Otago Daily Times

Alternativ­e foods an impetus for transition

- SALLY RAE

EMERITUS Prof Frank Griffin sees alternativ­e foods as a ‘‘wake up’’ call for convention­al farming.

Prof Griffin has spent a career in animal health research and also has a strong interest in New Zealand’s food production systems.

Speaking at the Otago Ballance Farm Environmen­t Awards field day at the Wallace family’s property in South Otago on Friday, he said alternativ­e foods were an opportunit­y if handled the right way.

There were big issues in farming and the sector was dealing with a new set of challenges ‘‘that didn’t exist for our grandparen­ts’’.

When it came to the future, traditiona­l farming could not be driven any further and the sector had to start reconsider­ing the way it did things — not necessaril­y getting bigger, but rather, perhaps getting smaller.

Sustainabi­lity, biodiversi­ty and greenhouse gas mitigation were all achievable goals for New Zealand farmers, and alternativ­e production systems and new technologi­es could get them there.

When it came to synthetic foods, Prof Griffin said farmers should not be afraid of the threat they posed.

Food processing and modificati­on had always been a very big business; food had always been open for manipulati­on.

Millennial­s were the future food consumer market and they were comfortabl­e with plantbased foods.

But those alternativ­e foods, which were always going to be commoditie­s, should provide the incentive to transition from traditiona­l farming practices.

They could never penetrate the highvalue food experience or ‘‘tell nature’s story’’. They would provide a vehicle for sustainabl­e land use and biodiversi­ty and convention­al farmers would provide most of the crops to create the alternativ­e foods.

New Zealand farmers had to get the right value for their quality food, which they had not traditiona­lly been getting.

‘‘If we get it right, we can beat them every time because we’ve got a story and a very special place this food comes from,’’ Prof Griffin said.

It had to be authentic; they must be able to show that the food came from a sustainabl­e system that conserved land, water and plant and animal genetic resources and was environmen­tally nondegradi­ng, technicall­y appropriat­e, economical­ly viable and socially acceptable.

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Going one better . . . Food processing and modificati­on has always been big business, Prof Frank Griffin says.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Going one better . . . Food processing and modificati­on has always been big business, Prof Frank Griffin says.

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