Otago Daily Times

Support for wool levy comes with proviso

- SALLY RAE

FEDERATED Farmers says it will support the reintroduc­tion of a compulsory wool levy, but only if there is a sound plan of action.

Without that plan, the industry was facing ‘‘death by a thousand cuts’’, Federated Farmers meat and wool chairman Miles Anderson said.

‘‘My fear is that the next time there is a downturn in sheep meat prices, we’ll lose a critical amount of breeding stock from the sector and, ultimately, we could see a hollowing out of rural economies, with mass treeplanti­ng on productive farmland,’’ he said in a statement.

This week, the rural lobby organisati­on’s meat and wool council voted to support a levy, provided the Wool Working Group came up with a ‘‘clear, practicabl­e and compelling’’ blueprint for lifting the fibre’s profile and returns.

The group, made up of 20 wool producers, processors and other industry representa­tives, was formed last year and charged with developing a pansector action plan.

It already had assurances of government support for an initial period to set up a governance and staff structure to bed in an industryag­reed plan.

The council’s vote to advocate for a levy, on a proven plan and structure, was to show farming leaders were committed to the cause, Mr Anderson said.

In the past decade, two farmer votes on a levy were not successful.

The more recent one was in 2014. That followed extensive work by the Wool Levy Review Group, a pansector group establishe­d in 2012 to investigat­e col lective grower investment.

Federated Farmers believed there was widespread recognitio­n among farmers that there was now urgency for the entire sector — farmer through to manufactur­er — to ‘‘get on the same page’’ and win the market share the fibre deserved, Mr Anderson said.

The council also voted in favour of Federated Farmers advocating for the Wool Research Organisati­on of New Zealand (Wronz) for additional research and developmen­t to be funded for strong wool, and greater transparen­cy on funded projects.

At yesterday’s South Island wool sale in Christchur­ch, prices for almost all wool styles and types were largely unchanged from the previous sale.

Despite the current market levels, most growers had fav oured meeting the market, reflected by the good clearance in the sale room, PGG Wrightson Wool’s South Island sales team said.

A range of prices.—

Est E T Beattie & Son (Outram), nine bales Perendale secondshea­r AA, 35.8 micron, 80.7% yield, 254 greasy, 315 clean; R Ruxton (Outram), 22 bales crossbred AA, 37.6 micron, 80.4% yield, 269 greasy; 335 clean.

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Qualified support . . . Federated Farmers will back a wool levy but requires a plan for lifting wool’s profile and returns; pictured, a woolhandle­r tosses a fleece at a competitio­n in Invercargi­ll last year.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Qualified support . . . Federated Farmers will back a wool levy but requires a plan for lifting wool’s profile and returns; pictured, a woolhandle­r tosses a fleece at a competitio­n in Invercargi­ll last year.

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