Palmerston North to host new recruitment programme
A new programme designed to attract young talent into New Zealand’s food and fibre sector, accelerate career paths and sector change is rolling out for young women in tertiary study or training.
Agri-Women’s Development Trust (AWDT) chair Linda Cooper has stepped down after three years serving the charitable trust.
As part of its succession planning and maturing governance model, trustees Murray Donald and Keri Johnston have been appointed as co-chairs and took up their roles on 1 June.
Cooper has served the trust since mid-2019, leading it through further growth and extension of its impact across the primary sector, from farms to boardrooms.
“We’ve come through some challenging times with the pandemic over the past couple of years as we committed to investing in our programmes, and our women and men to help meet the future needs of the primary sector,” she says.
“I am excited for the trust’s future with the new programmes rolling out, the continued support of our partners, new developing partnerships, and the talent around the board and staff tables.”
Cooper will continue her involvement with AWDT, the primary sector and women it works with through her role as a facilitator and coach on the trust’s Next Level leadership programme.
The appointment of longstanding AWDT trustee, Southland farmer and experienced governor Murray Donald, will ensure continuity on the board as it retains his strong financial and strategic skills.
Farmer, environmental consultant and natural resources engineer, Keri Johnston joined the AWDT board in 2021, bringing experience and skills from her role as chair of Irrigation NZ and vice chair of Timaru Girls High School. She is a graduate of AWDT’s Escalator leadership and governance programme.
As part of further succession plans and board progression, Jenni Vernon and Fi Dalgety will step down from the AWDT Board this year and the trust will recruit one more trustee.
This will reduce the total number of trustees from eight to five, including sitting trustees Anne-Marie Brougton and Poto Davies.
Āta Regenerative is bringing international expertise to New Zealand to help farmers respond to growing soil and water challenges, as environmental monitoring identifies declining ecosystem function and reduced water-holding capacity across farms.
Yili's New Zealand businesses have reported record profits following a major organisational and strategic transformation.
Owners and lessees of certain Hino Trucks New Zealand diesel vehicles have just 10 days remaining to register or opt out of a proposed $10.9 million class action settlement.
Silver Fern Farms has successfully produced and delivered 90 tonnes of premium chilled New Zealand lamb and beef to the United Arab Emirates via airfreight.
For the first three months of 2026, new tractor deliveries saw an increase over the previous two months, resulting in year-to-date deliveries climbing to 649 units - around 5% ahead of the same period in 2025.
QU Dongyu, director-general of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), has issued a warning saying that global fertiliser scarcity caused by disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz will lead to lower yields and tightening food supplies into 2027.