Processors, executives fined for exporting adulterated tallow
A group of meat processing companies, directors and managers have been fined a total of $1.6 million for deliberately and illegally altering exported tallow for profit.
The campaign to eradicate cattle disease Mycoplasma bovis could soon be handed over to Ospri.
The M. bovis Programme is currently a Government Industry Agreement between Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI), DairyNZ and Beef + Lamb New Zealand. It's co-funded, governed and operated by these three organisations.
To ensure the programme continues to adapt to the work that remains ahead and make the most of the significant gains made to date, programme partners back handling over the campaign to a specialist agency under a national pest management plan, says Simon Andrew, Director M. bovis Programme.
Andrew told Rural News that public consultation on this is proposed to take place in late 2023.
He says the governance group has nominated Ospri as the management agency as it has extensive expertise and experience in delivering successful disease eradication programmes over the long term, and an established rural network with strong stakeholder relationships.
Ospri manages the TBfree programme (to eradicate bovine tuberculosis) and the National Animal Identification and Trading (NAIT) programme. The NAIT system provides key information on the location and movement of cattle for both the M. bovi and TBfree programmes.
Andrew says the addition of the M. bovis programme to Ospri also provides the opportunity to realise operational cost efficiencies across programmes and deliver an integrated set of services to farmers.
M. bovis was first found on a farm in south Canterbury in 2017. However, the disease was spreading on farms before that - MPI believes it may have arrived in the country a few years earlier.
The plan to eradicate M. bovis was announced in 2018. It was expected to take 10 years and cost just under $900 million, with the price tag split between the government and industry bodies.
M. bovis is a bacterium found mostly in cattle and occasionally other animals like deer and sheep. It lives in the lungs and respiratory tract, and it’s usually passed on through nose-to-nose or other close contact between cattle.
According to MPI’s latest update, there were six active properties with the disease- all in the South Island.
The programme has completed over 3 million tests and 178,000 cattle have been culled.
Around $233m have been paid out in compensation to farmers. More than 2,800 claims have been paid with 13 claims still pending.
OPINION: Most people will be aware of the Government's plans to boost coal, oil and gas production to meet energy requirements.
AgriZeroNZ has entered a new partnership with Britain's national innovation agency, Innovate UK.
Twenty rural community hubs across New Zealand will receive $5,000 to upgrade their facilities having been selected as the winners of Rabobank's Community Hub Competition.
As the dairy industry prepares to celebrate its top achievers at an awards night this Saturday, attendees are being warned to be aware of protests planned outside the venue – Baypark Arena, Mount Mauganaui.
Beef + Lamb New Zealand (BLNZ) says the release of New Zealand's latest Greenhouse Gas Inventory clearly shows agriculture is playing its part in emissions reductions and there is no need for a price on agricultural emissions.
While opening the first electrode boiler at its Edendale site, Fonterra has announced a $70 million investment in two further new electrode boilers.