Nestle reportedly withdraws from methane accord
The ACT Party says media reports that global dairy giant Nestle has withdrawn from the Dairy Methane Action Alliance shows why New Zealand needs to rethink its approach to climate.
The Act Party is asking the Government to be transparent and clear with farmers regarding the potential for an outbreak of Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) in Australia.
“The party that subjected Kiwis to a daily broadcast from the podium of truth through Covid owes it to farmers to tell them the plan for Foot-and-Mouth,” says Act’s primary industries spokesperson Mark Cameron.
“The primary sector is our economic powerhouse, it accounts for $52.2 billion in export revenue, 81.8% of our trade, 11.1% of GDP, and employs hundreds of thousands of people,” he says.
Cameron says an outbreak of FMD in New Zealand would cripple the nation.
“It would shut the export industry down for months, or even years. The livelihoods of many hard-working farmers would go up in smoke and our wider economy would take a hit that is estimated to be around $15 billion,” he says.
“As the risk of incursion increases, the Government needs to be ready to pull out all the stops, and farmers need to know what the plan is.”
Cameron says he has heard from farmers across New Zealand who say that FMD would be “the straw that broke the camel’s back.
“They’ve already piggybacked our economy through Covid, any incursion would do lasting damage to our prosperity that would take decades to recover from.
“As the disease is rampaging across many tourist hotspots, our biosecurity system is our sole line of defence. All practical measures need to be in place to provide reassurance to rural New Zealand.
“No one will begrudge biosecurity officials for conducting stricter scrutiny at the border, the stakes are too high not to.
“Getting this wrong, almost doesn’t bare thinking about.”
The National Wild Goat Hunting Competition has removed 33,418 wild goats over the past three years.
New Zealand needs a new healthcare model to address rising rates of obesity in rural communities, with the current system leaving many patients unable to access effective treatment or long-term support, warn GPs.
Southland farmers are being urged to put safety first, following a spike in tip offs about risky handling of wind-damaged trees
Third-generation Ashburton dairy farmers TJ and Mark Stewart are no strangers to adapting and evolving.
When American retail giant Cosco came to audit Open Country Dairy’s new butter plant at the Waharoa site and give the green light to supply their American stores, they allowed themselves a week for the exercise.
Fonterra chair Peter McBride says the divestment of Mainland Group is their last significant asset sale and signals the end of structural changes.

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