The Farmlander - February 2021

Page 4

5 minutes with Damien O'Connor Minister of Agriculture

New Zealand also began a third round of negotiations on a free trade agreement with the UK in late January

Congratulations on retaining your portfolio following the 2020 election. What has been on your summer priority list?

and is close to completing one with the

What a year 2020 was! After COVID-19

a much-needed break over summer,

In the face of COVID-19, what stories do the NZ food and fibre industry want to be telling the world about our produce?

spending time at home doing the

We have some of the best farmers

turned our world upside down and we then fought an election campaign, I had

usual stock and maintenance jobs on our 8 hectares of land. I also rode my motorbike through the South Island from the West Coast-Tasman region where I live and am the proud local MP

EU. I had to hit the ground running this year! Parliament resumes this month, so it’s straight back into it.

in the world and I know we can be the best farmers for the world. New Zealand produce already had a global reputation for being ethically produced and of premium quality and now our

and got to spend a bit of time with four

success fighting COVID-19 has really

of my five daughters. The fifth lives in

put us on the map as a safe country

London so unfortunately, I won’t get to

and this is invaluable for our food and

see her for a while.

fibre industry. A New Zealand Trade

Being a Minister means work is never

and Enterprise campaign called Made

far away. Taking on the additional

with Care is telling the world how our

responsibility of the Trade portfolio after

progressive country and innovative

last year’s election meant I did a bit of

people are producing some of the best

reading over summer to get ready to

foods in the world in a way that’s good

host this year’s Asia-Pacific Economic

for them as consumers and good for

Cooperation (APEC) meeting.

the planet.

We have some of the best farmers in the world and I know we can be the best farmers for the world. New Zealand produce already had a global reputation for being ethically produced and of premium quality.”

4 | THE FARMLANDER

Export recovery is one of the five planks of our Government’s economic recovery. Last November, the Prime Minister announced that officials were starting to look at how we can boost our exports. She also confirmed that once borders open, she will lead business delegations to our key trading partners, including the US, China, the UK and the EU. Last year the Government invested $200 million in supporting exporters to take full advantage of our country’s reputation, so they could continue doing business despite international travel restrictions. Telling our story of how we successfully managed COVID to date will also help to attract international investment into our productive sectors and help the economic recovery. With a lack of foreign workers available in the coming seasons, what will be changing to support local farmers and growers in 2021? The Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI) has been helping the horticulture, agriculture and forestry sectors grow their local workforces through its Opportunity Grows Here campaign. The Farmlander readers might have seen news reports of former airline, tourism and hospitality workers retraining in Central Otago and enjoying their new lives behind the wheel of a tractor or picking fruit. They are just some of the people who are discovering that primary industries can offer

Farmlands Co-operative Society Limited | © February 2021. All rights reserved.

WWW.FARMLANDS.CO.NZ


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