The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Katie Milne
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Katie Milne
The regions will be big winners under the new government, but farmers have also felt under fire recently, with threats of a water tax and agriculture being brought into the Emissions Trading Scheme.
Dairy farmers in particular have got a bit of a bad rep these days, and I asked Federated Farmers president Katie Milne if they have some work to do to put that right.
Katie Milne: Absolutely. There have been issues, and there are some places that do have hotspots and so on that are being addressed, and the farmers are engaging with that, doing lots of catchment-by-catchment mitigations, whether it's planting... And we're learning more about farming systems and changing those as we go. We're attacking it from a lot of different angles. But one of the things also about it is that it's more of a realisation time too in that it's taken 150 years to get here — to where we are — and things have changed. Yes, we have grown our businesses and all those things. We were sheep farming, mainly, in New Zealand in the '50s. That's moved through to beef farming, and now more recently, it's moved through to dairy. So it has been a learning curve, and there have been issues, but they are well on the way to being dealt with. And I think that's the thing that's really stood out to farmers this time round that it's come up again is that there's a lot being done that people obviously aren't aware of already.
Lisa Owen: Well, it looks like under this new government that you won't have to pay a water tax. But some people would argue part of the mitigation is making farmers pay for water. Why shouldn't you pay for water?
Well, the other side to that was that they were going to use that to clean up the waterways. And, actually, irrigation in those areas, if you look through, hasn't actually... Irrigation and effluent and poor water quality don't go hand in hand, necessarily, at all. Those waterways in that area are actually not, as it's been reported, anywhere near the levels that some people have said. It's not as big an issue as it has been made out to be. So also what irrigation does is it enables you to grow something. And everyone has assumed that if you're going to carry on with more irrigation anywhere, it's going to be about cows. And that's a real problem for farmers in that with the disruption that we're looking at in the near future, where they're talking about plant proteins and so on, we actually have to be able to grow something, and irrigation will enable that. And it doesn't mean that it's going to be more cows.
While you might not face a water tax per se, in terms of the irrigation schemes, the National government has put in about 400 million from asset sales — 90 million in the last Budget. Why shouldn't Labour stop spending money on irrigation systems like that, and what if they do? What if this government does?
It's going to be
really sad, actually, if they do, and I know they're talking
about that pretty heavily — looking at unbundling it,
unwinding it. But it sets you up for infrastructure and
ability to do things in the future. And, as I said before,
with the disruption that agriculture is facing in general,
where people are saying, 'Look, we've found some ways to use
other protein sources — plant protein and so on — and
you won't know the difference; it'll taste like meat,' if we
don't set up to be able to grow that — and there's other
areas that we could irrigate, as we've seen — Ruataniwha
and so on — we will be behind the eight ball. And things
are going to change in agriculture going forward, and I say
to people, 'I don't know what I'll be growing in five or 10
years. I may have less cows.' So the rest of the world will
pick it up and will be able to be ahead of the game on us on
that one. And we won't be able to fit in and continue to
actually have an export—
So you're saying
you won't be able to compete on the world stage in terms of
exporting without that irrigation and without subsidised
irrigation.
Well, it's an
infrastructure thing. It is about actually enabling New
Zealand to have options, optionality going
forward.
Isn't that corporate welfare, though?
Government paying for an irrigation system that benefits
private businesses, which farmers are — private
businesses.
It's setting up
options for whatever type of business the nation wants to
have later. Look, roads and so on like that, they are paid
for by the government, and all private businesses and so on
benefit from that, as well as the general public. So I think
it's something that could be talked out, but it's definitely
not just for private benefit. It enables communities to grow
and thrive and provide jobs and so on through having
businesses there that function well.
From a
different angle, though, this is also related to preserving
the environment and climate change. And the other thing that
farmers do not pay for at the moment is animal emissions. So
why do you think that you should get a free pass on
that?
Well, no one in the
world charges for animal emissions. That's the first
part.
Doesn't mean that we
can't.
Yeah, no, that's
right. But I guess the thing is that we're working on
mitigations there. There's the Biological Emissions Research
Group; there's the Greenhouse Gas Consortium. We're spending
a lot of money in that area to find what we can do that will
help to mitigate that. And we've always said, 'Keep us out
unless there's mitigations.'
But Federated
Farmers has acknowledged that that is about a decade away
— so injections for cows and things like that. That's a
decade away. People would argue that's too far into the
distance, so why should you get a free pass on it
now?
Well, again, we're not
on a level playing field in our international— with other
competitors anyway when we export. No one else is doing it.
So if you add that impediment in the meantime... We want it,
because the thing is it'll make us more efficient
too.
So, I want to move on to politics. The
only party that has committed to not putting a charge on
emissions for farmers is National and not putting a charge
on water for farmers is National. So is National still the
party of farmers?
Well,
actually, New Zealand First is not big on the emissions
trading for farmers either — the biological part —
because they know, too, until the mitigation's there, it's
not—
Yeah, but they'd set up a climate
commission and do some other
things.
Yeah, which— But,
still, they have pretty fundamental things that they realise
that, yeah, until there's something there, it's not going to
achieve what you actually want.
So is New
Zealand First the party for farmers now? Or do you still
think National is the predominant party for
farmers?
Well, I hope that
all parties would be the parties for farmers, because we're
a part of the economy that is crucial. 80% of New Zealanders
still think that agriculture has a place to play in our
future. And so we need that to be supported through being
able to learn these new ways, get these mitigations in,
support the science that'll help us be better and do things
in a new way, because it is a key part to our
economy.
So, election figures show that, in
fact, the South Island in rural areas swung more to Labour
than the northern and urban areas. So why do you think that
there was that bit of a
shift?
I do think that that
was the political football that farming became, and the
rivers — you know, everyone talking about the degradation
and so on — people firmly believing that, basically,
they're all buggered. And that's not true. We have areas
where there has been decline. And in the towns as well, we
do have issues, and we know that, and we're all trying to
work towards making that better and doing our part where we
can. And so I think it's things like that that are
fundamentals for people. If they haven't gone out an
experienced themselves and had a look and talked to people
on what is actually happening and checked some of the
websites for validity, because there's some out there that
have got skull and crossbones on every river in Canterbury,
which is—
So you think the swing in vote was
due to misinformation about quality of
water?
Well, no. Part...
And a whole lot of policies where, you know, people cling on
to parts of it and the full story is not necessarily fully
understood. Yeah, so, look, that's just my opinion of what
the swing was about, and I think that that was more of an
urban-rural disconnect a little bit.
Okay.
Well, we're running out of time. Just before we go, on the
show recently, we've been talking about the gender pay gap.
Is there a gender pay gap in farming? How does women's pay
stack up with men's in the farming
industry?
As far as I'm
aware, there's not, because if you come in and you apply for
a job, your skill set is your skill set, and we just pay
what the going rate is. So, actually, it's a good question.
I'm not 100% sure, but my experience is that whoever comes
through my door, they get the hourly rate they get, and it
doesn't matter what sex they are.
And speaking
of pay, is there any justification where anyone should get 8
million bucks in the pay
packet?
I don't supply
Fonterra, so I'm glad I don't have to answer that one. Hey,
look, but as people have said, look, it's right out there,
and it seems pretty ostentatious, but if he's producing the
results under those parameters that those directors set up
as KPIs for him, then he's earnt it.
All
right. Hey, thanks for joining us this morning. Much
appreciated.
You're
welcome.