Site Admin


Newspapers
NZ Herald
Waikato Times
Dominion Post
Christchurch Press
Otago Daily Times
Southland Times
Country wide
Rural News
Straight Furrow
The New Zealand Farmers Weekly


Radio
Radio NZ
Farming show
News Talk ZB


Academic
Lincoln University
Massey University


Government
MAF
AgResearch


Trade and Industry

Deer Industry NZ
Meat and Wool NZ
Federated Farmers NZ
Merino NZ
Fonterra


For more perspectives, see ...
- Exchange rates
- Commodity prices
- Farm cost indexes
- Interest rate trends
- Rural credit aggregates
- Farm sales activity
- International dairy prices

for saleyard and processor price trend graphs, see...
- lamb
- beef
- deer
- velvet

and for comments on agricultural issues, see...
-commentary

ID scheme needed for livestock

Deer farmers at their national conference heard speakers call for an individual animal identification system, saying if the farming industry doesn’t get on with it, it could lose overseas markets reports The Manawatu Standard. They said it should not be put in the “too hard basket”, as there isĀ  technology already available that could be used for sheep, deer and cattle. Landcorp chief executive Chris Kelly said he is a solid supporter of a NAIT, which stands for National Animal Identification and Tracing. It is all about an animal identification system that links people, property and animals. NAIT will keep track of where farmed animals are and where they have been.

But some farmers and Federated Farmers, after first supporting NAIT, are saying such a traceability system is not required for overseas markets and are questioning whether the benefits of the scheme outweigh the costs of implementing it. Feds president Don Nicolson said: “It’s not clear that having a new Wellington bureaucracy forcing farmers to have a number plate on every sheep, cow, or deer, is going to be worth it. “If farmers think individually identifying animals is a profitable idea, then they will do that anyway.”

The system is planned to be fully operational in 2010 and, from mid-2011, it is expected to be mandatory for cattle and deer, with other species to follow if required. “We need to instigate it across all our main species, sheep, cattle, and deer” said Chris Kelly. “Mr Kelly said there is a problem over who should manage the single data base required for a NAIT system. “It should be independent, able to be verified in a regulatory sense, so that suggests something like MAF or some quasi-government linkage.” It should not be with a commercial organisation, because then there’ll be real, or perceived, questions on use of the information for commercial gain, he said. “We’ve just seen the United States introduce export subsidies overnight. It caught us by surprise. The same thing could happen with a traceability system.”



Tags: , , ,

Leave a Reply

Please copy the string 6Xstvp to the field below: