vital domestic fruit and vegetable production at risk. That’s the message from Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ) to the Government.
The industry-good body has told the Government that while people need houses, they also need to eat fresh fruit and vegetables.
HortNZ, which represents the interests of about 4,200 commercial fruit and vegetable growers, is seeking a range of amendments to proposed reforms, including recognition of the national importance of protecting highly productive land (HPL) for primary production and enabling the supply of fresh fruit and vegetables.
It has also written to Ministers highlighting the need for changes including permitted activity for discharges from commercial vegetable production (CVP), managed with a certified freshwater farm plan (FWFP).
“National promised to make fruit and vegetables a permitted activity in 2024. We urgently need them to deliver on that promise, through these RMA amendments,” says Nadine Tunley, chief executive of HortNZ.
“Minister Chris Bishop has said the government will change the Act to make it easier to build houses and renewable energy.
“We accept that people need houses, but they also need to eat fresh fruit and vegetables. If the government makes building houses easier, then it also needs to make changes to the RMA to enable the supply of fresh fruit and vegetables.
“If the amendments do not recognise the importance of that, it will increase the risks to New Zealand’s food supply and exacerbate the cost-of-living crisis.”
While the New Zealand population grew by 138,000 last year, council rules are currently preventing vegetable growers from growing more produce, notes Tunley.
“While housing has gobbled up highly productive land over the past 10 years, the area for growing vegetables has not expanded at all. This is because the RMA is preventing vegetable growers from expanding in many regions.
The localised effects of CVP can be managed with a FWFP, without causing significant adverse environmental effects, and the National Policy Statement for Freshwater supports the management of cumulative effects though freshwater limits.”
The horticulture sector plays a vital role in food security in New Zealand. Approximately 80,000 hectares of land is used for producing fruit and vegetables, providing over 40,000 jobs. Over 80% of vegetables grown are for the domestic market, with many varieties of fruit also serving the New Zealand market.
HortNZ is also calling for the amendments to the RMA to include:
New Zealand needs a new healthcare model to address rising rates of obesity in rural communities, with the current system leaving many patients unable to access effective treatment or long-term support, warn GPs.
Southland farmers are being urged to put safety first, following a spike in tip offs about risky handling of wind-damaged trees
Third-generation Ashburton dairy farmers TJ and Mark Stewart are no strangers to adapting and evolving.
When American retail giant Cosco came to audit Open Country Dairy’s new butter plant at the Waharoa site and give the green light to supply their American stores, they allowed themselves a week for the exercise.
Fonterra chair Peter McBride says the divestment of Mainland Group is their last significant asset sale and signals the end of structural changes.
Thirty years ago, as a young sharemilker, former Waikato farmer Snow Chubb realised he was bucking a trend when he started planting trees to provide shade for his cows, but he knew the animals would appreciate what he was doing.

OPINION: Your old mate welcomes the proposed changes to local government but notes it drew responses that ranged from the reasonable…
OPINION: A press release from the oxygen thieves running the hot air symposium on climate change, known as COP30, grabbed your…