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New Zealand: Agriculture

More in New Zealand: Agriculture
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To have any chance of coaxing species like the Secretary bird back from the brink of extinction we must reconcile the pressures of food production with the need for nature conservation

Farmers hold the key to nature conservation ... so give them a break

25 May 2015

The town of Bethlehem in the Free State Province, South Africa, gets its name from the Hebrew words “Beit lechem” - house of bread. It is a fitting name for a town nestled within a patchwork of privately owned commercial farmland. Much can be learnt here about the challenges farmers face when conserving nature.

Nick Pyke ... feeding the world.

You must find a way, academics tell farmers

18 May 2015

Farmers must find ways of farming more sustainably while maintaining production, warns the Foundation for Arable Research.

You asked for it ... organic milk heads for the shops

11 May 2015

Anchor is launching a new nationwide line of organic milk on the back of strong demand.

Meat processor aims high to curb emissions

4 May 2015

One of the world’s largest processors of sheep meat, Alliance Group Limited, aims to reduce carbon emissions by 3300 tonnes over the next three years.

The word is out ... dairying costs more than income

28 Apr 2015

Research claiming New Zealand’s dairy industry could be costing the country more than it is making it has been published in an international science journal.

Minister happy with dairying emissions progress

20 Apr 2015

The dairy industry is making progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, the Government says.

More cows means double the gas emissions

13 Apr 2015

Greenhouse gas emissions from dairy cows in New Zealand have more than doubled since 1990.

Industrial corn farming is ruining health and water

13 Apr 2015

A taxic algae outbreak last year in Ohio's Lake Erie shut down the water supply for almost half a million people in Toledo and the surrounding suburbs.

Hi-tech farming seen as way to green the food chain

7 Apr 2015

Connected agriculture – from farm to retail – has been promoted at an event in Brussels as the way to wean European agriculture off its addiction to chemicals, water and fossil fuels.

Beat-the-heat beans could keep feeding millions

30 Mar 2015

Scientists believe they may have found how to safeguard a staple tropical crop, on which hundreds of millions of people depend, from the depredations of climate change.

We got it wrong, admits Ballance

30 Mar 2015

Fertiliser manufactuer Ballance Agri-Nutrients is taking on the chin a $60,000 fine for illegally discharging sulphur dioxide into the air at Mount Maunganui last year.

No matter how you cut it, the answer is ecosystem services

23 Mar 2015

As a professor of ecology, Shahid Naeem knows all too well that there’s no shortage of environmental ills to keep us awake at night – global warming, the spread of diseases, dead zones in the Gulf of Mexico, collapsing fisheries, mass extinction, and a hundred other things that are the stock and trade of environmental doomsayers.

Chemical fertilisers poison our water, says study

16 Mar 2015

Waterways – including human drinking supplies – are being poisoned by excessive use of chemical fertilisers, new research shows.

Climate impacts on European farmers’ yields per field

23 Feb 2015

Farmers in Europe have already begun to feel the pinch of climate change as yields of wheat since 1989 have fallen by 2.5 per cent and barley by 3.8 per cent on average across the whole continent.

Oil aside, we’ve reached peak chicken, peak rice, and peak milk

16 Feb 2015

We still haven't reached peak oil. But peak milk happened in 2004, peak soybeans in 2009, and peak chicken in 2006. Rice peaked in 1988.

Chatham Rock awaits island phosphate ruling

9 Feb 2015

A decision on whether a New Zealand company will be allowed to mine undersea phosphate for use in agricultural fertilisers will be released this week.

Orangutans ... losing homes to palm oil.

New labelling rules steer shoppers clear of palm oil

9 Feb 2015

By RUTH EVANS.- A European Union decision to give consumers more information about the food they buy could mean good news for tropical countries whose forests are threatened by the expanding trade in palm oil.

Nutrients maker helping farmers to go green

2 Feb 2015

Ballance Agri-Nutrients has launched a specialist team to help farmers to navigate increasingly complex environmental regulations and consent requirements to promote clean green land, rivers and streams.

Forest owners seek truth about dairying

27 Jan 2015

Foresters are calling for an honest analysis of the costs of the intensification of dairying.

