fbpx
Print this page
Wednesday, 02 March 2016 06:55

MIE ‘noise’ won’t bring change – BLNZ

Written by  Pam Tipa
Beef + Lamb chair James Parsons. Beef + Lamb chair James Parsons.

No amount of noise from farmer ginger groups will bring change in the meat industry if the company boards choose not to adopt the measures they are calling for.

So says Beef+Lamb NZ chairman James Parson.

That's one reason Beef+Lamb NZ does not support further funding of Meat Industry Excellence (MIE) initiatives.

"That doesn't for a second say that Beef+Lamb has no desire for a better structure and better returns for farmers. We just can't see how funding MIE is going to achieve any of the stated goals that they have," Parsons told Rural News.

"At the end of the day it needs to be driven by the people that have the levers around these commercial companies. The boards of the companies need to be getting together.

"If they have no appetite, no matter how much lobbying and noise that farmer ginger groups make, if the board chooses not to adopt some of those measures it is just not going to happen.

"That is despite MIE having endorsed candidates being elected onto the boards of some of those co-ops."

Regarding further funding to MIE, Parsons says "we felt these guys had done a lot of work with considerable effort – they are very passionate farmers that want structural reform and there is nothing wrong with that.

"However, they've already done a significant amount of work – the Pathways report which is farmer funded through B+LNZ levy investment – and despite all their efforts they haven't been successful to date in terms of achieving that structural reform.

"If anything it is further away with the Silver Fern Farms shareholder vote, which was strongly in support of the deal with Shanghai Maling.

"MIE has also had no support from the boards of the two cooperatives. So for B+LNZ to further fund MIE to push their agenda – when clearly there is no appetite for change from the board or the shareholders of one of the cooperatives – would not be wise investment."

MIE have also proposed in a remit to the B+LNZ annual meeting, on March 23, that the two positions of processor representatives on the B+LNZ board be removed and replaced initially with directors of MIE.

Parsons says a review of the B+LNZ constitution is also underway – which it committed to mid last year. They will discuss the review at this year's winter meetings with farmers.

"We already started the process of looking at the constitution. We already had some board papers on it when their (MIE) remit came through.

"We also didn't think it would be appropriate for MIE to then put up directors. They are a small group of enthusiastic farmers.

"There is a process we would need to run if we were to have independents on the board - we changed the governance structure to not have processor nominated directors there.

"It wouldn't be appropriate for MIE to then have the right to put those directors up."

In a newsletter to farmers, MIE chairman Dave McGaveston says B+LNZ has done a good job behind the farmgate, but needs to step outside its comfort zone and swing support behind MIE's approach to resolve the issues beyond the farmgate.

He says if the Silver Fern Farm deal with Shanghai Maling goes through, most pundits are predicting the procurement war will end with an eventual foreign monopoly of our supply chain.

"What's increasingly obvious as we lose a million plus sheep every year, year on year that the best efforts of B+LNZ are not working," he says.

"It is time our farmer organisation had a makeover."

There has been no attempt to come to grips with the issues and solutions identified in the Pathways Report, McGaveston says.

"The Red Meat Strategy report identified that over 50% of farmers lack the wherewithal to adequately reinvest in their business.

"There is no doubt the red meat sector is on a knife edge and there is no doubt the problems are both imminent and urgent."

More like this

RMA amendments 'will be a relief to farmers'

The Government’s announcement that a Bill to amend the Resource Management Act (RMA) could be introduced in Parliament next month will be a relief to farmers, says Beef + Lamb New Zealand (B+LNZ).

Still a slow boat to China!

Hopes of NZ sheepmeat prices picking up anytime soon in the country's key export market of China looks highly unlikely.

Featured

Vaccinate against new lepto strain

A vet is calling for all animals to be vaccinated against a new strain of leptospirosis (lepto) discovered on New Zealand dairy farms in recent years.

TV series to combat food waste

Rural banker Rabobank is partnering with Food Rescue Kitchen on a new TV series which airs this weekend that aims to shine a light on the real and growing issues of food waste, food poverty and social isolation in New Zealand.

National

Celebrating success

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

Cyclone's devastating legacy

One of the country's top Māori sheep and beef farms is facing a five-year battle to get back to where it…

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.