fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 18 November 2014 00:00

Feds, Landcorp plan water talks

Written by 
Landcorp chief executive Steven Carden. Landcorp chief executive Steven Carden.

LANDCORP AND Federated Farmers plan to talk in the next few weeks about issues including water allocation in the upper Waikato catchment.

 Feds provincial president for Rotorua/Taupo, Allan Wills, says as many as 60 dairy farmers in the catchment fear they will be denied enough water to wash down their dairy sheds. 

Wills claims this is because Wairakei Pastoral, the owner of large landholdings now being converting to dairying, has gained consents for most of the available water in the catchment. Landcorp manages the farms for Wairakei Pastoral.

Wills acknowledges Wairakei Pastoral acquired the water consents by legal and legitimate means, but questions the ethics of its move. 

Farmers had the same opportunity as Wairakei Pastoral to apply for the water consents, but these were awarded by the regional council on a first-come, first-served basis and local farmers missed out.

Says Wills, “The Wairakei Pastoral Landcorp partnership needs to be part of the solution. Every farmer has to have consent to use water for cleaning stock sheds. Stock water and domestic water is guaranteed, but the problem is with the water used for irrigation and shed wash-down.”

Landcorp chief executive Steven Carden says while he knows Federated Farmers’ concerns about water allocation, it’s the regional council that allocates the water. Wairakei Pastoral, as the owners of the land in question, applied for the water consents in 2011 and gained these in 2012. The water is essentially for stock and for shed wash-down, with some provision for irrigation. Only about 14% of the Wairakei estate is irrigated, Carden says.

“Landcorp and Wairakei Pastoral will have to sit around the table and work out the options. It’s certainly not Landcorp’s aim to see people disadvantaged.” 

Carden says the meeting with Federated Farmers, in early December, will be part of a wider dialogue Landcorp is having with its stakeholders. Landcorp wants to be open about what it is doing and give others an opportunity to engage with the company and see what can happen as a result of that dialogue.

More like this

Strong growth in farm salaries - report

A new report shows farm employers across the dairy, sheep and beef, and arable sectors have continued to invest strongly in one of their greatest assets – their staff.

Feds back Fast-Track Approval Bill

Federated Farmers is throwing its support behind the Fast-track Approvals Bill introduced by the Coalition Government to enable a fast-track decision-making process for infrastructure and development projects.

Farmers oppose work visa changes

Farmers are crying foul over changes announced by the Government this week to the Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV) scheme.

Featured

Rural Change to merge with RST

The Rural Change programme, providing free private mental health professional sessions to the rural industry, is set to continue its next chapter within Rural Support Trust from 1 July 2024.

Strong growth in farm salaries - report

A new report shows farm employers across the dairy, sheep and beef, and arable sectors have continued to invest strongly in one of their greatest assets – their staff.

National

Celebrating success

The Director General of MPI, Ray Smith says it's important for his department to celebrate the success of a whole…

Machinery & Products

Factory clocks up 60 years

There can't be many heavy metal fans who haven’t heard of Basildon, situated about 40km east of London and originally…

PM opens new Power Farming facility

Morrinsville based Power Farming Group has launched a flagship New Zealand facility in partnership with global construction manufacturer JCB Construction.