logo
Uncertainty For Meat Workers As Plants Grapple With Low Livestock Numbers

Uncertainty For Meat Workers As Plants Grapple With Low Livestock Numbers

Scoop27-06-2025
Meat plants across Aotearoa are struggling to match low volumes of livestock coming through with staffing levels.
New Zealand's national sheep flock and dairy herd have continued to decline in recent years, impacting the flow of livestock into meat works.
However, this has also created a competitive environment for farmers, some of whom were earning record prices for their stock, exacerbating the challenge of profitability for meat companies.
Consistently declining livestock numbers saw red meat farmer-owned cooperative Alliance Group close its Smithfield processing plant in Timaru last year.
Major red meat processor, Silver Fern Farms' chief executive, Dan Boulton told the Primary Industries New Zealand Summit in Ōtautahi this week, that the organisation was pulling thousands of seasonal workers off the chain to match capacity with the supply of livestock.
"We're holding on tight. We're having to reduce capacity," Boulton said.
"We have about 3,000 of our workers on seasonal layoff right now, which normally would be running full steam as we work through the back end of the cow season."
Taking capacity off, particularly for night shift workers, helped to reduce and control operating costs, but created issues of uncertainty.
"We're trying to attract workers into our sector and that uncertainty around [the] workforce is a real challenge."
He said the beef kill was down 4 percent in 2024 and the lamb culls down 9 percent, creating procurement tension among the different companies.
"Clearly a big challenge, and so on one hand we've got fantastic market returns and that's bringing profitability back into the sector, but we can't underestimate some of the livestock volumes and where they've landed particularly in the last 18 months.
"Those are some big adjustments that the New Zealand processing sector has to make. So clearly, we have a capacity imbalance, that's through the media and that's creating a little bit of uncertainty."
Through 2024 Silver Fern Farms recorded a $21.8 million after-tax loss, following a $24.4m loss in 2023.
Competitor, co-op Alliance Group reported an after-tax loss of $95.8m for the year ended September, just over half of which accounted for the redundancies associated with Smithfield's closure.
Meat Workers Union national secretary Daryl Carran said company profits were being affected by the record prices farmers were getting for livestock because the environment was very competitive.
He said the low livestock numbers in farming, which the union had warned meat companies about for years, were particularly acute for larger companies.
"Every year we're losing sheep farmers."
Curran said realigning capacity with the reducing livestock numbers was vital to the sector's sustainability.
"We've recently told one company to rationalise capacity because the numbers just aren't there anymore.
"We have too many sites considering the stock we have available."
Curran said further plant closures were likely in future, and meat companies should work together to address the processing network.
StatsNZ figures showed the national sheep flock had fallen 21 percent in the past decade to 23.6m sheep.
The ratio of 22 sheep per New Zealander in the 1980s was now down to 4.5.
Dairy cattle also fell by about 13 percent or 860,000 over the decade with the national herd now 5.8m.
However, beef cattle numbers were holding steady at 3.7m.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shareholder approval sought for Alliance sale
Shareholder approval sought for Alliance sale

Otago Daily Times

time2 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Shareholder approval sought for Alliance sale

Site closures and asset sales are possible if farmer shareholders do not support Dawn Meats Group taking a 65% stake in Alliance Group for $250 million, the co-operative says. Yesterday, Alliance — the wholly farmer-owned co-operative — confirmed the rumour the Irish company was planning to take a majority stake. The deal is subject to shareholder approval and will require a minimum of 75% shareholder acceptance of those who vote, and greater than 50% of all shareholders voting yes at a special general meeting in Invercargill on October 20. If shareholders did not support the investment, the Alliance board would be obliged to enter into a process led by its banking syndicate which might involve possible asset sales, site closures and further cost-reduction initiatives, the co-operative said. Alliance is a major employer in the South with plants at Pukeuri, Mataura and Lorneville, along with Nelson, Dannevirke and Levin. It is owned by more than 4000 shareholders. If approved, the investment would reduce Alliance's short-term working capital facility by about $200m, accelerate the board's strategic capital expenditure programme and enable the distribution of up to $40m to the co-operative, subject to shareholder livestock supply, it said. Alliance chairman Mark Wynne said the announcement came after a two-year process to reset and recapitalise the business. Last year, Alliance appointed Craigs Investment Partners to explore external capital-raising options after posting a full-year after-tax loss of $95.8m for the year ending September 30, which followed a $70.1m loss the previous year, yet a record $116.3m profit in 2022. Established by three farming families in 1980, Dawn Meats has 24 facilities and more than 8000 employees in 10 countries, processing more than 3.5 million sheep and 1 million cattle per annum, with a core annual turnover of more than $5.8 billion. Speaking to the Otago Daily Times yesterday afternoon, Alliance chief executive Willie Wiese said feedback on the proposal included mixed views but was predominantly supportive. The business had been built up over generations and that was valued. Farmers had questioned if the company could trade its way out. Despite the challenges it had faced, it would be profitable this year. But an issue was the debt it was dragging along. When the record profit was announced in 2022, the company also had $107m debt at that time. It had taken two years but the company was now in a very different space and was a very different business. "We can trade our way out of it but the time it will take is far too long from a banking perspective," Mr Wiese said. While Alliance would be working hard for a yes vote, Mr Wiese said he would also be relentlessly working on "what if" the proposal was rejected. It would be up to the banks to determine what that would look like. Yesterday, James Anderson, who with fellow Waikaia farmer David Pinckney implored shareholders attending Alliance's last annual meeting in Gore in December to support 100% farmer ownership, said he was now "trying to drive down the middle line". While canvassing support to retain farmer ownership, Mr Anderson spoke with fully paid-up Alliance shareholders who were "disgruntled" with the co-operative's management. They had gone to competing companies, either with all or some of their stock and they wanted change. These were younger farmers from intergenerational farming families and they were "disgruntled about this very stoic attitude of why we have to be 100% farmer-owned". "What I know is bankers and our young farmers are seeing the business in a different light than what I am," he said. Mr Anderson, who started supplying Alliance shortly after starting farming in 1987, said the "elephant in the room" had been the drop in livestock numbers and the government's slow response to landuse change. Federated Farmers meat and wool industry group chairman Richard Dawkins urged farmers to attend farmer roadshow meetings — which begin on September 29 — to understand what was proposed so they could make an informed decision. "Apathy is not a solution," he said.

