The Gold Coast Bulletin

Honey producers burnt

Beekeepers will take ‘several years’ to recover

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CAPILANO honey owner Hive + Wellness says important beekeeping areas suffered “devastatin­g” impacts during the bushfire crisis, with the consequenc­es “even worse than feared” and potentiall­y requiring several years of recovery.

Hive + Wellness chief operating officer Ben McKee (pictured), who recently visited drought and bushfire-affected beekeepers throughout Queensland, New South

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Wales and Victoria, said many family-owned businesses were under significan­t stress.

“In some ways it was even worse than we feared,” he said yesterday. “We saw vast swathes of burnt and droughtstr­icken country with little in the way of flora for bees to feed on. Many of our beekeeping mates have lost hives, while the long-term impact of lost bushland is devastatin­g.”

Mr McKee said despite recent rainfall, it would take

“several years” for some of these areas to regenerate and once again sustain healthy beehives.

“There won’t be sufficient food for some time,” he said.

Mr McKee warned that an ailing beekeeping industry could also potentiall­y damage Australia’s agricultur­al industry, as honey bee pollinatio­n played a vital role in the production of crops like almonds, avocadoes, and blueberrie­s. He said beekeepers, the nation’s

“forgotten farmers”, needed urgent government support.

“I believe our politician­s understand this, and we will work with them in any way needed to secure the assistance so desperatel­y needed by beekeepers,” Mr McKee said.

In November Hive + Wellness flagged shoppers would almost certainly be stung by higher honey prices as supply tightened and beekeepers struggled to keep their hives alive during drought.

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