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Solar On Farms: Unlocking Farm Cost Savings
Solar On Farms: Unlocking Farm Cost Savings

Scoop

time2 hours ago

  • Business
  • Scoop

Solar On Farms: Unlocking Farm Cost Savings

Minister for Energy Energy Minister Simon Watts has announced the Government's new Solar on Farms initiative, which will support farmers in taking the next step towards installing solar and battery systems, helping them reduce energy costs, increase on-farm resilience, and allow farmers to gain greater control over their power use, leading to increased efficiency and productivity. The Solar on Farms package includes: Independent and practical tools and advice to assist farmers A dedicated help function to guide farmers through the opportunities Feasibility studies and technology demonstrations tailored to various farm types Real-life energy data for different farm types, showing how solar energy works in practice Independent advice on progressing consents and applications with local and regional bodies and Electricity Distribution Businesses A partnership with the Centre for Sustainable Finance to accelerate access to finance, making it quicker, simpler and easier. 'Kiwi farmers have a long history of adapting, problem-solving and finding ways to be smart with land and resources. Real progress comes from the ground up, from people who understand the land, the seasons, and how to run a business,' Mr Watts says. 'That's why we want to give farmers more choices and the ability to unlock the cost savings that come with on-farm solar, batteries, and flexible energy systems. However, to achieve this, farmers require the correct information, evidence, tools, and trusted advice. 'That's where Solar on Farms comes in. It's a practical support package that helps farmers determine if solar and battery systems are right for them by working with them to navigate the details of installing and leveraging this technology for their businesses. The package provides farmers with direct access to independent advice. It offers solutions tailored to various farm types and energy profiles. 'Farms across New Zealand, especially those using irrigation and other energy-intensive systems, are facing increasingly high and unpredictable energy costs. This adds real pressure to already tight margins. 'On-farm solar and batteries can help reduce that pressure by improving self-sufficiency and lowering exposure to rising energy prices, especially in rural and remote areas. Generating electricity on-farm also creates opportunities to receive revenue from solar electricity back to the grid. 'Early modelling tells us that if 30 per cent of Kiwi farms installed larger systems – of the size we see on some farms already – they could generate as much as 10 per cent of New Zealand's current electricity demand. This is a real win for the security of our energy supply.' EECA is leading the delivery of Solar on Farms in collaboration with farmers, sector bodies, and technical experts, and the package of initiatives will be available soon. Fieldays 2025 also celebrated the launch of Farmlands Flex, a complementary solar on farms product from Farmlands and energy innovator Blackcurrent, with the support of Ara Ake, New Zealand's energy innovation centre. The product combines solar, batteries and smart software in a fully managed system that enables users to generate, store and manage their energy on-site. 'The Farmlands Flex product includes equipment, flexible demand management software, and takes care of the installation and application processes on behalf of the farmer,' says Mr Watts. 'It is an excellent demonstration of how solar purchasing and installation can be made more efficient.' Mr Watts also welcomed ASB's recent announcement of a new 0 percent solar loan aimed at helping farmers secure long-term energy resilience and cost savings. 'I look forward to seeing how products like Farmlands Flex, the ASB SMART solar loan, and our Solar on Farms initiative help set the farming sector up for long-term success.'

The iconic California avocado is in trouble, and this farmer is fighting to save it
The iconic California avocado is in trouble, and this farmer is fighting to save it

American Military News

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • American Military News

The iconic California avocado is in trouble, and this farmer is fighting to save it