Shareholder approval sought for sale
Shareholder approval sought for sale

Otago Daily Times

time2 days ago

  • Otago Daily Times

Shareholder approval sought for sale

Site closures and asset sales are possible if farmer shareholders do not support Dawn Meats Group taking a 65% stake in Alliance Group for $250 million, the co-operative says. Yesterday, Alliance — the wholly farmer-owned co-operative — confirmed the rumour the Irish company was planning to take a majority stake. The deal is subject to shareholder approval and will require a minimum of 75% shareholder acceptance of those who vote, and greater than 50% of all shareholders voting yes at a special general meeting in Invercargill on October 20. If shareholders did not support the investment, the Alliance board would be obliged to enter into a process led by its banking syndicate which might involve possible asset sales, site closures and further cost-reduction initiatives, the co-operative said. Alliance is a major employer in the South with plants at Pukeuri, Mataura and Lorneville, along with Nelson, Dannevirke and Levin. It is owned by more than 4000 shareholders. If approved, the investment would reduce Alliance's short-term working capital facility by about $200m, accelerate the board's strategic capital expenditure programme and enable the distribution of up to $40m to the co-operative, subject to shareholder livestock supply, it said. Alliance chairman Mark Wynne said the announcement came after a two-year process to reset and recapitalise the business. Last year, Alliance appointed Craigs Investment Partners to explore external capital-raising options after posting a full-year after-tax loss of $95.8m for the year ending September 30, which followed a $70.1m loss the previous year, yet a record $116.3m profit in 2022. Established by three farming families in 1980, Dawn Meats has 24 facilities and more than 8000 employees in 10 countries, processing more than 3.5 million sheep and 1 million cattle per annum, with a core annual turnover of more than $5.8 billion. Speaking to the Otago Daily Times yesterday afternoon, Alliance chief executive Willie Wiese said feedback on the proposal included mixed views but was predominantly supportive. The business had been built up over generations and that was valued. Farmers had questioned if the company could trade its way out. Despite the challenges it had faced, it would be profitable this year. But an issue was the debt it was dragging along. When the record profit was announced in 2022, the company also had $107m debt at that time. It had taken two years but the company was now in a very different space and was a very different business. "We can trade our way out of it but the time it will take is far too long from a banking perspective," Mr Wiese said. While Alliance would be working hard for a yes vote, Mr Wiese said he would also be relentlessly working on "what if" the proposal was rejected. It would be up to the banks to determine what that would look like. Yesterday, James Anderson, who with fellow Waikaia farmer David Pinckney implored shareholders attending Alliance's last annual meeting in Gore in December to support 100% farmer ownership, said he was now "trying to drive down the middle line". While canvassing support to retain farmer ownership, Mr Anderson spoke with fully paid-up Alliance shareholders who were "disgruntled" with the co-operative's management. They had gone to competing companies, either with all or some of their stock and they wanted change. These were younger farmers from intergenerational farming families and they were "disgruntled about this very stoic attitude of why we have to be 100% farmer-owned". "What I know is bankers and our young farmers are seeing the business in a different light than what I am," he said. Mr Anderson, who started supplying Alliance shortly after starting farming in 1987, said the "elephant in the room" had been the drop in livestock numbers and the government's slow response to landuse change. Federated Farmers meat and wool industry group chairman Richard Dawkins urged farmers to attend farmer roadshow meetings — which begin on September 29 — to understand what was proposed so they could make an informed decision. "Apathy is not a solution," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store