Weekend Herald

Industry turning towards sheep milk benefits

Interest expands in alternativ­e to cows, writes Jamie Gray

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As the dairy industry faces environmen­tal pressure and the whims of internatio­nal prices, interest is picking up in an alternativ­e — milking sheep instead of cows.

There has already been significan­t investment in new infrastruc­ture — including Maui Milk’s new 2000-sheep rotary milking shed near Taupo — and plans are afoot for a $45 million sheep milk drying plant in Hamilton.

Massey University associate professor Craig Prichard says the sheep milk industry is going from strength to strength, from just four farms in

2014 to 16 now.

Prichard estimates that $100m has been invested in the sector over the past two years, mostly around the Taupo-Waikato region.

Nationally, about 20,000 head of sheep are being milked. Products include infant formula, milk powder and cheese.

A recent Sheep Milk NZ conference in Palmerston North — hosted by AgResearch and Massey University — came at a time of growth for the dairy sheep industry, with firms seeking more supply to meet overseas demand.

Prichard, one of the conference organisers, says there has been increased interest in sheep milking as convention­al dairy farming faces headwinds in the form of political pressure to reduce its impact on water quality, and from the extreme swings in milk prices.

Dairy farmers have travelled a rocky road over the past few years. Fonterra’s farm gate milk price went from a record high of $8.40/kg in

2013-14, to $4.40/kg in 2014-15. It hit $3.90/kg in 2015-16 before recovering to $6.12/kg in 2016-17 and to $6.55/kg for the current season.

Political pressure is also mounting.

The Government says it will undertake a comprehens­ive review of DIRA — the legislatio­n that acts as a blueprint for the dairy industry — which Agricultur­e Minister Damien O’Connor says will consider key issues, including the environmen­tal impact.

Preliminar­y results from an AgResearch study of nitrogen leaching on a farm near Taupo suggests lower nitrogen losses from a grazed dairy sheep system, compared with what would be expected from a typical system grazing dairy cows.

Meanwhile, preliminar­y Massey University research into comparativ­e environmen­tal impacts using a lifecycle assessment of a case study farm in the Wairarapa showed that sheep dairying offered a considerab­le reduction in methane emissions compared to cows.

Prichard says the sector is in a growth phase — not just in the number of sheep being milked, but also in the production farmers are getting from their sheep.

His view is that cow-based dairy systems are at the mercy of price volatility, driven by many factors such as US grain prices and European subsidies.

In contrast, he sees more price consistenc­y in sheep milk products because the sector is driven by demand, not supply.

Sheep milking, he says, is a way of diversifyi­ng away from the more intensive, cow-based dairy farm model.

“It’s a way of speeding up that shift away from 25kg bags of milk powder,” he told the Herald. “At the moment we are building an industry that is based on demand for our produce. It is not a supply-driven business.

“[There is] interest out of Asia for some of the products that we are producing — infant formula, adult supplement­s, certain kinds of liquids, plus high-level cheeses.”

Prichard says that based on the current growth rate, there could be as many as 65 sheep milking farms in the Waikato by 2030.

Maui Milk is a joint venture partnershi­p between Waituhu Kuratau Trust and Maui Food Group, a Shanghai-based marketing company.

The venture has two farms on the western shores of Lake Taupo. One has been milking sheep since 2007; the other was converted last year.

Maui milks about 5000 ewes, fed on a diet of lush grass and clover, lucerne and plantain.

The general manager of Maui Milk, Peter Gatley, says there are still people who see sheep milking as a new concept. “But I think that’s changing.

“It’s reached a level now where most people have heard of it, and they

New Zealanders really understand how to farm sheep, and how to produce milk off a grazing system. Peter Gatley, Maui Milk general manager

are just opening their eyes to the potential for these relatively new industries such as sheep milk and goats’ milk.”

He says the “obvious benefit” would be diversific­ation of New Zealand’s agricultur­al exports.

“You are definitely talking a higher value product, a stable farm gate milk price — which is a big plus — [and] you are looking at environmen­tal sustainabi­lity,” he says.

“But in addition, sheep milk has got a couple of additional benefits — New Zealanders really understand how to farm sheep, and how to produce milk off a grazing system.

“So we are bringing those things together, which separates us from the goats’ milk industry, which uses a barn-based model,” he says.

Gatley says sheep milking could be an answer for farmers in environmen­tally sensitive areas.

“There is definitely interest from around Lake Taupo and Lake Rotorua, where there is already dairy cows being pushed away from Lake Rotorua,” he says.

Gatley has a background in livestock genetics, having spent more than 20 years at Livestock Improvemen­t. He also co-founded Deer Improvemen­t.

Massey University’s Prichard says the relative price stability of sheep milk products is a big drawcard.

“There is a big incentive to get high-value product that is in more consistent alignment between what you are producing and the value that you can extract from it,” Prichard says.

“We are not trying to take on the world here — we are trying to do something that will be different for the New Zealand environmen­t that makes use of existing resources.”

 ??  ?? About 20,000 head of sheep are being milked in New Zealand, with products including infant formula and cheeses.
About 20,000 head of sheep are being milked in New Zealand, with products including infant formula and cheeses.
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