Helping waterways without hurting rural communities
Today’s Essential Freshwater Package shows healthy and
swimmable waterways are important to all New Zealanders,
including dairy farmers, who share the same aspirations to
protect our streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands.
DairyNZ chief executive Dr Tim Mackle said the dairy sector and our farmers share the same vision communities, Maori and Government have to protect and improve our freshwater resources.
“The Essential Freshwater
Package announced today provides a real opportunity for
everyone to have their say in this important conversation.
We know we can’t farm without healthy water and land, and
we reflect this in our Dairy Tomorrow sector strategy, and
we need to acknowledge the work that’s already taken
place,” said Dr Mackle.
“Our dairy sector is already
on the journey to improve and protect water quality and our
farmers have been working towards this for more than a
decade.”
Dr Mackle said at the same time it is acknowledged that, in some catchments, community expectations for water quality has not yet been met. Here, further action is required by all land users, including dairy, to halt a decline and longer-term solutions put in place to restore the health of these waterways.
“This policy package focuses not only on dairy but all
land use activities, including sheep and beef, horticulture
and urban activities, reflecting that we all have a part to
play in improving our waterways,” said Dr Mackle.
“We
agree with a focus on ecosystem health and alongside this,
options to better track the impact of improvements farmers
are making to work towards this. However, we have serious
concerns that the proposed approach of reducing nitrogen and
phosphorus may not achieve improved ecosystem health and
could have a significant impact on the viability of farm
businesses and rural communities. We need to understand this
better and what it means for our water quality, farmers and
for the country.
“We know from experience that
regulation is one tool, but hearts and minds are vital to
create enduring change. We also want this to be grounded in
facts and science, as well as economic and social analysis.
“Many things impact on ecosystem health, nutrients are
often not the key driver. It will be important to recognise
a catchment-by-catchment targeted approach as opposed to
blanket one-size-fits all rules.
“We believe further
uptake of Good Farming Practices and Farm Environment Plans
across all farms, catchments and land users nationally is an
effective way to accelerate further improvements,” said Dr
Mackle. “Over 3000 farms already have a comprehensive Farm
Environment Plan and we support that every farm has have one
by 2025.
“Overall we support the intent of the Essential Freshwater Package but we haven’t been involved in its development, so we need to understand the proposed policies in more detail.
“It is important the
policies contribute to meaningful improvements in water
quality for the community and there are realistic
expectations for all landowners.
“We believe on-farm
initiatives are already contributing to maintaining or
improving water quality across many catchments and the most
recent LAWA report supports this, with almost all water
quality measures showing more sites improving, than
not.”
Dr Mackle said there is an opportunity to extend on the good work already done by promoting good farming principles across all catchments, farms and land owners. “This should build on successful sector initiatives, including the Sustainable Dairying: Water Accord, and we don’t want to see our good work undone.
“Our farmers are adaptable and have made significant changes to how we farm over the last 30 years. We will continue to learn and make changes into the future,” said Dr Mackle.
“We recognise that over time, future land use may look different than it does today. It is important that farmers have the certainty, tools and adequate transition time to continue on the journey and make the changes that may be needed over the next generation.
“Looking forward, we are encouraged by the prospect of a vibrant primary sector and rural communities, benefiting from healthy and resilient waterways.”
For more information on the new Essential Freshwater
Package proposal visit www.mfe.govt.nz
For more
information on the Sustainable Dairying: Water Accord, visit
www.dairynz.co.nz/water-accord