management
northland field days
Cooling grain the day it comes off the paddock minimises the risk of infestation. page 21
A change in scheduling gives rise to better attendance by exhibitors. pages 29-34
RuralNEWS
wool growth The hot dry weather has seen a bumper season says wool broker.
page 12
to all farmers, for all farmers
february 5, 2013: Issue 531
www.ruralnews.co.nz
DCD scare will blow over su des h k i ssu n sudeshk@ruralnews.co.nz
A DAIRY RETAIL analyst believes the DCD tainted-milk scare engulfing New Zealand processors will blow over in two weeks. Tim Morris, of Coriolis, an Auckland market research firm, says there’s nothing to suggest Fonterra has been directly involved in getting DCD into milk or trying to sweep the issue under the carpet. Fonterra’s global reputation as a producer of clean and safe dairy products isn’t under threat, he says. Unlike the 2008 Sanlu melamine scandal in China where six babies died and thousands were hospitalised. Fonterra owned 43% of Sanlu. Morris says levels of DCD found in Fonterra products are well below acceptable limits in Europe. Last week one Kiwi entrepreneur selling infant formula in China reported a drop in sales.
But Morris says sales of New Zealand infant formula in China should not be affected. Chinese consumers prefer New Zealand milk powder over their own since the melamine scandal. Consumers will also decide whether Fonterra is a passive victim or an active participant in getting DCDcontaminated milk to the markets, he says. “There are no dead babies and most people have never heard of DCD,” he told Rural News. “It has been detected because there is much more stringent testing in place after the Sanlu scandal. But it’s nothing like the melamine scandal.” Morris says he has researched 20 to 30 similar events and believes the media focus on the story will be gone in two weeks. Outgoing Minister for Primary Industries David Carter is also backing Fonterra’s handling of the DCD scare.
“I think Fonterra acted with absolute honesty and integrity and I equally think that New Zealand has acted with honesty and integrity,” he told Rural News. “We are aware of our international reputation in this regard about
being upfront with trading partners and we’ve enhanced that reputation again by being so upfront.” MPI was first made aware of the issue in early November. Nitrate inhibitors containing DCD are applied by farmers
andrews@ruralnews.co.nz
CONCERNS OVER a consultant’s success fee are emerging as the pivotal issue in the CRT/Farmlands merger debate. Merger analysts KPMG or Simmons Corporate Finance get no bonus if the merger goes ahead, but there is such a deal with the consultant who
Recent fine weather has helped cropping farmers reel in this year’s harvest, with most reporting good yields and quality, including Canterbury grower Sid Worsfold. “I’m wrapped with harvest so far,” he told Rural News last week as he was augering Saracen milling wheat into a silo. Coming off a dryland paddock at 9t/ha it was well ahead of his long-term average of 6.5t/ha for such crops off that land. “And the quality’s just beautiful.” More harvest detail p13
supplied those firms the information they analysed. That is prompting some shareholders in both cooperatives to question the independence of the information critical to their decision. But CRT chairman Don McFarlane stands by the analysts’ reports. “There’s absolutely no success fee for the independent appraisers so that the reports are completely independent
WHAT EXACTLY IS IN YOUR BLEND?
IF YOU’RE GUESSING, IT’S HARMING YOUR PRODUCTIVITY.
to page 3
Not all blends are created equal. Even the same blends can vary in their nutrients from one delivery to the next. And that spells disaster for a modern, high performance cow that needs consistency to achieve maximum productivity. Call us now to find out exactly what’s in your current blend and to discover how the affordable new AcuBlend range of feed supplements from Ingham deliver consistently better productivity … week after week, month after month, year after year.
Take the guesswork out of blends. Call 0800 650 505 now!
Talk to your Ingham rep or visit inghamfeeds.co.nz
to page 4
happy chappy
Success fee concerns a n dr ew swa l low
in spring and autumn. Carter says the MPI took time to re-test and check the results before talking to processors and other industry stakeholders on a strategy to deal with the issue.
WIN a free on-farm consultation with Australasia’s leading Ruminant Nutritionist, Pip Gale. Call us before 28 February 13 to go into the draw! Conditions apply. TRACTA40398-A