China’s new beef tariffs expected to favour New Zealand exporters
Additional tariffs introduced by the Chinese Government last month on beef imports should favour New Zealand farmers and exporters.
The sheep industry is in rapid decline and can’t afford to make any more wrong decisions, says Silver Fern Farms shareholder Allan Richardson.
He believes Silver Fern Farms needs to investigate whether a $100 million in savings from consolidation projected by a Meat Industry Excellence report is an option before going down the foreign investment track.
By raising the support of 5% of the shareholders Richardson has forced a special meeting to consider whether the board should fully investigate a potential merger with Alliance Group.
Alliance shareholders Jeff Grant and Gaye Cowie are working to reach the same 5% threshold in Alliance, to also trigger a special meeting to consider the same resolution.
The resolution asks for an analysis of potential benefits and risks of a Silver Fern Farms and Alliance merger into one cooperative entity, along with a risk mitigation plan verified by an independent firm.
“There are projected $100m savings in the latest Meat Industry Excellence [plan] and the board is looking for $100m capital,” he says. “You would think they would examine that first before going down the foreign capital track. Instead of making foreign capital the first option, let’s make it the last one.”
Richardson claims he does not oppose foreign capital in principle, but is concerned about implications for ownership down the track. “We’re not talking a full merger here; in the current cultures that wouldn’t work. But there are areas where the two companies can work together.”
The sheep industry is in rapid decline and hasn’t got too much freeboard left, Richardson says. Decisions are needed to turn the company and the industry around. “If we get it wrong the implications are far reaching,” he says.
Since 2008 both companies have talked but there has only been “one willing dance partner” at any one time. “There will be two companies at the dance now.”
New Zealand's diverse cheesemaking talent shone brightly last night as the New Zealand Specialist Cheesemakers Association (NZSCA) crowned the champions of the 2026 New Zealand Cheese Awards.
Tracing has indicated that the source of the first velvetleaf find of the 2025-26 crop season, in Auckland, was likely maize purchased in the Waikato region.
Fish & Game New Zealand has announced its election priorities in its Manifesto 2026.
With the forage maize harvest started in Northland and the Waikato, the Foundation for Arable Research (FAR) is telling growers of later crops, or those further south, to start checking their maize crop maturity about three weeks prior to when they think they will start silage harvesting.
Irrigation NZ is warning that the government's Resource Management Act (RMA) reform risks falling short of its objectives unless water use for food production and water storage infrastructure are clearly recognised in the goals at the top of the new system.
More than five million trays, or 18,000 tonnes, of Zespri’s RubyRed Kiwifruit will soon be available for consumers across 16 markets this season.