New Zealand - Kūmara businesses cling to staff despite massive crop loss

30.03.2023 1024 views

Kūmara packers have had working hours slashed after this year's crop was ravaged by Cyclone Gabrielle- but packhouse bosses are doing their best to keep staff on for next year's season.

Growers are nearing the end of a dismal harvest in Kaipara - losing about 70 percent to rot.

Kaipara Kūmara in Ruawai normally washes, grades and packs about 7000 tonnes of kūmara per harvest.

This year it is tracking to less than 2000.

Managing director Anthony Blundell told RNZ that tally "goes back to what we were packing 30 years ago, so it's quite a catastrophic drop for us".

He had been hoping for a "normal" year after Covid protocols disrupted operations - but the packhouse has about 35 employees and supply has been "turned upside down" by the cyclone.

"We're probably going to have two-and-a-half days of production each week instead of four or five ... we've already had just a couple of staff members that have moved on or are looking for other jobs. We've got some staff members that are going to hang in there."

Blundell said the business was "managing the best we can and topping up people's wages, understanding the fact that in January 2024, we'll be harvesting the 2024 crops so we'll need everyone back on board".

Grower Doug Nilsson suffered damage not only to his crops but also to sheds and housing for recognised seasonal employers (RSE workers), just outside of Dargaville.

"Every bit of our [plantation] flat went underwater here. So we had close to 7 hectares of kūmara that had been underwater for four to six days. Anything longer than a-day-and-a-half, two days, and you've lost them.

"So it [floodwater] has been through our accommodation block down here. So (Cyclone) Bola came up to the level of our shed floors. This one was at least three-quarters of a metre through all our cool stores. So we've lost the capabilities of our cool stores."

He was granted $10,000 in government relief funding but that covered very little of the repair costs so far. Insurance is helping pay for infrastructure damage but not crop loss.

"If we get over the financial hurdle for the next 12 months, we can have a crop again," he said.

"We've been [spending] three or four weeks cleaning subsurface drainage at the moment, silted up with the flooding. So that's just an ongoing thing ... we've lost all our pasture, we've had to sell off all our lambs that we normally take through and fatten."

Nilsson was also regrassing paddocks and will "basically be a sheep farmer again for winter".

"All of a sudden, the projected income we had for the next 12 months is not there. So we've got to go 12 to 14 months now, with no income virtually at all, a little bit from sheep, maybe a bit off grass silage. And we're determined not to have to cut our staff hours down, or lay anyone off."

He said: "One of the hard things for growers this year is with the last two seasons - we've been selling below the cost of production. So already we're under a little bit of financial pressure and growers were borrowing money to put this crop in, and then spent 90 percent of the money on their crop. And just prior to harvesting - that's where it's been lost."

Nilsson said growing kūmara was "very expensive".

"We bed out our seed by hand. Once those plants are grown, we harvest them by hand, we take them to shed, we store them and when we sort them, that's all done by hand. Then we take them back out into the fields and they are all planted by hand. We have a few chemicals that we can spray little weeds with, herbicides. But after that, we hand-weed."

Grower Andre de Bruin was harvesting a paddock at Aratapu this week.

Rows of upturned dirt have scattered patches - where kūmara have been dug up, alongside compacted patches, where rotten kūmara have been hoed back into the ground.

"It wasn't much fun - on the scale it is, this is pretty unprecedented," he told RNZ.

He said the most similar situation was after Cyclone Bola, "but there is a really big difference that people don't realise".

"Cyclone Bola hit towards the end of March. This Cyclone Gabrielle hit in February. So there was nothing harvested when Gabrielle hit. With Cyclone Bola, there was a lot that was already harvested in the store sheds. So it was already good quality, sitting ready for market."

However, de Bruin said "no matter how difficult" the situation was for Kaipara growers, "it's still nothing compared to what some of our [horticulture] colleagues have had down in the Hawke's Bay ... just a totally different scale".

He was concerned about how well the kūmara would store before getting to shelves over the coming months.

"There's a lot of crop that's going into store sheds that might have 10 percent rot, 20 percent or 30 percent. Some won't be very good at all, and so won't make it to market. So at the moment the overall impact is - individually, you kind of have a feel for it, but over the industry, it's still a hard one to predict exactly."

For now the flow-on effects for consumers from cyclone damage are reduced supply and higher prices - at about $11 a kilogram in supermarkets, more than double this time last year.

Source - https://www.rnz.co.nz

04.05.2026

Bulgaria's Kyustendil cherry crop severely affected by frost for second consecutive year

Frosts have caused critical damage to cherry orchards in the Kyustendil region of Bulgaria for the second consecutive spring, with producers reporting near-total crop losses. 

04.05.2026

Vietnam - MoF moves to expand farm insurance support and eligibility

The Ministry of Finance has proposed sharply increasing agricultural insurance premium subsidies to up to 95 per cent and widening the pool of eligible beneficiaries to better share risks with producers, stabilise farm incomes, and strengthen climate resilience.

04.05.2026

Bangladesh - One lakh hectares of rice fields go underwater in haor regions

What should have been a vibrant harvest season in the country’s haor belt across seven districts has instead turned into widespread devastation. 

04.05.2026

Philippines - P150-M insurance buffer vs El Niño but PCIC limits coverage to irrigated farms

The Philippine Crop Insurance Corporation (PCIC) in Western Visayas has set aside P150 million in drought insurance as El Niño conditions intensify, with officials warning that the region is already nearing “critical” risk levels that could threaten thousands of farmers in the coming cropping season.

04.05.2026

Indian banana crops damaged across 809 hectares in Tamil Nadu

Strong winds and heavy rainfall in parts of Tamil Nadu have damaged banana crops across districts, including Theni, Dindigul, Coimbatore, and Salem.

04.05.2026

Poland reports up to 100% fruit crop losses after late April frosts

Fruit growers in Poland are assessing losses after late April frosts damaged crops across multiple regions, with eastern areas most affected and stone fruit production under pressure.

03.05.2026

Vietnam - Aid for agricultural insurance premiums proposed to rise

The Ministry of Finance has proposed increasing support for agricultural insurance premiums and expanding eligible beneficiaries in a move aimed at encouraging greater participation by farmers and agricultural organisations.

03.05.2026

USA - MDARD Awards Over $3.2 Million Through Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure Grant Program

The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) today announced more than $3.2 million of grants to 10 Michigan entities through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure (RFSI) Grant Program.