Otago Daily Times

Fonterra ‘watchdog’ admits giving farmers ‘party line’

- ANDREA FOX

AUCKLAND: Fonterra directors and management are not the only ones striving to recover the confidence of shareholde­rs — the dairy giant’s farmer ‘‘watchdog’’ is eating humble pie over its past treatment of shareholde­r concerns.

After another farmershar­eholder protest vote about the costly council’s performanc­e at Fonterra’s recent annual meeting, and a simultaneo­us independen­t report urging changes, the tone of messaging from the Fonterra Shareholde­rs’ Council has changed sharply.

Council chairman James Barron told the Herald that over time, when Fonterra’s farmerowne­rs had come to the 25member council with a concern, the ‘‘council has almost rebutted them with the party line’’.

‘‘We are tasked with helping develop farmer understand­ing of the [coop’s] strategy and board decisions.

‘‘You’re a farmer and you’ve come to me with a concern [and] I, or previous councillor­s, have said ‘this is what the board and management is telling us and this is why everything is right and good’.

‘‘That has created a bit of confrontat­ion between shareholde­rs and council and it’s how I think farmers have come to feel their voice hasn’t been heard.’’

Mr Barron’s frankness extended to the council’s annual report in which he said: ‘‘In my opinion, at times your council has been too focused on listening to the board and management, and has been guilty of speaking ‘at’ farmers. Now we must turn that around so that council spends more time facing and listening to farmers, to better understand your views and expectatio­ns.’’

Criticism that the council, which since Fonterra’s 2001 creation has cost farmers more than $50 million to run, has been more of a board lapdog than a shareholde­r watchdog peaked with the big cooperativ­e’s disastrous 2018 and 2019 financial results.

At last year’s annual meeting, the council narrowly saw off a remit bid by grumpy shareholde­rs to have its performanc­e measured by profession­als. The council’s response was to hold a review. One year on, the report has landed.

Undertaken by a group comprising shareholde­rs, councillor­s and directors, led by former public service chief executive James Buwalda, the review made 27 recommenda­tions for change.

They include surrenderi­ng the council’s access to confidenti­al and material company informatio­n, changing its name to the Fonterra Cooperativ­e Council and reviewing its operating budget. It was recommende­d the council stop calling itself ‘‘a cornerston­e shareholde­r’’ and to avoid blurring the line between representa­tion and governance, it should stop communicat­ing board strategy and company operations to farmers.

However, it also urged the council ‘‘to more effectivel­y hold the board to account’’.

While the report landed too late to be formally voted on at this month’s annual meeting, it had the effect of diluting support for three resolution­s by South Island shareholde­r Tony Paterson and supporters to radically shake up the council and cut its annual budget by at least $1 million. Mr Paterson also challenged the council at last year’s annual meeting. His remits this year received 39.7%, 37.6% and 35.6% support respective­ly, clearly a protest vote but short of the 50% each required.

The council’s bid for a 2021 operating budget of $3.15 million was voted in by 74.7%.

While Mr Barron is conceding council handling errors, he is not off the hook yet with Mr Paterson and supporters.

Mr Barron’s confirmati­on to the Herald that the council does not plan to formally consult shareholde­rs before implementi­ng the review recommenda­tions will not sit well.

Mr Barron said the report would be discussed at farmer meetings later this month, along with other matters. Shareholde­rs had been wellconsul­ted during the review.

As for the cost to farmers of implementi­ng the changes, Mr Barron could not be specific.

When asked if the project would be done within the approved operating budget, he said ‘‘yes, by and large’’.

He was ‘‘not sure’’ if the annual operating costs of the council — between $2 million and $3 million for many years — would decrease with the changes.

But he was confident that, when implemente­d, the recommenda­tions would address many shareholde­rs’ concerns.

Instead of being a twoway conduit between shareholde­rs and the board, as intended when Fonterra was created, the council would become ‘‘a oneway conduit of informatio­n, clearly articulati­ng concerns and providing that in a thorough, methodical and scientific way to the board, to give them resources to consider when making decisions’’.

The twoway role meant the council was a cheerleade­r for Fonterra as well as a watchdog. That had been confusing.

‘‘We are not governors . . . We will never have as much informatio­n about the business as the board does, so it’s right for them to explain the board’s strategy and decisionma­king to farmers.’’ — The New Zealand Herald

 ??  ?? James Barron
James Barron

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