Six Commitments to Improve Waterways
15 November 2018
Six Commitments to Improve
Waterways Continue to Drive Action
One year on from the launch of an ambitious
plan to help rebuild the health of New Zealand’s
waterways, Fonterra is showing progress with more
Sustainable Dairy Advisors on the ground and actions taking
place across the country.
In November 2017, Fonterra announced six commitments to help protect and restore water quality in New Zealand.
“Fresh water is such an important topic for New Zealanders so we want to keep people regularly updated on our commitments and be open about our progress,” says Carolyn Mortland, Fonterra’s Director of Sustainability.
Key milestones reached in the last 12 months include:
On farm:
• Fonterra farmers have
nearly excluded all dairy cattle from waterways on their
farms – 99.6 per cent of permanent waterways are now
fenced and 99.9 per cent of regular waterway crossings now
have bridges or culverts.
• Fonterra now employs 24
Sustainable Dairy Advisors (SDAs) across the country and is
due to have 28 by the end of 2018, on the way to a target of
30 (double last year).
• Fonterra’s TIAKI programme, which involves SDAs
providing advice, tools and services to farmers, has helped
see more than 1,000 Farm Environment Plans completed. These
are tailored plans to improve environmental outcomes,
utilising digital mapping tools and a suite of good
management practices.
At
sites:
• A recent water recycling innovation
at Fonterra’s Pahiatua manufacturing site will
save about half a million litres of water a day. Meanwhile
Fonterra’s factory in Darfield has new technology which
will reduce the amount of groundwater drawn by around 70 per
cent.
• Learnings from Pahiatua and Darfield will be
applied elsewhere to help reach the 2020 target of reducing
water use across 26 New Zealand manufacturing sites by 20
per cent.
Progress through
partnerships:
• Significant progress has been
made at the halfway point of Fonterra’s
10-year Living Water partnership with the
Department of Conservation, which is focussed on five
freshwater catchments to identify game-changing and scalable
solutions that demonstrate dairying and freshwater can
thrive together.
• Working with community stakeholders,
the additional 50 catchments that Fonterra has committed to
help restore have been identified and action planning is
underway.
“Our focus continues to be working collaboratively with others who care about New Zealand’s waterways, because the task of reversing the decline in water quality over many years is complex and will only be achieved if everybody does their bit,” adds Mortland.
“It’s a long-term approach, and many of the results will only show over the long-term, but it’s crucial we keep up the hard work now to accelerate the national movement to rebuild the health of the country’s waterways.”
Fonterra’s six water commitments are
as follows:
1. Farm within regional
environmental limits
2. Encourage strong
environmental farming practices
3. Reduce
water use and improve wastewater quality at manufacturing
plants
4. Build partnerships to improve
waterway health
5. Invest in science and
innovation to find new solutions
6. Make the
products people value most
Fonterra also recently appointed a Sustainability Advisory Panel, with six independent experts, to help guide its sustainability strategy going forward.
For more information
visit Fonterra’s water information hub here.
A full
picture of Fonterra’s commitments, progress and
performance across environmental, social and economic topics
for FY18 will be provided in its second annual
Sustainability Report, which is due out at the end of
November and will be published on Fonterra.com.
ENDS