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Meat Industry update. Presentation to NZ Cold Storage Association 82 nd Annual Conference Wellington 19 August 2014 Tim Ritchie Chief Executive Meat Industry Association of New Zealand. Representing New Zealand Meat Processors, Marketers and Exporters. Presentation outline.
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Meat Industry update • Presentation to NZ Cold Storage Association • 82nd Annual Conference • Wellington • 19 August 2014 • Tim Ritchie • Chief Executive • Meat Industry Association of New Zealand • Representing New Zealand Meat Processors, Marketers and Exporters
Presentation outline • About the MIA • Meat industry overview • Competitive challenges • Industry response
Meat Industry Association of New Zealand • A voluntary trade association representing beef and sheep meat processors and exporters. • 33 member companies (about 99% of all meat exports). • Members operate some 60 processing plants nationwide. • Representing New Zealand Meat Processors, Marketers and Exporters
Industry overview (1) • 12,500 commercial sheep and beef farmers • 25,000 people employed in processing sector • New Zealand’s largest manufacturing employer • Export-focused and fortunes driven by world prices
Industry overview (2) • Red meat and wool exports worth $7.3 billion in 2013/14 • NZ’s 2nd largest goods exporter - 14% of NZ’s total merchandise exports • Exports 92% of sheepmeat and 83% of beef production • Export to more than 120 countries
More than 130 years of cold storage (and exporting) • The New Zealand meat industry has been built on its ability to ship perishable goods to the other side of the world. • The “Dunedin”, which made the first shipment of frozen meat to Britain in 1882.
Historical exports • New Zealand sheepmeat and beef exports in 1961 (by volume) • Source: Compiled by MIA from Statistics NZ data • Beef • Sheepmeat
Market diversity • New Zealand sheepmeat and beef exports, ye June 2014 (by volume) • Source: Compiled by MIA from Statistics NZ data • Beef • Sheepmeat
Product diversity • New Zealand exports of red meat and co-products • (by value), year ended June 2014 • The industry also produces and exports a wide range of co-products • Co-product export revenue • NZ$1.4 billion • Important in maximising the value from each carcass • Source: Compiled by MIA from Statistics NZ data
Product and market diversity(where the bits of a lamb go) • To Middle East • To USA • To Europe/UK • To UK • Edible offals to UK/China/Saudi Arabia • To China • Co-products: • Pelts to China, MBM to USA, Tallow to China and Singapore, Casings to China/Hong Kong
Changing product mix • Customers have changed from butcher shop to multiple retailer • Now in the disassembly business – exporting value-added products • Export lamb product mix, 1970/71 – 2011/12 Frozen carcasses Frozen bone-in cuts Frozen boneless cuts Chilled cuts
Major destinations for NZ red meat & co-products • For 2013/14, with arrows showing markets worth $50m+
China sheepmeat Chinese sheepmeat balance 2000-2014f • Consumption • 3 kg/per capita, and rising • Imports - 6.4% of demand • Major impact on world market
China • Chinese retail meat prices (US$/kg)
Many markets – Many standards • Regulatory standards: Domestic, China, EU, US, Japan, etc. • Commercial standards: McDonalds, Walmart, Tesco, Metro, Carrefour, etc. • Other: NGOs, religious authorities, consumer groups. • Food safety • Animal welfare • Biosecurity • Worker welfare • Halal • Biotechnology • Climate change • Other environmental
Halal exports • Halal-certified exports compared to red meat and offal exports
Competitive challenges • International competition from other proteins • Domestic competition for land use • Competition from other red meat producers • Getting products to markets
Relative profitability • ANZ Commodity Price Index (Jan 1990=100)
Other red meat producers • NZ and Australia the two major sheepmeat exporters • But NZ a much smaller player in the beef trade • NZ beef exports around 1/3 volume of the major exporters: • Australia, United States, Brazil – and India
Indian buffalo beef exports • Indian buffalo beef exports (calendar years) • Source Compiled by MIA from GTIS data
Getting product to market • NZ chilled sheepmeat exports by Region • (by volume and value for the year ending June 2014) • Distance to major markets • A particular challenge for high value, time sensitive chilled products
Impact of slow steaming on red meat industry • Normal steaming – 24 knots • Slow steaming – 18 knots on Asia to Europe leg • Days required • Super slow steaming – 14 knots on Asia to Europe leg • Representing New Zealand Meat Processors, Marketers and Exporters
On-farm productivity Source: B+LNZ Economic Service, Statistics New Zealand
Processing productivity improvement • In 1980 the volume of meat exported per worker was 23 tonnes • in 2013 the volume was 43.2 tonnes of a much more valuable and further processed product: a productivity gain of at least 88%. • a typical meat worker now processes 130 sheep a day, compared to 55 in the 1980s.
Robotics - automation • An industry consortium is investing in robotics to automate the early stages of sheep processing, with two systems recently commercialised. • An automated system to remove the viscera set • An automated brisket cutting system
Getting product to markets - industry • Maintaining and improving access into as many markets as possible: • Industry works closely with government on market access • Investment in R&D to extend shelf life of chilled meat • Will mitigate impact of slow steaming, reduce wastage and improve returns to the industry • Food safety
Representing New Zealand Meat Processors, Marketers and Exporters
Thank you • Representing New Zealand Meat Processors, Marketers and Exporters