Speech by Meat & Wool NZ Chairman, Mike Petersen
Speech by Meat & Wool NZ Chairman, Mike Petersen
International Sheepmeat Forum, Brussels, 8 October 2009
Overview of the International Sheepmeat Sector: current trends in demand and supply
Introductory comments
• Firstly can I say
that I’m delighted at the high level of international
representation and participation at this Forum. I am
excited by the opportunity for us to discuss the issues
facing sheepmeat producers and industry, and how we can
capitalise on the opportunities for us all. I am very
appreciative of the positive reception of holding the Forum,
and I see this as recognition that there is substantial
shared interest on the part of sheepmeat producers and
industry worldwide and that the major issues and problems we
are facing are the same.
•
• I’m also very
appreciative of the strong support and the cooperation of
many organisations but especially COPA-COGECA and UECBV who,
along with MLA and M&WNZ have constituted the Steering
Committee to organise this Forum. COPA-COGECA’s support
and generous provision of its facilities have enabled the
organising committee to waive the registration fee. This
has been especially valuable to enable attendance by so many
participants from so many countries which will add to the
discussion over the next day and a half.
•
• My
special thanks to Pekka Pesonen for agreeing to accept the
role of Chairman of the Forum.
•
• I am
personally looking forward to our discussions and debate and
I am confident that our dialogue will be constructive. I am
especially hopeful that some conclusions will be able to be
drawn from the Forum that will help us all to identify some
pathways to making our industry more profitable and
economically sustainable.
•
• The concept of
proposing a Sheepmeat Forum has been building for the past
two years. As some of you know the Chairman of M&WNZ makes
an annual trip to Europe to meet with our counterparts and
other organisations to share information about the upcoming
season. I have undertaken three of these visits, and while
we often focus on the few areas where we differ, there is no
doubt that we have more in common than we do
apart.
•
• The simple reality is that sheepmeat
producers worldwide share the same challenges of low
profitability leading to falling supply, changes in consumer
demand, compliance issues, farm succession and the many
research needs that are required to improve productivity and
address issues like the response of our sector to climate
change.
•
• Initially we envisaged a Forum
focusing particularly on the concerns of farmers. However
the relationships between between producers and processors,
are very close and in New Zealand there is strong
cooperation between M&WNZ and the processors’
organization, MIA. There are two processor and exporter
representatives on the Board of M&WNZ and I am pleased both
are participating in this Forum.
•
Common
problems facing the industry
• One or two here might
have been somewhat surprised that the proposal to hold the
Forum came from New Zealand. My response would be that the
origin of the proposal is not important and the Forum is
owned by all of us as participants. I have always held the
view that our shared interests are vastly more substantial
than the differences that might appear to divide
us.
•
• While the Forum has an international
focus, it is necessary to comment on the importance of the
region where this meeting is being held. Europe is indeed
your market but it is also a critically important market for
all of us, as pricing in Europe influences pricing for the
rest of the world.
•
• The first New Zealand
lamb arrived in Europe 127 years ago. Before 1973 New
Zealand supplied over 300,000 tonnes a year, mainly but not
exclusively to the United Kingdom. Today, under the
European Union’s current import quota arrangements, New
Zealand is able to supply 227,854 tonnes a year on a carcass
weight equivalent basis to all of the EU-27 member
countries, about half of our total sheepmeat exports. Total
imports from all origins account for only about 20% of the
European Union’s consumption of mutton and lamb.
•
• So like European producers and processors,
we depend on continuing strong demand in Europe. It is
essential that lamb is available throughout the year,
visible at retail and food service and high quality.
Consequently, we in New Zealand are in no doubt that the
continued health of our export market in Europe depends
absolutely on economic and sustainable sheep production in
Europe. Without that, demand would dwindle and consumers
would soon cease to regard lamb as a real meal alternative.
It would be relegated to a novelty niche product, and if
that happened we would all suffer. I am pleased that there
are representatives here from many countries, including our
Antipodean neighbour, Australia, several Latin American
countries, and South Africa as well as many of the Member
States of the European Union. The diversity of views from
such a wide spectrum of agricultural environments should
certainly contribute to both the interest and the value of
the Forum.
