WORDS & IMAGES PROVIDED BY DAIRYNZ
Right now, on dairy farms around the country, farmers are managing feed, animals, budgets, machinery, and weather. They’re having conversations with their bankers and insurers and finding time for their kids.
That is just life for farming families, and everyone has to balance their own challenges.
In the background for farmers, as with other industries, are pending political cycles. These can bring changes to regulation, uncertainty while policy is decided upon, and a disconnect between national and local level while decisions are made.
To paraphrase Nuffield Scholar Kylie Leonard, it’s best for farmers to be at the table, rather than on the menu.
DairyNZ is an industry-good organisation, representing all 10,600 dairy farmers.
Our duty is to help keep them and their farming businesses moving forward.
In the past nine months of a changed government, we’ve seen several policy changes begin to roll out, including methane targets, agriculture out of the NZ ETS, further reform of the RMA, and the beginnings of a new pastoral sector group.
Much of this we’ve advocated for on behalf of farmers, and we welcome it - particularly in a time of high inflation and input costs. It is our job to keep engaging, and we do so with information supported by world-class scientists and farm system expertise.
We are submitting on behalf of farmers regarding climate targets and emissions reduction plans, immigration and workforce development, the Biosecurity Act and freshwater standards.
We are also following closely impending government changes to genetic technology regulation.
We do what we can to help get bipartisan support for regulations that are logical and support good farming practices. Hopefully, we can solidify those rules and not have them disrupted every few years.
DairyNZ has 17 years of science and research to specifically benefiting dairy farmers. It is important we share our knowledge with decision-makers to ground policy in reality.
Much of our knowledge aligns with the realities of the global market, which is changing the way we farm.
Just recently, at the Primary Industries NZ Summit, we heard from Rabobank that 80 percent of Zealand’s exports are destined for countries with mandatory climate-related disclosures either in force or on the way.
New Zealand dairy farmers have always innovated and will continue to do so.
This is the basis of New Zealand’s prosperity, and today we stand proud as an internationally competitive dairy farming nation.
We produce over 20 billion litres of milk a year and bring in $25 billion in export revenue. Dairy employs 55,000 people and last year accounted for about 36% of all New Zealand’s goods exports.
New Zealand dairy farmers have a solid reputation as producers of safe, low-emissions, high-quality milk who uphold the highest standards of care for animals and environment.
The success of dairy underpins the success of the New Zealand economy and the wellbeing of New Zealanders.
At the end of the day, farmers and politicians surely have a similar end goal – a prosperous, safe, secure country with strong links to the outside world.
It’s good to be at the table so that, on behalf of our farmers, we can chart a more enduring course for sustainable growth.
Because at the end of the day, when dairy does well, New Zealand does well.
Back to Real Farmer