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General Discussion >> General Board >> Chinese paddock to Chinese plate http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1410925454 Message started by bogarde73 on Sep 17th, 2014 at 1:44pm |
Title: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by bogarde73 on Sep 17th, 2014 at 1:44pm ONE of China’s biggest milk companies is buying up dairy farms in Australia, convinced it can generate higher milk production and bigger profits here than most local dairy farmers are achieving. The Ningbo Dairy Group says that to produce as much fresh milk as it would like to fly to China from its Victorian farms, profitably and rapidly, it needs to bring in Chinese employees, fast-track construction of a new milk processing plant and cut through government red tape. Ningbo Dairy, which runs 20,000 cows on 30 farms in China’s coastal Zhejiang province, south of Shanghai, has already spent more than $15 million buying and improving three farms in Victoria’s verdant South Gippsland region. It has further well-advanced plans — and cash — to buy more farms in Gippsland and northern NSW, to increase its herd from 550 to 2500 cows and to build its own $6 million fresh milk processing plant on its 280ha Glenview Farm at Kernot. Ningbo Dairy vice-president Harry Wang said the key to its profitable Australian dairy investment lay in vertically integrating the group’s Australian operations, with it owning and controlling all parts of the supply chain. Inspecting Ningbo Dairy’s cluster of farms near Phillip Island yesterday with his uncle and company owner Yin Chong Zhang, Mr Wang said the target was to own enough farms, superior cows and processing facilities to produce and fly 100,000 litres of fresh milk a day direct from Melbourne and Sydney to China. Mr Wang said Australian dairy products were well-known by consumers in China for being high-quality and safe. The small amount of Australian fresh milk currently being flown in by plane by NSW co-operative Norco is being snapped up for an astounding $10 a litre. With fresh milk processed by Ningbo Dairy in its Chinese dairies selling for a maximum price of $2 a litre, Mr Wang says the company unashamedly sees Australian dairy farming and milk processing with the focus on exports to China as the place to be. “We also think there is room for big production increases (in the industry) here; our cows produce 9000 litres of milk a year in China but here in Australia the average is 6000 litres,” Mr Zhang said. “There is huge potential in Australia because there is land here that can run dairy cows while in China there are few farms left for expansion. Australia and New Zealand are the best countries in the world for dairying and that is why I expect more Chinese like us will come here.” Mr Zhang said positives about Australia were the availability of cheap high-rainfall land suited to dairying and the superior genetics of its cows. Ningbo Dairy exported 1200 of its best young heifers last year to its Chinese operations. The downside of Australian dairying to the Chinese newcomers is the low milk price paid by Australian processors to farmers, high labour costs, excessive red tape, a slowness to innovate and the lack of good young workers. Mr Wang said Ningbo Dairy, trading in Australia as YoYou Dairy, had already increased production significantly in 18 months on its previously rundown Gippsland farms by investing in pasture improvements and buying top-quality cows. Future innovations being adapted from China will include more crop production such as growing maize to feed cattle, with the milking cows likely to be kept in barns rather than grazing paddocks for much of winter and spring. As local workers are hard to come by and expensive, Mr Zhang is keen to bring some of his 2000 employees from China to Australia to milk cows and help lift farm production levels to Chinese standards. “The milk price paid here to farmers – less than 50 cents a litre – is a joke and so is the fact that you buy milk in a shop here for $1 a litre,” Mr Wang said. “With labour so expensive — three times more than in China — and milk cheaper, it makes profitable farming very hard; we see the only way is to process the milk ourselves, export it to China and to bring some of our workers here,” Mr Wang said. “We are ready to buy more farms and build our factory as soon as possible; the only thing that will slow us down is if the milk price paid here stays low and we continue to have problems finding enough good managers and young employees keen to work hard.” |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by bogarde73 on Sep 17th, 2014 at 1:45pm
Nobody is going to stop them. Nobody stops them buying houses even if it's illegal.