•
• Yet if you look at production in
the world’s significant sheep-producing countries there
are some interesting trends:
•
i. In the main
sheepmeat trading countries of the European Union (before
the Central European enlargements), Australia and New
Zealand there has been a significant decline in the flocks
over the last decade;
ii.
iii. In the major South
American producing countries and in South Africa production
has been relatively stable this decade but at levels
markedly lower than the ten years earlier starting in
1990;
iv.
v. In some of the countries with the
largest flocks, numbers have increased, including in China,
India and Sudan. These countries, as well as some members
of the Confederation of Independent States (Former Soviet
Union) may have some cross-border exports. However for a
variety of reasons including animal health issues and the
growing middle classes in some of these countries, they seem
unlikely to become significant players in developed country
markets, notably Europe, North America, Japan and Korea, in
the foreseeable future.
vi.
• From a global
perspective, the European Union remains by far the largest
high-value market, though the US takes significant volumes
of high value cuts. The Middle East also remains significant
owing to the historic taste for sheepmeat. China and India,
both enjoying strong economic growth, also offer
opportunities for greater sales. China is already a
significant market though as yet the emphasis is on lower
value cuts for traditional dishes. However both China and
India are expected to increasingly demand higher value cuts
as their purchasing power increases.
•
• There
are other markets as well, but for the foreseeable future,
Europe will continue to present the largest number of
affluent consumers who enjoy the quality of lamb. This
explains why much of the focus of this Forum will be on the
European market.
•
• I suggest the real issues we
need to address include the following:
•
i. Why are
sheep numbers declining in virtually all the countries
represented here?
ii.
iii. Why are consumers in many
of our countries buying less lamb than in the past? We know
that lamb is a superior protein alternative, so what are
consumers looking for?
iv.
v. How can we persuade
Governments to mitigate the compliance costs that have
increasingly burdened producers and processing industries in
recent years and to avoid burdening us further with costs
related to carbon emissions and water
use?
vi.
vii. Are there ways in which we can increase
our productivity and produce high quality lamb meat more
cost-efficiently?
viii.
ix. All the stages in the
value chain from producer to consumer are mutually
dependent. Is there scope to transfer a greater share back
to the producer in order to ensure the sustainability of the
sheepmeat sector?
x.
xi. And importantly, what can
and should we do to increase consumer demand for our lamb?
xii.
Flocks in Chronic Decline
• So, in
most of the countries represented here sheep flocks are in
decline. Why? In the first session we shall hear about
production trends and the contributing causes in Britain,
France, Australia and Chile.
•
• Let me say
something about our experience in New Zealand.
•
• Our flock has fallen from 70 million in 1982
to a little more than 33 million today (measured in
mid-winter). Several recent dry seasons have contributed,
but we have also seen sheep farming land being converted to
dairying and forestry. The underlying factor is inadequate
profitability in sheep farming. That is despite the
enormous gains in productivity we have achieved by selective
breeding and improved husbandry. Ewe lambing rates have
increased from about 90% in 1990 to 125% and average lamb
slaughter weights from under 14kgs to 17kgs fed on pasture.
These productivity increases have ensured that the volumes
of lamb meat exported to world markets have until recently
been maintained in spite of the overall decline in numbers.
•
• It has to be acknowledged by every sector in
the value chain that lamb is not an easy or cheap meat to
produce and process. If it were not for the fact that sheep
can thrive in some regions that are wholly unsuited to
arable farming or cattle, the decline in numbers would
probably have been even greater. Lamb is one of the highest
priced consumer meats and retailers and consumers cannot
expect us to compete on anything like equal terms with pork
and poultry or other alternative proteins.
•
• This should be seen as an opportunity rather
than a problem for our industry, and the challenge for us is
to be rewarded with fair pricing that reflects the quality
and status of sheepmeat as a food source. There is no doubt
that the premium pricing of lamb in the consumer market
allows this, and we need to put programmes in place to
ensure a greater share of this magnificent product comes
back to producers.
•
• Ongoing research and
development investment is critical to deliver productivity
gains and innovation, as well as providing the tools to
address emerging issues that are needed to improve the sheep
industry’s competitiveness. Yet this comes at a
significant cost and often with lead-times that make it
difficult to fund the investment.
•
• Compliance costs in all major sheep
producing countries have grown and are a real threat to our
ongoing viability. We shall hear more of this also this
afternoon. I am fully aware of the burden of cross
compliance in the European Union, of consumers’
expectations in the field of animal welfare and the imminent
introduction of mandatory electronic tagging of sheep.
•
• Producers in other countries experience
similar burdens. New Zealand farmers do not have to comply
with precisely the same cross-compliance rules as our
European counterparts. However, we have our own
comprehensive set of animal welfare rules and we are obliged
to comply with an equivalent range of protocols with the
retail chains to ensure that we satisfy their consumers’
expectations. In addition we must meet all importing
countries animal health and food safety requirements around
the world.
