Otago Daily Times

Appointed to newly created role at bank

- SALLY RAE

DUNEDIN man Blake Holgate has been appointed as head of sustainabl­e business developmen­t at Rabobank New Zealand.

In the newly created role, Mr Holgate would would focus on helping the bank’s clients position themselves to best manage increasing environmen­tal, societal and market risk as well as ‘‘seizing opportunit­ies’’ created by a scarcity of resources and a growing global population, the bank said in a statement.

Mr Holgate has been with Rabobank since 2013, most recently as the sustainabi­lity and animal proteins analyst. Prior to joining Rabobank, he practised as an environmen­tal lawyer.

Brought up on a sheep and beef farm in South Otago, Mr Holgate said he was excited to move into the new role during what was ‘‘quite a transforma­tional period’’ for agricultur­e in New Zealand.

During his eight years with the bank, it had been an interestin­g time; the sector and farmers had faced a lot of pressure to focus on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

Those pressures were still there but it was probably the pace and scope of change that was different now.

When he first started, the freshwater regulatory space was starting to ‘‘amp up’’ — that was still there and had probably ‘‘gone up a gear’’ — but now it was also coming into climate change, greenhouse gas emissions, carbon and biodiversi­ty.

It was ‘‘layer on top of layer’’ and consumer and market pressure was also now a driver, he said.

While there was a lot of change happening, there was also a lot of innovation and new ways of doing things, and it was an exciting time. There was a role for all rural profession­als to add value, he said.

In a statement, Rabobank New Zealand chief executive Todd Charteris said Rabobank was acutely aware of the market forces and regulatory changes related to sustainabi­lity that were impacting clients and was committed to helping them to understand and address the resulting challenges.

That support included making policy submission­s on government — which incorporat­ed its views and those of its clients on legislatio­n and regulation affecting the sector — as well as providing clients with indepth reports examining issues linked to sustainabl­e farming.

The bank recently developed a new approach to help clients build a detailed snapshot of the nonfinanci­al performanc­e of their business which included collection of informatio­n relating to their agronomic, environmen­tal, and social and workplace performanc­e, Mr Charteris said.

Mr Holgate would also play a pivotal role in Rabobank’s efforts to develop additional products and services aimed at helping clients’ businesses be more commercial­ly and environmen­tally sustainabl­e.

“We expect to see the market for sustainabl­e finance — finance specifical­ly used for activities which produce a verifiable positive impact on the environmen­t or society — to grow strongly over coming years and Blake will play a lead role in identifyin­g new opportunit­ies for the bank and our clients in this area,” he said.

He would also work closely with KiwiHarves­t — the bank’s new national food rescue charity partner — to help address food waste issues within New Zealand’s food and agribusine­ss supply chain.

 ??  ?? Set to sell . . . The Grange Lifecare Village director Geoff McPhail visits a villa at the $150 million facility in East Taieri.
Set to sell . . . The Grange Lifecare Village director Geoff McPhail visits a villa at the $150 million facility in East Taieri.
 ??  ?? Blake Holgate
Blake Holgate

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