Norman Kachuck stood on a loamy ridge overlooking his inheritance. Avocado trees blanketed the hillsides of ACA Groves in three directions, just a portion of a 372-acre spread studded with 16,000 specimens, many of them dense with branches weighed down by that quintessential California fruit. The serene San Diego County property felt far from the chaotic epicenter of the global avocado industry in Mexico. Violence, corruption and environmental degradation have saturated the avocado trade there, causing the U.S. to briefly stop imports and senators to agitate for action by the federal government. Norman Kachuck of ACA Farms, seen here on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, in Valley Center, California, is fighting for the survival of California avocado farms. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS) 'Mexican avocado imports are tainted conflict fruit,' said Kachuck, 70, a former neurologist who heads his family's business. 'The Mexican avocado industry is corrupt and ungoverned — and the American consumer is being deceived.' A deluge of inexpensive avocados from Mexico has imperiled the livelihoods of California growers, Kachuck among them. A quirky and voluble man, Kachuck is on a quest to save the California avocado, taking political and legal action against entrenched interests he sees as an impediment to farmers like him. He calls himself a 'Neuroavocado Warrior.' 'You've got to be an activist, you've got to be proactive and you have to defend your strengths and buttress your weaknesses in everything you do,' said Kachuck, a married father of three adult children. 'Everything has adversarial components to it. But the operative part is making peace.' Avocados are harvested at ACA Farms on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, in Valley Center, California. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS) As recently as the 1990s, the U.S. did not import Mexican avocados. But 1994's North American Free Trade Agreement opened the floodgates: now roughly 90% of the avocados consumed here are imported. And the bulk of that fruit — again, roughly 90% — comes from Mexico, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. At the same time, Southern California farmers must survive in a drought-prone state, and extreme weather brought on by climate change has meant irregular crop yields, among other challenges. Dylan Marschall, a real estate broker who specializes in avocado properties, said the market dynamics are brutally simple: 'Yeah, California has better-quality avocados, but retailers are in the business to make money. And if they can get [better] prices from Mexico, they aren't going to pay for California fruit.' Amid the tumult, Kachuck has battled with the California Avocado Commission, accusing it of insufficiently aiding growers. Now he is bracing for President Trump's trade policies, unsure what they might do to his business. Kachuck said he would welcome a tariff, but pointed out that another major Trump initiative — deporting millions of immigrants in the U.S. illegally — could seriously deplete his and other farmers' labor forces. Change can't come soon enough. Kachuck's line of credit is tapped out and he's had to draw hundreds of thousands of dollars from his retirement account to keep the business afloat. ACA Farms worker Raul picks avocados from atop a tall ladder on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, in Valley Center, California. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS) Amid the avalanche of foreign fruit, the seasons spanning 2019 through 2023 were 'just awful,' Kachuck said. The COVID-19 pandemic amplified the problems. But he presses on. 'Yeah, I'm taking chances. And I'm stupid enough to not know when quitting is correct,' he said. 'I just have this general sense of optimism — or hubris — that I can figure it out.' The quintessence of California Kachuck took over his family's business in 2010, making the long drive to San Diego County from his home in Valley Village. He had just walked away from a career in medicine — he'd practiced as a neurologist at USC for 20 years — to aid his ailing father. Israel Kachuck, a onetime astronautics engineer and general contractor, bought more than 450 acres of mostly barren land in the 1960s and began planting avocado trees. A worker at ACA Farms chops fallen limbs for composting as avocados are harvested on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, in Valley Center, California. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS) 'He had been a restless soul for as long as I was aware,' Kachuck said. 'lt was part and parcel with what he was doing: moving things around in his brain to accommodate problem solving that was interesting and remunerative.' The son had a similar wandering spirit. 'My avocado did not fall too far from the tree,' Kachuck acknowledged. He studied music composition and briefly played keyboard — three days in 1976 — with the Pointer Sisters. He then moved to New York to compose music for a girlfriend's dance company until his curiosity about how the brain works led him to neurology. Next came medical school, graduating from USC in 1987. When he got involved in ACA Groves about 15 years ago, his dad was grateful. 'For the first time in his life, he was finally sharing the business with somebody,' Kachuck said. Manuel Aquino totes a satchel full of avocados at ACA Farms on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, in Valley Center, California. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS) Before long, though, Israel was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. He died in 2021 at 92. Though he'd been addled by the ailment, he understood that his son had managed to preserve the family business. 'The saving of the family legacy was a very important obligation I felt,' said Kachuck, who added, with a laugh, that he had also hoped the business would ensure his children 'had more than just a neurologist's income to support their lifestyles.' Kachuck immersed himself in a wide-ranging education in avocados, from their agronomy to the unlikely backstory of their California triumph. Once known as the alligator pear, the avocado traces its history to southern Mexico, where the fruit, according to some experts, was first cultivated about 5,000 years ago. (In Nahuatl, avocado is ahuacatl, sometimes defined as 'testicle.') ACA Farms worker Raul prepares to climb a ladder to pick avocados on Tuesday, May 28, 2024, in Valley Center, California. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times/TNS) Though it is not native to California, the avocado is arguably as tied to the state's identity as the orange once was. This is thanks to the venerable Hass variety, discovered in the 1920s by a Pasadena mail carrier-turned-grower, Rudolph Hass. His namesake variety accounts for 95% of avocados consumed in the U.S. The proliferation of Mexican and other Latin cuisines cemented the avocado's position as an American staple — largely via guacamole. But the fruit hit some speed bumps on its path to ubiquity. Amid an obsession with low-fat diets in the 1980s, avocados were spurned by many — even though their fats are mostly unsaturated. Enter: the California Avocado Commission, which is overseen by the California Department of Food and Agriculture and whose main responsibility is to market and promote the state's fruit. In the 1990s, the commission — which is funded by an assessment of the gross dollar value of California avocados sold — invested in research to establish the fruit's health efficacy, said avocado farmer Duane Urquhart, a commission board member at the time. Once the avocado's nutritiousness was established, Urquhart said, the commission launched a marketing and education campaign to teach consumers how to use them, even working with cooking schools to develop recipes. 