Yvette McCullough, Political Reporter
The government is allocating nearly $6 million to a campaign to stop Australian beekeepers marketing their products as
"mānuka" honey.
Photo: Avenue on Wikimedia Commons
The Mānuka Honey Appellation Society is being granted $5.7 million through the Provincial Growth Fund, including a $1.7
million loan, to help in its bid to secure international property rights.
Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones accused Australian honey producers of trying to steal what was
indigenous to New Zealand.
"The Aussies are trying to promote themselves as the owners of the mānuka honey brand. That is wrong culturally, that is
a type of economic larceny", he said.
Mānuka honey sells for as much as $400/kg and has purported medicinal benefits.
The funding announcement follows the government giving its support to an industry push to trademark mānuka honey in
China and shut Australia out of the market.
Mr Jones said the money would be necessary to meet "the costs of securing international recognition of the mānuka
property right" and certification in key markets.
"Undertaking more research, promotion and developing a more cohesive commercial entity to hold whatever property rights
are secured in the patent courts at an international level.
"But the most important thing for myself with the mānuka investors and the mānuka players is to ensure that no other
country can filch and essentially steal.
"Mānuka represents a chance to expand jobs and wealth in regional parts of New Zealand and if the Crown doesn't step up
and work constructively with our mānuka partners, there's a strong prospect that other international players will walk
away with the bulk of the prize," Mr Jones said.
Shane Jones Photo: RNZ / Dan Cook
Mānuka Honey Appellation Society spokesperson John Rawcliffe said the government funding was "very significant".
He said getting certification marks was a very long journey, but they wanted to head down the path of Scotch whisky in
protecting their product.
"The industry has made a massive commitment towards this, it's got support from all the industry but it needed some
government support, it gives us the infrastructure for the industry to advance," he said.
Mr Rawcliffe said the grant element of the funding would go towards scientific research.
"The science surrounds not necessarily the definition but all the elements that support that mānuka is true to label.
That means, is it from New Zealand, is it Leptospermum scoparium, and has it not been adulterated?
"So it's all of those other elements that make up and support the consumer that they're purchasing mānuka honey from New
Zealand," he said.
Mr Rawcliffe said he believed this would actually be a good thing for Australian honey producers.
"They have unique honey, they have a unique position, instead of borrowing off of New Zealand's position they can
develop their own. So in the medium to long term it is very beneficial to the Australian honey industry," Mr Rawcliffe
said.
Mr Jones said this was an attempt to bolster the fortunes of all mānuka investors in New Zealand - and he said he would
not let any disputes from hāpu about the ownership of mānuka derail that.
He said he's confident that the bulk of the mānuka players were on board.
"The mānuka brand and the mānuka tree does not belong to any single Māori tribe and if we continue to acquiesce and
indulge in regional disputes between different tribes we will wake up and find the Aussies, the Chinese, the Americans
have purloined the majority of the wealth because we couldn't get our act together," Mr Jones said.