Climate’s threat to wheat is rising by degrees

27 Jan 2015

Worldwide field trials show that just one degree of warming could slash wheat yields by 42 million tonnes and cause devastating shortages of this vital staple food.

UN stresses need for genetic diversity

27 Jan 2015

Knowledge of agricultural genetic resources needs to grow more quickly because of the critical role they have to play in feeding the world as climate change advances faster than expected, according to the United Nations.

Africa will be able to feed itself within the next 15 years

27 Jan 2015

Africa will be able to feed itself in the next 15 years. That’s one of the big “bets on the future” that Bill and Melinda Gates (http://www.gatesfoundation.org/) have made in their foundation’s latest annual letter.

Dairying costs exceed export income, says report

22 Dec 2014

Dairying is probably costing the country more than it earns in export revenue.

Organic techniques closing gap on farming yields

22 Dec 2014

The unintended consequences of the agricultural food system – polluted air and water, dead zones in coastal seas, soil erosion – have profound environment implications for human health and the environment. So more sustainable agricultural practices are needed as soon as possible.

Why our ‘silent ally’ soils are on the endangered list

8 Dec 2014

The world is not paying enough attention to its soil – our silent ally – says the United Nations.

Dr Sally Price ... start now.

Memo farmers: Learn to manage your methanotrophs

1 Dec 2014

Farmers could cut their future exposure to carbon prices by looking after the methanotrophs in their soils, a soil scientist says.

Green Revolution trebles human burden on planet

24 Nov 2014

Humans are changing not just climate overall, but also the difference between seasons in any given year.

Diet's effects on emissions give food for thought

17 Nov 2014

American researchers confirm that a shift to vegetarian, Mediterranean or fish-based diets would cut greenhouse gases, conserve forests and savannah, and have a big impact on obesity-linked health problems.

Peter Yealands ... significant.

Southern winery wins green award ... again

3 Nov 2014

A Marlborough winery that uses miniature sheep to tidy around its vines has won another sustainability award.

Salt-poisoning a growing threat to crops

3 Nov 2014

Salt is poisoning around 2000 hectares of irrigated farm land every day – and has been doing so for the past 20 years, according to new research.

Honey hits the jackpot for steep-land believer

28 Oct 2014

In 2010, Taranaki farmer Neil Walker was enthusiastic about the potential for a combination of carbon farming and beekeeping to rejuvenate steep-land farming.

Soils SOS as cities gobble up our best growing land

20 Oct 2014

New Zealand is allowing its elite soils to be eaten up by cities – despite signing up to a new global campaign to protect valuable agricultural land.

Robert Wright ... leadership is needed.

A new agricultural economy is knocking on the door

20 Oct 2014

Europe should be pushing for the rapid expansion of its network of biorefineries, to produce European food, fuel and feed, as well as a range of other high-value products that replace fossil fuels, writes ROBERT WRIGHT, Secretary-General of the European Renewable Ethanol Association:

New Zealand is drying out ... and here’s why

13 Oct 2014

Over 2012 and 2013, parts of New Zealand experienced their worst drought in nearly 70 years.

Landcorp bio-generation scheme runs out of gas

13 Oct 2014

Landcorp's pulling of the plug on its BioGenCool manure-powered electricity generation ends the first, large-scale experiment in using milking shed cow dung to drive the milking shed itself.

We're wrong about waterways, admits Government

6 Oct 2014

The Government has admitted that official information on the state of New Zealand’s waterways is wrong.

Dr Bethanna Jackson ... managing the land.

Listen to LUCI and keep land use on the level

6 Oct 2014

A computer-modelling programme designed by a Victoria University of Wellington academic is helping to ensure that farming practices here and overseas are as sustainable and environmentally friendly as possible.

Use your phone to report water pollution

29 Sep 2014

Water pollution may soon be reported by the public over a phone app and investigated by an aerial robot.

Northern Australia ... getting wetter.

Win some, lose some ... that's climate change

29 Sep 2014

With climate change, you win some, you lose some. New research shows that suitable new cropland could become available in the high latitudes as the world warms − but tropical regions may become less productive.