'That,' he said, 'was when we really created the U.S. market for California avocados.' Now praised as a superfood, avocados are at turns revered and vilified. Consider the endless disparaging of millennials over their avocado toast. But that hasn't stopped anyone from eating them. The avocado's rise had an unintended consequence: Business interests in Mexico took notice. Board machinations As inexpensive Mexican avocados flooded the state, many California growers looked to the avocado commission for help. But Kachuck felt its board of directors made major missteps. In late 2020, an agricultural trade attorney advised the commission's board that it could petition the United States International Trade Commission for import relief, which can include tariffs. Such a complaint, the attorney said, could prompt an investigation and have a 'chilling effect on foreign competitors,' recalled avocado farmer John Cornell, then a board member. But the avocado commission never took action. Writing in the commission's 'From the Grove' publication in 2023, the board's then-chairman, Rob Grether, derided what he termed 'fanciful fixes for foreign fruit flow.' The California avocado industry's retail and food-service partners would oppose such efforts, he wrote. Kachuck was incredulous: 'There was so much information about malfeasance in the Mexican avocado industry.' Complicating matters were competing interests. Though many California growers complained about Mexican imports, some of their peers had avocado groves or related businesses in Mexico too. Other issues pitted farmers in the north — Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo and Ventura counties — against those south in San Diego and Riverside. This all came to a head when Growing Coachella Valley, a nonprofit advocacy group, asked the commission in 2021 to support California legislation that sought to hold imported agriculture to state health and environmental standards. But the commission's board never even voted on whether to support the legislation. According to minutes from a board meeting, a staff member said he and legal counsel determined that AB 710 was not in the commission's 'best interest' in part because it would put the group in 'a precarious position' with important retailers. Kachuck fumed. In February 2024, he called out the commission's board of directors at its meeting in Oxnard: 'You betrayed my trust, that of our avocado growing community, and as well that of the American consumer.' The California Avocado Commission did not respond to multiple interview requests; instead, a staff member referred The Times to minutes from its board meetings. Kachuck's comments at the Oxnard meeting galvanized a loose coalition of other unhappy growers, most of them in the San Diego area. They decided to fight the issue through the 2024 board election, with six seats up for grabs on a body composed of 20 members and alternates. 'Borrowed money' and ballot failures Kachuck believed the election presented a realistic opportunity to shake up the commission. He sent out mailers and posted a get-out-the-vote appeal on the website of American Avocado Farmers, a group he and other growers formed last year. But only 14% of eligible voters cast ballots, Kachuck said, and just one of the candidates he and a handful of like-minded farmers had backed was elected. 'It's awful,' he said. 'I'm spending money I don't have — it's borrowed money. At this point I am 80% through my retirement account.' Kachuck's failure at the ballot box may stem in part from the geographical divide. In addition to comparatively plentiful and inexpensive water, northern farmers enjoy another advantage: a later summer harvest, which means their fruit is picked after the Mexican crop has inundated the market. The Southern California avocado harvest roughly coincides with that flood. Some farmers wonder if the gulf between the northern and southern poles of the industry is so wide that each region might be better served by having its own commission. Others are gearing up for a different vote: Every five years, the state's food and agriculture department holds a referendum that allows growers to decide whether the commission should continue to serve them. The next one will be held in spring 2026, a department spokesman said. And then there is the big elephant in the boardroom: President Trump's on-again, off-again tariffs. Kachuck pivoted to a new strategy in the meantime: In February, he and three other farmers sued Fresh Del Monte Produce, Calavo Growers and Mission Produce in federal court, alleging they violated the California Business and Professions Code by falsely marketing their avocados as 'sustainably and responsibly sourced' when they actually come from Mexican orchards planted on deforested land. Jennifer Church, attorney for the plaintiffs, said that the case 'is really about the American public being misled to the detriment of our local farmers.' Fresh Del Monte, Calavo and Mission did not respond to requests for comment. But in May, the companies filed a joint motion to dismiss the growers' lawsuit, arguing in part that the challenged statements are typical 'corporate puffery,' a legal term for exaggerated marketing claims that may not be objectively factual but are generally permissible. A better avocado The fight over California's avocado industry has become Kachuck's focus — to the detriment of other pursuits. There are things he wishes he could work on, like cultivating the Reed avocado, a little-known variety that's about the size and shape of a grapefruit. 'It's the most luscious, creamy, large and delicious avocado I've ever tasted,' he said. He maintains 50 Reed trees, but doesn't sell the fruit, instead giving it away to friends and family. The Reed, Kachuck said, spoils quickly after being picked, but could be made hardier via genetic intervention, such as cross-breeding. Kachuck was in his element showing off the Reed trees during a visit to ACA Groves, taking obvious pleasure in the ranch's pastoral tableau. He crunched across alluvial soil in scuffed sneakers. A gust of wind turned an avocado tree into a viridescent blur. 'I would love to concentrate on making a better avocado for us,' Kachuck said. He noted that Reed avocados have something unique going for them: They are not commercially grown in Mexico. At least not yet. ___ © 2025 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Japanese Farm Minister Taki Eto resigns after saying he never had to buy rice
Japanese Farm Minister Taki Eto resigns after saying he never had to buy rice

