Tuesday, 04 July 2023 15:55

Cream of the crop honoured

Written by  Staff Reporters
PINZ Emerging Leader Award winner Dr Louise Hennessy of AgResearch, with Professor Grant Edwards, Vice-Chancellor at award sponsor Lincoln University. Photo Credit: Neil Mackenzie PINZ Emerging Leader Award winner Dr Louise Hennessy of AgResearch, with Professor Grant Edwards, Vice-Chancellor at award sponsor Lincoln University. Photo Credit: Neil Mackenzie

Teams and individuals whose talents and work to help New Zealand farmers, foresters and fishers thrive and what they produce were honoured at the 2023 Primary Industries New Zealand Awards last night.

The awards evening, part of the fifth annual Primary Industries New Zealand (PINZ) Summit, saw nine winners announced at Tākina, Wellington’s new Convention and Exhibition Centre.

A mark of the fact that science and research so often underpin solutions to gnarly environmental, climate and production challenges is that AgResearch personnel took out three of the coveted trophies.

The Science & Research Award went to the AgResearch Endophyte Discovery Team for their development and commercialisation of strains of ryegrass with improved insect protection and plant persistence, coupled with fewer adverse effects on animal health.

Scientist Dr Louise Hennessy claimed the Emerging Leader Award for her efforts at AgResearch and other crown research institutes championing support for early career researchers and a learning approach that blends matauranga Māori with western science.

Another AgResearch scientist, Dr Dave Leathwick, was presented with the Primary Industries Champion Award.

Leathwick was praised by the awards judging panel for his knowledge sharing and effective communication. They said Leathwick demonstrated “an unwavering commitment to the rural sector”, in particular championing parasite control and anthelmintic drug resistance management.

On the environmental front, DairyNZ’s Tararua Plantain Project and Adam Thompson of Restore Native Ltd were heralded. The plantain project started in 2018 and with the help of 80 Tararua dairy farmers, dairy companies, government and research partners, DairyNZ has been able to show that with 30% of plantain in pasture sward, nitrogen loss reductions of up to 50% are possible. The project won the Team & Collaboration Award.

A love of restoring land saw former mortgage broker Adam Thompson become one of New Zealand’s most passionate advocates for our native trees and biodiversity. His Cambridge nursery grows more than a million native trees to plant on farms and he leads by example, being well on his way to meeting his personal target of digging in 250,000 trees on his own beef finishing farm. He was presented with the Kaitiakitanga/Guardianship & Conservation Award.

The Fibre Producer Award went to Kaituna-based sawmill OneFortyOne for what judges said was a “relentless drive” for improvement and adding value and, in large part by using their own fibre to power their kilms, dropping the sawmill’s greenhouse gas emissions by nearly half in the last decade.

To cap the evening, the Outstanding Contribution Award was presented. Hot contenders were outgoing DairyNZ Chief Executive Dr Tim Mackle and veteran Country Calendar producer and director Julian O’Brien but the winner was Professor Keith Woodford.

The Honorary Professor of Agri-Food Systems at Lincoln University was recognised for his "long and meritorious" contribution to New Zealand’s primary industries spanning five decades.

An agriculture economist, Prof Woodford has taught generations of New Zealanders, run immersion courses for upcoming sector leaders, and contributed to or supervised many research activities.

Judges said his continued research and writing on current topics - A2 milk, composting barns, mycoplasma, greenhouse gases and forestry in farming systems, to name a few - "has explained these complicated areas to many".

More like this

Bye bye Paris?

OPINION: At its recent annual general meeting, Federated Farmers’ Auckland province called for New Zealand to withdraw from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

What's going on?

OPINION: On the 2nd of May, Agriculture Minister Todd McClay announced that the 'government remains on track to ban full farm-to-forestry conversion'.

Featured

NZEI unhappy with funding cut for teachers

Education union NZEI Te Riu Roa says that while educators will support the Government’s investment in learning support, they’re likely to be disappointed that it has been paid for by defunding expert teachers.

EU regulations unfairly threaten $200m exports

A European Union regulation ensuring that the products its citizens consume do not contribute to deforestation or forest degradation worldwide threatens $200m of New Zealand beef and leather exports.

Bionic Plus back on vet clinic shelves

A long-acting, controlled- release capsule designed to protect ewes from internal parasites during the lambing period is back on the market following a comprehensive reassessment.

National

Machinery & Products

New Holland combines crack 50 years

New Holland is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the introduction its Twin Rotor threshing and separation technology, which has evolved…

Iconic TPW Woolpress turns 50!

The company behind the iconic TPW Woolpress, which fundamentally changed the way wool is baled in Australia and New Zealand,…

» Latest Print Issues Online

The Hound

Double standards

OPINION: Imagine if the Hound had called the Minister of Finance the 'c-word' and accused her of "girl math".

Debt monster

OPINION: It's good news that Finance Minister Nicola Willis has slashed $1.1 billion from new spending, citing "a seismic global…

» Connect with Rural News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter