Otago Daily Times

Leaders discuss sustainabl­e farming

- SALLY RAE

AGRICULTUR­E, as a whole, needs to be brave.

That was the takehome message for North Otago dairy farmer Lyndon Strang after attending the annual DairyNZ Dairy Environmen­t Leaders Forum in Wellington recently.

The threeday event was attended by nearly 100 dairy farming leaders who discussed sustainabl­e farming and progressed goals for the future.

Mr Strang and his wife Jane milk 450 cows at Five Forks and run a selfcontai­ned operation, wintering all cows, rearing young stock and growing the majority of their supplement­s.

The couple aimed to run a business that provided good returns, had minimal impact on the environmen­t, and was a place where people enjoyed working.

Mr Strang has held leadership roles in Federated Farmers and, earlier this year, received the rural lobby organisati­on’s farming message award.

He was a driving force behind the North Otago Sustainabl­e Land Management Group and particular­ly enjoyed working with and educating those outside agricultur­e on what was being done in the sector to reduce its environmen­tal footprint.

The sector needed to ‘‘frontfoot things’’ rather than waiting to be told what to do when it came to issues like global warming and greenhouse gas emissions, he said.

When it came to water quality, it was about taking leadership and ‘‘not waiting to analyse everything’’.

‘‘If it looks wrong, [or] if it feels wrong, it is wrong. So change your habits,’’ he said.

It was reassuring that experts speaking at the forum emphasised that none of the legislatio­n wanted to ‘‘put farming under’’. That was not the intent.

New Zealand needed a strong farming sector and economy but there were some environmen­tal issues that needed addressed, Mr Strang said.

The only way farmers would get their ‘‘social licence’’ back was by teaming up with their urban counterpar­ts and stakeholde­rs and working together.

Things also needed to be looked at from the global customer’s perspectiv­e and what they wanted around animal welfare, looking after people and the environmen­t.

It also reinforced what was being done through catchment groups in Otago was ‘‘bang on’’.

‘‘Farmerled and communityl­ed catchment groups just getting on and doing things in Otago is the gold,’’ he said.

Having a strong dairy industry was also crucial. To make good environmen­tal social changes within farming, money was needed.

‘‘If you’re not in the black, you’re not in the green,’’ he said.

Programme chairwoman Tracy Brown said the forum was geared at developing and empowering dairy farming leaders to shape a sustainabl­e future for the sector and its communitie­s.

In its sixth year in its current format, this year it hosted around 50 new dairy farmers, expanding the programme’s dairy farmer base to 300 nationwide.

Keynote speaker was Dunedin businessma­n and technology entreprene­ur Ian Taylor, who talked about how to inspire everyone to work together to get the best results for New Zealand.

 ??  ?? Lyndon Strang
Lyndon Strang

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