Feds must stop "kicking farmers" over systemic agricultural failures
Monday, 29 July: Following an expose of grisly scenes of mudbound cows in Southland due to winter cropping, Greenpeace
is expressing frustration at agricultural industry leaders’ failing to take responsibility.
"Federated Farmers head Katie Milne is once again blaming farmers for what is actually a systemic failure in New
Zealand’s agriculture - namely the cramming of the land with too many cows," said Greenpeace NZ senior campaigner Steve
Abel.
"These miserable images of cows forced to live in mud are a consequence of a greedy and underregulated dairy industry
that has overstocked the land. Dairy industry bosses and a laissez faire attitude from consecutive governments and
regional councils is squarely to blame."
"Whenever people raise these systemic issues, the dairy industry bosses call it an attack on farmers; putting the heat
back on farmers instead of taking responsibility for the broken system their industry has made. Farmers are often the
meat in the sandwich and Fed Farmers and Dairy NZs scapegoating of individual farmers is unethical and changes nothing."
The issue was highlighted again today by images of mudbound cows in Southland and Otago released by environmentalist
Angus Robson outside the offices of the Ministry for the Environment in Wellington this morning.
"Cows in mud is a consequence of intensive grazing, feedlotting and winter cropping. It is miserable for the animals who
are often heavily pregnant. They have to live, sleep and give birth, through the coldest months of winter, often up to
their knees in mud and their own excrement."
"Winter cropping pollutes our freshwater. It concentrates all the urine and effluent from the cows in one muddy paddock
so that the animal's nitrate-rich waste flushes into estuaries, creeks, rivers and groundwater aquifers.
Greenpeace says the real solution is a systemic change in farming and a switch to regenerative agriculture.
"Fewer cows would be better for animal welfare, freshwater health, and the climate. By substantially reducing stock
numbers, getting rid of synthetic nitrogen and big irrigation, and most winter cropping, we can see an end to cows in
mud. New Zealand needs to shift to regenerative agriculture to have a farming industry fit for the 21st century,"
concluded Abel.
ENDS