Trade experts warn of US tariff risks to NZ exports
Two leading New Zealand trade experts warn that the 15% tariff slapped by the US shouldn't be taken lightly.
NEW ZEALAND'S middle-of-the-road 'space' in export markets has a potential three billion people, Trade Minister Tim Groser says.
"Our space in the market has not been always at the absolute top end. That's for Louis Vuitton and companies like that," he said at the recent opening of dairy-based manufacturing and marketing company New Image Group's new $10 million plant at Penrose, Auckland.
"It certainly isn't at the low end – it's that middle... [where] we do well, whether it is tourism, education or food and beverages. That's New Zealand's space and it's a very good space to be in.
"We now have through the extraordinary economic development occurring in emerging Asia, a middle class that is our market and it did not really exist in a meaningful way until recently.
"It is now about 500 million and all the projections tell us that as soon as 2030... that's going to be 3 billion people.
"That is our market; China is the single most important part of that. I am also very conscious of other great countries like India, Indonesia, Philippines – all of these other countries have a great future ahead of them."
Groser jointly opened the new plant with New Image executive chairman Graeme Clegg.
Among new capabilities of New Image's Penrose plant is HPP technology used to manufacture its new health drink called Col + colostrums to add to the company's range of colostrum-based health products
New Zealand dairy farmers are set to be the first in the world to receive access to a new digital physical milk pricing tool that enables them to fix the price for their physical milk.
State farmer Pāmu is opening its farm gates this summer in an effort to give the rural sector the opportunity to see how large-scale, multi-system farming is delivering productivity and profitability across New Zealand.
A five-year study has found that the cost of reducing emissions without technology may be significant and unsustainable for Northland dairy farmers.
DairyNZ says Waikato farmers need certainty on Plan Change 1, but they say that certainty must be matched with practical, workable rules and a clear transition that doesn't get ahead of the new resource management system currently under review.
While the Government has moved quickly to make commercial hauliers' lot easier during the current fuel crisis, they appear to be stuck in the creep box when it comes to the agricultural industry.
Waikato farmers have been told that the Government’s new planning system legislation and the region’s Plan Change 1 (PC1) “won’t mesh together very well”.