Miami Herald

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Miami Herald

Japanese Farm Minister Taki Eto resigns after saying he never had to buy rice

May 21 (UPI) -- Japanese Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, or Farms Taki Eto resigned Wednesday after his comments over the price of rice led to a national backlash. Eto wrote on his website that he submitted his resignation to Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who accepted. "My remarks were extremely inappropriate at a time when the public is suffering greatly from the rising prices of rice, and for that I offer my sincere apologies," Eto. Eto made the comments Sunday a weekend fundraising event, where during a speech he said he had never bought rice, as he receives so much from his supporters. "I have enough rice at home I could open up a store and sell it," he said. He later said the comment was made in jest, but retracted it and admitted that the joke was "too far." The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service reported in March that rice "prices have continued to spike and are almost 80% higher in January 2025 than one year ago." The Farm Ministry responded to the price of rice with the release of 300,000 tons of reserved rice through July. The government had already released 321,000 tons of rice between March and April as rice prices have risen dramatically in 2025. Ishiba reportedly chastised Eto on Monday, but on Tuesday the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan made an agreement with four other opposition parties to insist Eto resign, and to together submit a no-confidence motion against him. Representative Yoshihiko Noda, leader of the CDP, said Wednesday that Eto's comments "showed no consideration for the people's lives, who are suffering as rice prices soar, and they rubbed the public the wrong way," and that Eto in his opinion "shows no sense of crisis about the current situation," and is "not fit to be a minister." Copyright 2025 UPI News Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Japanese Farm Minister Taki Eto resigns after saying he never had to buy rice
Japanese Farm Minister Taki Eto resigns after saying he never had to buy rice

Yahoo

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Japanese Farm Minister Taki Eto resigns after saying he never had to buy rice

May 21 (UPI) -- Japanese Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, or Farms Taki Eto resigned Wednesday after his comments over the price of rice led to a national backlash. Eto wrote on his website that he submitted his resignation to Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who accepted. "My remarks were extremely inappropriate at a time when the public is suffering greatly from the rising prices of rice, and for that I offer my sincere apologies," Eto. Eto made the comments Sunday a weekend fundraising event, where during a speech he said he had never bought rice, as he receives so much from his supporters. "I have enough rice at home I could open up a store and sell it," he said. He later said the comment was made in jest, but retracted it and admitted that the joke was "too far." The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service reported in March that rice "prices have continued to spike and are almost 80% higher in January 2025 than one year ago." The Farm Ministry responded to the price of rice with the release of 300,000 tons of reserved rice through July. The government had already released 321,000 tons of rice between March and April as rice prices have risen dramatically in 2025. Ishiba reportedly chastised Eto on Monday, but on Tuesday the Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan made an agreement with four other opposition parties to insist Eto resign, and to together submit a no-confidence motion against him. Representative Yoshihiko Noda, leader of the CDP, said Wednesday that Eto's comments "showed no consideration for the people's lives, who are suffering as rice prices soar, and they rubbed the public the wrong way," and that Eto in his opinion "shows no sense of crisis about the current situation," and is "not fit to be a minister."

