NZGrower | August 2020

Page 12

YOUR LEVY AT WORK

FARM ENVIRONMENT PLAN UPDATE Words by Ailsa Robertson

Freshwater Farm Plans, more commonly known as Farm Environment Plans, were passed as law in July, meaning that they are mandatory and enforceable. However, the details are yet to be worked out, and this will be done through the development of regulations.

If in doubt, start your Farm Environment Plan now. The NZGAP Environmental Management System (EMS) add-on provides a horticulture specific Farm Environment Plan template benchmarked to regional council requirements. The EMS is available as an add-on for all NZGAP, NZGAP-GLOBALG.A.P. Equivalent, and GLOBALG.A.P. certified growers.

Some key details to be developed through the regulations include: which region, district, or part of New Zealand these requirements apply to; timeframes for implementation, certification, and audit; criteria for the appointment of certifiers and auditors; any fees payable; and further information and content requirements.

Engage with your Product Groups, grower associations, and HortNZ and ask how you can get support to develop your Farm Environment Plan.

In our submission on behalf of growers, Horticulture New Zealand supported the government’s intent to maintain and improve freshwater quality. We also stressed how achieving these outcomes will affect growers and what trade-offs will be required, and that the timeframes set for achieving outcomes must be realistic. New Zealand needs to ensure that it can grow enough fresh food to feed itself, and that food prices are reasonable, particularly as climate change begins to bite. The focus needs to be on planned progressive improvement so we achieve outcomes that reflect values we have for freshwater and wider social, economic, environmental and cultural values. The new regulation is expected to be developed over the next six to twelve months. HortNZ will engage with Product Groups, Good Agricultural Practice (GAP) schemes and growers, to provide input into the development of the regulations. The process and timing of industry inputs is not yet known.

What does this mean for growers? The legislation is clear. All horticultural land uses greater than or equal to 5ha will require a Farm Environment Plan (FEP). A 20ha threshold applies for other sectors or a combination of land uses. If you grow in a region that has a requirement for a Farm Environment Plan through the regional plan, operative or proposed, these regional requirements still apply. It is unknown if or how the new regulations will impact on existing rules and requirements.

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NZGROWER : AUGUST 2020

What support is available?

Sign up to an FEP workshop and encourage your neighbours to attend. Workshops are being planned for 2020–21 across the regions. The workshops will step growers through the process to build a Farm Environment Plan using the NZGAP EMS system, from registration to audit. In the workshops we showcase real life examples of growers who have already developed an audited FEP and adopted good and best management practices. It is also an opportunity to meet consultants and advisors who can help you develop your plan. The first workshops will be held in Auckland and Waikato in August. Details of workshops and locations will be notified through the HortNZ and Product Group newsletters and websites. Future regions include Canterbury, Gisborne and Hawke’s Bay. Other regions will be announced in time.

What else is coming? Climate change emissions are also on the farm planning horizon. By 2025, all farms must have a written plan in place to measure and manage their emissions. For horticulture growers this means reporting your annual nitrogen fertiliser use, and methane emissions if you have animals. Guidance and tools for growers to meet these requirements are still being developed through He Waka Eke Noa, the primary sector commitment on climate action. HortNZ and Product Groups will be involved in shaping this guidance, and we will continue to communicate with growers as guidance becomes live.


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Articles inside

BioStart: Harnessing microbes to sustainably increase yield

2min
pages 74-76

AsureQuality’s new look

2min
page 73

QTRACA: Giving you confidence in training and compliance

2min
page 71

Heat and Control Celebrates 70th Anniversary

2min
page 72

TomatoesNZ Inc

3min
page 70

Vegetables NZ Inc

4min
pages 68-69

Potatoes NZ Inc

6min
pages 64-65

Onions NZ Inc

1min
pages 66-67

Promising start for biological control of tomato potato psyllid

7min
pages 60-63

Metservice update: La Niña Watch

3min
pages 52-53

Time for a strategy refresh: New directions for Vegetable Research & Innovation

4min
pages 54-55

How one grower inspired a community during the pandemic

2min
pages 48-49

Jade Garden: On surviving a year of change

5min
pages 46-47

3,000 bins of kumara

9min
pages 40-43

Automation and Agritech get funding boost

5min
pages 44-45

Tonnes of vegetables put on tables

4min
pages 38-39

One proud Pukekohe grower

5min
pages 36-37

Pukekohe growers face devil in Plan Change detail

5min
pages 34-35

A promising start for Mad Melon

6min
pages 30-31

Vital water going out to sea

5min
pages 32-33

Kickstarting the food and beverage industry

4min
pages 28-29

Growing mushrooms during a global pandemic

5min
pages 26-27

Significant gains from new growing system

4min
pages 24-25

COVID-19 blues

2min
pages 22-23

The Chief Executive: Covid-19 has changed the world

5min
pages 6-9

Attracting the next generation

3min
page 16

President’s Word: What’s going to be involved in growing New Zealand?

7min
pages 4-5

Different rules create concern

7min
pages 18-20

PVGA stalwart farewelled

2min
page 21

GAP, safety and technology

3min
page 17

Farm Environment Plan update

3min
page 12

GoHorticulture internship programme grows new industry talent

3min
pages 14-15
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