Pukerau Winter Grazing Field Day to Help Southland Farmers Prepare for Season
Southland farmers are being encouraged to get ahead of the winter grazing season by attending a practical field day in Pukerau next week.
National’s agriculture spokespeople Barbara Kuriger and Joseph Mooney have added their voices to the chorus of people asking the Government to delay winter grazing regulations.
The regulations come into effect in November this year, with many saying local councils are ill equipped to handle the influx of resource consents they will receive as a result of the new regulations.
Industry bodies Federated Farmers, Beef+Lamb New Zealand and DairyNZ have all requested the Government delay the introduction of the regulations until November 2023.
“Under Environment Minister David Parker’s regulations, farmers must have a certified freshwater farm plan for winter grazing on sloping land. If they do not have a certified plan, they must obtain a resource consent,” Kuriger says.
Two years on from the passing of the regulations, the Ministry for the Environment has not completed a framework which would allow farmers to certify farm plans, Kuriger says.
“Officials have indicated the framework will not be ready this year.”
Already, the regulations have been delayed twice. The first time was in 2021 and it saw the rules delayed until May this year. Then, in May, the regulations were delayed once again.
“Because the guidelines will not be ready, many thousands of farmers will have no alternative but to apply for resource consents for their winter grazing.
“Officials say as many as 10,000 resource consents will be required, while industry estimates are higher,” says Kuriger, adding that each application could cost as much as $10,000.
Joseph Mooney, MP for Southland and National’s associate spokesman for agriculture, says farmers are already facing the highest inflation in over 30 years, “adding $100 million in unnecessary costs is a kick in the guts for New Zealand’s most productive sector”.
“The worst part is that forcing farmers to apply for consents is unlikely to achieve any environmental gains.”
“If New Zealand’s regional councils were to suddenly receive 10,000 applications, the consenting teams would inevitably be swamped, meaning the process would likely become a box-ticking exercise.”
The regulations come into effect on 1 November 2022 ahead of the 2023 winter grazing period.
Federated Farmers says the Government’s latest investment in road resilience is a positive step toward protecting rural communities and freight routes from increasing severe weather events.
The stockfood storage capacity of J Swap Stockfoods continues to grow in the South Island with the opening of a new store that boosts its capacity in Christchurch and work starting on another store in Southland.
Fonterra has lifted and narrowed its full year forecast earnings range to 60-70 cents per share after a strong quarter, supported by robust milk production, strong shipment volumes and continued demand across its Ingredients and Foodservice businesses.
Fonterra has announced it will continue with the planned expansion of its organic business into the South Island.
New Zealand farmers have been told they all have amazing people on their farms and have been urged to be “that one person” that can make a huge difference to those going through tough times.
OPINION: For thousands of Southland farmers, this week would have tipped them into the non-compliant category when it comes to following regional freshwater plan rules. But the Government has stepped in to give them the clarity they deserve.