Launch of landmark R27-billion Southern Farms development flames housing hopes for Joburg South residents
Launch of landmark R27-billion Southern Farms development flames housing hopes for Joburg South residents

Daily Maverick

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Maverick

Launch of landmark R27-billion Southern Farms development flames housing hopes for Joburg South residents

After more than a decade of grassroots activism and broken promises, residents in Johannesburg South are finally seeing progress in their fight for land and dignified housing. After more than a decade of protest and sustained calls for government intervention in the housing crisis, residents in the south of Johannesburg are finally seeing long-awaited progress. On Friday, 9 May 2025, Johannesburg Mayor Dada Morero, along with MMC for Human Settlements, Mlungisi Mabaso, and other City of Johannesburg officials, met with community members at the Bushkoppies site in Region G to officially hand over the land where the Southern Farms Mega City Project will be constructed. The ambitious development marks a significant milestone in a community-led fight for equitable access to land and dignified housing. Although the project was officially launched in 2018 under the name 'Southern Farms Biodiversity Development Project', the struggle dates back to 2013, when grassroots movement Abahlali base Freedom Park began mobilising residents to demand solutions to overcrowded and inadequate housing conditions. 'In 2013, Abahlali came together to fight for land and housing. We were sharing small spaces with our families, with three to four generations living in one Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) house,' Peter Monethe, a founding member of Abahlali base Freedom Park, told Daily Maverick. 'So we came together and fought so we could find a space where we could live in dignity.' Long road of resistance and negotiation Over the years, Abahlali base Freedom Park, together with other community organisations in Region G, engaged in tireless advocacy, protests, and negotiations with the City. Their efforts spanned multiple mayoral administrations, often marked by broken promises. 'All through this time we protested, and then the government would engage, but then nothing would happen,' Monethe said. 'There would be houses built, but they'd be allocated to ANC members because of cadre deployment, while the community was excluded.' Frustrated by the delays, Abahlali eventually identified and occupied Bushkoppies — the very site now earmarked for the project. After enduring years of forced removals and legal battles, the City of Johannesburg ultimately purchased the land, paving the way for development to begin. R27-billion housing initiative The Southern Farms Mega City Project is a R27-billion housing initiative designed to address Johannesburg's estimated 1.3 million housing backlog. It will also promote economic development and environmental sustainability in one of the City's most underserved areas. As the community gathered on Friday to mark the handover, spirits were high. Residents sang, danced, and ululated in celebration of what many called a long-overdue breakthrough. Set to unfold over the next 10 years, the project covers 4,000 hectares and will deliver at least 43,000 mixed-housing units for communities in Freedom Park, Eldorado Park, Diepkloof, and surrounding areas — many of whom have waited years for housing allocations. 'This really feels like there is finally change coming,' said Farhana, a lifelong Eldorado Park resident. 'It has felt like we were divided for so long, fighting the government and fighting among ourselves for housing. My mother has been on the list for years, but now at least we can see this is really happening.' According to Mabaso, the development will include: Breaking New Ground (BNG) multi-storey units Affordable finance-linked housing options Serviced stands Mixed-income neighbourhoods Economic zones and community facilities 'Southern Farms is a bold statement that every Joburg South resident deserves dignity, opportunity and progress. We're building more than homes, we're building an inclusive future,' Morero said. Questions remain about transparency Despite the celebrations, concerns persist. Monethe said some members of Abahlali remained uneasy about the lack of clarity surrounding the number of RDP houses to be built and the criteria for allocation. 'We want to know who the beneficiaries will be. There are elderly people living in shacks, people with disabilities, and we want to ensure they are included in the allocations,' he said. During the launch, Mabaso assured the public that beneficiary management would be handled with strict transparency and adherence to the City's verified housing database. 'No one will receive a house unless they're on the verified housing database,' Mabaso said. 'Only pre-approved residents will benefit.' However, when Daily Maverick contacted the City for specific figures regarding RDP house allocations and further details on the selection process, no response had been received by the time of publication. As the bulldozers prepare to move in and formal construction begins, the community remains cautiously optimistic. For the residents of Region G, the Southern Farms Mega City Project symbolises not only a victory after years of struggle, but a test of whether the government can finally deliver on its promises. DM

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