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

NAIT and Feds spar over ear tags

To avoid future costs, cattle farmers should consider using NAIT-compliant electronic ear tags when they tag livestock this year, says National Animal Identification and Tracing project (NAIT) chairman Ian Corney in the Rural News. The suggestion follows a recent move by the Animal Health Board (AHB) to approve NAIT-compliant tags as secondary tags under its national identification programme to control bovine tuberculosis in cattle and deer. ‘The great thing about the AHB move is farmers can avoid having to apply an additional ear tag to cattle to meet anticipated NAIT obligations,’ says Corney. ‘We’re asking cattle farmers to consider the approved electronic tags for newly born animals that will be alive in July 2011 – when NAIT is planned to become a regulatory requirement,’ he says. If the NAIT scheme is approved, RFID [radio frequency identification device] tags will become mandatory from 2011.Farmers could avoid the need to re-tag in 2011 if they start using the new technology this year.

However Federated Farmers is warning farmers not to purchase ear tags in anticipation of the proposed National Animal Identification and Tracing (NAIT) scheme. “We are concerned with comments made by the chairperson of the NAIT governance group urging farmers to purchase low frequency radio-frequency identification (RFID) ear tags,” says Lachlan McKenzie, Federated Farmers Dairy chairperson. “Aside from the fact NAIT is by no means guaranteed in its current guise, this makes no commercial sense whatsoever when many farmers have little or no farm income.

“It’s premature and irresponsible given the financial pressures farmers are currently under. “Anyway, with just a few hundred NAIT RFID ear tags being sold right now, why would any farmer pay over the odds when prices will come down later? “If NAIT, or a similar system is introduced, millions of ear tags will be sold and mass manufacturing tells us the price will be much, much less than what it is today.  That’s supply and demand. “Federated Farmers is currently investigating the cost of Ultra High Frequency RFID tags.  Our discussions on Chinese sourced tags indicate a price point substantially lower than what exists today.

Tags: , , ,

Leave a Reply

Please copy the string ht5wN3 to the field below: