this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2023
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For those who have been following the "Dairy/Emissions/Climate Change" saga the last few days, this story highlights the role that Fronterra will/must play in turning the industry around to be accepted on the World stage. This includes at least some move to plant based production. Fronterra can dictate to farmers what practices are acceptable, or it won't collect the milk, this has been done before, so Fronterra has the power to force the change.

As one of the early commenters below the story highlights, this does nothing for the pollution of NZ Rivers that continues, though. It IS time for the Farmers to pay, and I suspect many are going to pay dearly.

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[–] flambonkscious@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This sounds great - I'm sure it's a sore subject and no one loves being the bashed victim, but I'm fairly confident the farming community have some overly loud complainers that aren't willing to change (that's my prejudice, at least).

I'm excited to hear Fonterra may be able to force this and is essentially leading the charge. It's gotta hurt, but I see this just like the flattening of the COVID curve - less pain before it's too late...

I say this because it's obvious to me that we need to diversify from milk and meat - as soon as those are cheaply synthesized we're done for (as far as GDP, etc). It happened with the wool market, so they all switched (those that weren't bankrupt) and made exactly the same mistake again (by going all in on beef & dairy).

[–] deadbeef79000 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

All good, except this:

no one loves being the bashed victim

The farmers who will bear the brunt of the changes are not victims. They are the ones victimising the environment and the rest of us.

They're had decades to change, to adapt to sustainable practices, all the while getting a hefty discount on the actual cost of their practices. Times up.

Touché. I concur