•
• Climate change and the response
of governments to this issue is a challenge to all of us.
Like others here today, New Zealand is a signatory of the
Kyoto Protocol, and we are now seeing a range of domestic
measures being implemented by individual countries as they
try to meet their commitments under this agreement. I know
there are major concerns among the farmers and industry at
this Forum about the burden that a new carbon emissions
regime might impose on them. In the second session today we
will explore the scope for some common approaches to this
issue. There is no doubt that the solution has to be
technological advances that reduce emissions without a
corresponding drop in production. The real opportunity is
more efficient rumen function that increases productivity
with a lower emission footprint.
•
• Commissioner
Fischer Boel is to address us later this afternoon. She
will be very aware of these cost challenges facing the
sustainability of the industry and we will be interested in
her view of the future of the industry in Europe.
•
• In any event, it is vital that we arrest the
decline in the availability of lamb meat in Europe and other
major markets so that we do not see the consumer base erode
away. One retailer representative who shall remain nameless
is recorded as having recently described efforts to promote
sheepmeat as “rearranging the deck chairs on the
Titanic” and he described the product as “getting to be
a luxury meat for old people”. There would be little
future for any of us in that scenario, and we all have a
shared interest to ensure that this does not happen.
•
Meeting the Challenges of the 21st
Century
• How do the challenges facing our industry
today differ from those of a generation ago? I suggest they
can be summed up under four broad
headings:
•
i. Meeting the expectations of
today’s more demanding
consumers;
ii.
iii. Competing with new food products
and securing the place of sheepmeat as a genuine convenience
food – one that is not too time-consuming or demanding to
prepare;
iv.
v. Marketing to build demand and
consumer preference for lamb;
vi.
vii. Working within
today’s retail distribution
structure.
viii.
• Today’s consumers are more
conscious of health and nutritional, and social and
environmental factors than ever before. They are generally
better informed than in the past and less inclined to accept
product assurances without evidence or information they can
assess for themselves. Sometimes these expectations are
codified in official regulations, sometimes they are set out
in retailers’ requirements. Either way, while the
consumer is not always right, they will always get what they
want – eventually!
•
• There is a second
major area of consumer expectation – convenience.
Translated into terms of our product, can it be purchased
locally, prepared easily and cooked quickly? There is a
widespread perception, especially among the younger
generation of consumers, that lamb is too difficult. To
dispel that impression we need to look to product
development and to carefully focused market development.
Later speakers will help us to focus on the key challenges
here.
•
• Today’s consumers enjoy a huge choice
of meal options. The position of lamb is bound to be eroded
unless the industry can offer new and more convenient cuts,
and bring them to the attention of consumers by the same
sophisticated marketing techniques used by our competitors
supplying other protein meal options.
•
• Branding and the use of indications of
origin are part of this mix and will be covered in the final
session of the Forum. For many decades New Zealand lamb has
been promoted in the United Kingdom and more recently in
Germany. We intend to continue to market our lamb but we
have no interest in doing so in a way that reflects
negatively on lamb from other origins. The seasonal focus
of our advertising means that our activity complements
European production and assures continuity of marketing and
messaging. While all of us can legitimately promote our own
origins, the underlying message in all our marketing should
be generic and that lamb is a quality product providing the
finest meat-eating experience.
•
• The fourth
challenge of working within the retail distribution
structure and getting fair returns for our quality product
is complex. Often emotion dominates this debate, when the
issues are broader than just focusing on the percentage
return of the retail price that flows back to farmers. The
real opportunity is to work with retailers to ensure
continuity of supply of a quality product that rewards
farmers fairly for the commitment they have made. Anything
less will see continued decline in sheep numbers worldwide
to the detriment of all. I look forward to the sessions
tomorrow which will focus on these issues.
•
• I
shall conclude here. The initial impetus to hold this Forum
arose from concerns about declining production, rising costs
and fears of an unsustainable sheep industry. Following
speakers will explore these issues in greater depth and our
industry can only be sustainable and profitable if we always
keep in mind that we cannot make the consumer buy what we
produce. We must produce a product the consumer will want to
buy and one that they are prepared to reward with a price
that ensures the viability of the
industry.
•
• The challenge for all of us here
today is to put aside any differences we might have and
focus on the issues we have in common. The sheepmeat
industry and farmers worldwide will be better off as a
result.
•
ends