Whanganui Midweek

Alliance Group pins its hopes on India

Incrementa­l steps towards a trade deal with India seen as way to reduce reliance on China, writes Jamie Gray.

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Highly protected India has long been in the too-hard basket for New Zealand exporters, but meat company the Alliance Group believes a free trade agreement (FTA) with the world’s most populous country will be signed within a year.

Chief executive Willie Wiese, who was appointed to lead the co-op in March, said he expects an incoming National-led Government to deliver an agreement with India within the first 12 months of office.

The farmer-owned co-operative is NZ’s biggest sheepmeat exporter.

“We still pay a 38 per cent tariff in sending product to India, whereas Australia gets their FTA in January,” Wiese said. “India, specifical­ly from a sheepmeat perspectiv­e, is a great market for us.

“However, with a tariff, it really limits your opportunit­ies to move into that market without a significan­t financial impact.

“We are really working through that to get the tariff out,” he said.

Prime Minister-elect Christophe­r Luxon talked a big game regarding trade with India during the election campaign.

India’s Prime Minister Shri Narendra

Modi congratula­ted Luxon on his party’s win in the general election.

Modi also said he looked forward to working with Luxon “to further strengthen India-New Zealand ties”.

Alliance has a holding in QualityNZ, a firm that specialise­s in exporting to India and through which it supplies meat to five-star restaurant­s there.

Wiese said he was upbeat about what an incoming National-led Government could bring.

“Going on what Christophe­r Luxon has committed to, I am confident that it [a deal] can be done,” he said. “If Australia can do it, why can’t we?”

Dairy has been a key sticking point in trade deals with India.

“I think that instead of trying to move everything at once, we need to take incrementa­l, practical steps to get us to the end point,” Wiese said.

Alliance, like many other exporters, is looking to lessen its reliance on China as its chief export destinatio­n.

Wiese said geopolitic­al tension arising from the war in Ukraine and worsening China-US relations were affecting markets.

“We have taken a number of steps to de-risk that and to reduce our reliance on China.

“We have gone into Central America and the rest of Southeast Asia, where we have grown significan­tly in markets like Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore.”

Trading conditions in China were challengin­g as the country continued to recover from the Covid era, which brought much of it to a standstill.

Wiese said China’s strict lockdowns, during which time the export trade was impeded by supply chain issues, saw Chinese consumers turn more to domestical­ly produced goods — from infant formula to meat.

“China is significan­tly more selfsuffic­ient in their white protein — chicken and pork — and red protein, and that’s driven by the Government itself,” he said.

Wiese noted that youth unemployme­nt was high in China and that consumer confidence there was low.

“On top of that, we have got Australia significan­tly increasing their exports of really low-cost sheep meat into China as well, which obviously pushes people into other markets, so that’s not helping.

“My biggest concern over the next 12 months is mutton, specifical­ly as it’s getting drier in Australia where they are clearing stock, as well as the anticipate­d drought brought by the El Nino weather pattern.”

Alliance has provided its farmers with a range of prices for the first quarter. For premium lamb, it has offered $6.60 to $7.20 a kilo and $2.80 to $3.20 a kg for sheep meat — both about a dollar per kg below what would be considered the norm for this time of year.

Wiese said there was a high rate of inventory clearance for meat globally: “If we can see good clearance rates of that inventory, then a replenishi­ng of that inventory, that obviously gives us some price opportunit­ies to get more value back to our farmers.”

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? The Alliance Group, which has 4500 farmer shareholde­rs and exports to more than 65 countries, is concerned about the effect of Australia clearing its stock.
Photo / NZME The Alliance Group, which has 4500 farmer shareholde­rs and exports to more than 65 countries, is concerned about the effect of Australia clearing its stock.

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