We're spending millions, say green-wise farmers

22 Sep 2014

Manawatu-Whanganui region farmers have spent an average $110,000 each over the past five years on measures to protect the environment, according to a Federated Farmers survey.

David and Sarah Smith ... winners.

Pumped-up couple win energy award

22 Sep 2014

The switch to a gravity-feed water system has resulted in huge cost-savings for Otago farmers David and Sarah Smith, winners of an energy excellence award in the 2014 Otago Ballance Farm Environment Awards.

NZ scientists line up first lo-gas sheep

16 Sep 2014

Farmers could have access to low-methane-emitting sheep as early as 2016.

Bambara ... nutritious groundnut.

It makes no sense to rely on the same few crops

16 Sep 2014

We are in the middle of one of the biggest experiments in human history. At its core is the homogenisation of global food systems, which increasingly must deliver the same products to an expanding population across the world.

Holsteins ... remarkable cows.

Drain the milk lake and create healthier, happier cows

16 Sep 2014

Milk, a precious resource in many parts of the world, has become a throwaway commodity in wealthy countries.

Angry green-plan backers desert Horizon council

8 Sep 2014

Every member of the Horizon’s Regional Council that worked on the controversial One Plan has left amid allegations of political interference in implementing the ground-breaking environmental rules.

Cucumber beetle.

Attention farmers: Stand by for a proliferation of pests

8 Sep 2014

Coming soon to a farm near you: just about every possible type of pest that could take advantage of the ripening harvest in the nearby fields.

Scientists claim fertiliser breakthrough

1 Sep 2014

Researchers in the UK think they may have found a way to produce fertilisers that should cut farmers’ costs and at the same time boost some types of renewable energy.

Climate change increases the odds of a hungry world

4 Aug 2014

The odds on food production being unable to meet the needs of an expanding population are hard to predict, but a new study shows that the risk increases dramatically when man-made climate change is factored in.

Why swimmable rivers are a bridge too far

1 Aug 2014

Federated Farmers environment spokesman IAN MACKENZIE on why making rivers swimmable isn't practical.

Organic farming growing rapidly, says EU

1 Aug 2014

The organic farming sector has grown rapidly over the past 10 years, to about 500,000 new hectares every year, according to European Union statistics.

Politics
More Politics >

Trans-Tasman ministers push climate cooperation amid NZ retreat from climate commitments

Mon 8 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Last week's 2+2 Climate and Finance Ministers’ Dialogue in Auckland urged deeper trans-Tasman climate cooperation, despite New Zealand’s recent moves to weaken climate policies.

Energy
More Energy >

Market rewards firming over renewables in gentailer split

3 Dec 2025

A clearer valuation divide is emerging across the gentailer sector, with the market increasingly rewarding companies positioned for flexibility and firming rather than renewable build-out.

Carbon emissions
More Carbon emissions >

Mounting emissions due to Government decisions

20 Nov 2025

By Liz Kivi | The Coalition Government’s climate policies have added a whopping 26 million tonnes of emissions out to 2030, according to new analysis of Government projections.

Transport
More Transport >
Australia-based AMSL Aero's Vertiia is intended for hydrogen-powered flight.

Christchurch Airport boasts world-first liquid-hydrogen refuelling for test aircraft

30 Oct 2025

By Liz Kivi | Local companies working on hydrogen-electric flight have made ‘a significant step forward’ in successfully filling aviation tanks with liquid hydrogen produced and stored on-site at an international airport for the first time.

Forestry
More Forestry >

Uncertainty eroding confidence in forestry sector

Fri 5 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Warnings are mounting that tree planting is set to plunge to “very close to zero”, as new Ministry for Primary Industries data shows ETS registration applications falling sharply as confidence in forestry declines.

Business
More Business >
Rob Campbell

Investors must support positive climate-tech

28 Nov 2025

OPINION: We need better leadership than the current ‘climate opportunism’ that is rife in the Beehive, and we need to back a marketplace that will make it happen, writes Rob Campbell.

More in New Zealand: Agriculture
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