Otago Daily Times

More effort needed to meet water goals

KPMG launched its annual Agribusine­ss Agenda at the National Fieldays at Mystery Creek yesterday, which features the latest insights relevant to the agribusine­ss sector. Agribusine­ss reporter Sally Rae takes a look at some of the issues identified by prim

- SALLY RAE

THE agrifood sector needs to ‘‘move with velocity’’ to deliver on the community’s desire for swimmable rivers and lakes, an industry report says.

KPMG’s latest Agribusine­ss Agenda said many commitment­s had been made by organisati­ons but they were piecemeal and had gaps.

A collective view of commitment­s made should be developed, projects developed to address gaps identified and a more ambitious timetable adopted.

It had become more difficult to hold a balanced conversati­on on water, due to the entrenched positions people held, the report said.

The benefits to the community that came from making water available — and the chance to unlock a diversity of higher value land uses — had become ‘‘lost in the noise’’.

The industry faced a significan­t challenge reestablis­hing its voice in relation to the responsibl­e management of water.

‘‘As one contributo­r suggested, the industry needs to convince the community that water does not have any impact on pollution; it is bad farming practices that cause pollution,’’ the report said.

The Government had indicated it would no longer provide seed funding to irrigation projects, making it even more challengin­g CLUTHASOUT­HLAND MP Hamish Walker has slammed the Ministry for Primary Industries’ moving day performanc­e as ‘‘woefully inadequate’’, saying some farmers were forced to leave stock on farms.

Permits were required for properties under movement restrictio­ns to move cattle to other farms for annual winter grazing, because of the Mycoplasma bovis incursion.

At a select committee meeting this week, Mr Walker questioned Agricultur­e and Biosecurit­y Minister Damien O’Con to utilise water effectivel­y.

There was a plentiful supply of water in New Zealand but it was not used effectivel­y. The industry needed to refocus on doing what was right and ensuring the country’s inherent water resources were used as responsibl­y as possible.

The central role that water and the environmen­t played in the election debate last year increased the focus on how aspects of the country’s natural environmen­t were used daily.

Through the coalition agreements, the new Government had placed the transition to a lowcarbon, environmen­tally sensitive country at the centre of its agenda.

The environmen­tal challenge facing the country had many dimensions. But it was too often simplified by mainstream media to a position that the primary sector was largely responsibl­e for environmen­tal decline across the country, and needed to take ownership in fixing the issue, the report said.

However, the pollution that closed many Auckland beaches over the summer was raised in conversati­ons as highlighti­ng it was not an ‘‘us or them’’ issue, but one that needed whole ofcommunit­y responses.

Economic opportunit­ies associated with more intensive production systems had resulted in some farmers seeking to extract more from their land than it was capable of giving.

Those farmers had impacted ecosystems and caused environmen­tal degradatio­n. The actions of the minority had resulted in all farmers being placed under increasing scrutiny.

The perception that farmers could no longer be trusted as guardians of the land was leading the industry towards tighter regulation, more onesizefit­sall remediatio­n, and increasing requiremen­ts to capture and report data.

That was an undesirabl­e path that would see much invested in managing perception­s, and significan­tly less in fundamenta­lly enhancing ecosystems for the benefit of current and future generation­s.

The key message from conversati­ons was clear — it was ‘‘not OK’’ to pollute the environmen­t in any way, and there needed to be significan­t consequenc­es for those that continued to do so.

It was also apparent the industry recognised restoring the environmen­t to meet the expectatio­ns of the wider community could not be done alone. It was going to require partnershi­ps.

Partnershi­ps could evolve by the government and community providing financial support to retire marginally productive land, returning it towards native planting, for instance, or through the community setting rules that provided the time and scope to allow farmers, growers and producers to transition their farming systems to a lowercarbo­n operating model.

There were many projects around the country where land owners, farmers, community groups, industry and government agencies had come together with a goal of improving environmen­tal outcomes.

Such collaborat­ion would require a mindset change for many farmers who had spent decades seeking to maximise production and yield.

That new focus would mean aligning their systems and deploying datarich technology to enable them to work in balance with the capacity of their ecosystem.

considered, Mr Bryan said.

The issue of waste milk transfer between farms, weaning of dairy calves and risks associated with bringing in (and back) service bulls would all be upon the industry quickly.

He urged MPI to develop strategies to manage those calendar events ‘‘well in advance’’ to best alleviate farmers’ concerns.

MPI has urged schools to think carefully about holding calf days this year, as a precaution.

The number of traced properties — the number of properties traced from infected properties — was now up to 3178.

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Seeking a balance . . . New Zealand’s plentiful supply of water is not being used effectivel­y, an industry report says.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Seeking a balance . . . New Zealand’s plentiful supply of water is not being used effectivel­y, an industry report says.

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