They can see that we have useless governments and a virtual open door. |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by aquascoot on Sep 17th, 2014 at 2:55pm
Happy times for my collaegues in dairy.
I said 6 months ago that Norco, the biggest milk producer in the country were doubling capacity to supply the Asian powdered milk industry. interesting that fresh milk sells for $9 a litre in china. F*ck you, woollies, coles and the lazy urban consumer who think farmers should get 19 cents a litre for working 80 hour weeks. You can suck my bulls dick ;) ;) |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by jockohomo3d on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:05pm
Nobody bares about our future anymore. People are selling off our land, they want to erase our history and a filling the country up with terrorists and country shoppers. It's every man/woman for themselves now.
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Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by John Smith on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:10pm
you heard of battery hens? now here come the battery cows.
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Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by eagle eyes on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:29pm aquascoot wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 2:55pm:
Now you blame the customers, you blame the foreign owned wollies and coles, but I'm sure you vote for politicians who ALLOW THIS TO HAPPEN.... Countries like Indonesia, Thailand etc. have laws that prohibt foreigners from buying land. That's what we should have here. But no. Our pieces of corrupt scum politicians are happy to screw every middle class and lower class Australian. |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by Laugh till you cry on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:52pm aquascoot wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 2:55pm:
jockohomo3d wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:05pm:
jockohomo3d you win the prize offered by Aquatrousers. Rush before Aquatrousers makes it a dry argument. ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by jockohomo3d on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:55pm Laugh till you cry wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:52pm:
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Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by Laugh till you cry on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:07pm jockohomo3d wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:55pm:
You obviously "bare" about your country. Can I take a rain check? :D :D :D ;D ;D ;D |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by gizmo_2655 on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:09pm gone wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:29pm:
Neither Woolies or Coles are foreign owned, you do know that, right?? |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by jockohomo3d on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:10pm Laugh till you cry wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:07pm:
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Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by Laugh till you cry on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:17pm jockohomo3d wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:10pm:
I am sorry your wretched existence is not as fortunate as aborigines or a country shoppers. I am sure Lostweekend58 can provide the services you desire after Aquatrousers' bull services your immediate needs. ;D ;D ;D ;D |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by Hot Breath on Sep 17th, 2014 at 4:56pm
Why the big tizzy? When it was Pommie paddock to Pommie plate when companies like Vestes were exploiting black Australians, no one cared two hoots! I say good on the farmers, if they can sell to these Chinese fellows at a price higher than Coles or Woolies will offer, it's their benefit and eventually our's 'cause it means the duopoly will have to pay more for their milk so the farmers get more money in their pockets to spend here, in Australia.
How is this different in principle to what the miners do with Iron ore or Coal? ;D ;D ;D ;D :D :D :D ;D ;D ;D |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by JaSin on Sep 17th, 2014 at 5:31pm ...Chinese men are buying Australian wives as there is a shortage of women in China due to the One-Child Policy and the fact that 79% of those births are 'males'. Chinese men are forced to front up to 'compete' with hundreds of other Chinese males for the right to 'breed' while 'rare' Chinese Females get (paid well) to pick and choose who will sire their child. Most of these Chinese males act early and attain their Australian Wife via their 'Student Visa' entry, if not able to stay in Australia permanently via the marriage with the possibility of having more children. |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by Laugh till you cry on Sep 17th, 2014 at 6:35pm
Some Chinese in the Autralian gene pool will be great to breed out the recessive closet pom gene.
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Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by General True Blue on Sep 17th, 2014 at 6:48pm jockohomo3d wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 3:05pm:
that's right.. im looking at importing from china... before, china comes here.. manufacturing in Australia is ****** so I couldn't care less about importing and making money... there's a lot of dodgy Chinese "so called" factories.. sure.. but get the right one and fill your pockets up with money... ;) |
Title: Re: Chinese paddock to Chinese plate Post by General True Blue on Sep 17th, 2014 at 6:49pm Jasin wrote on Sep 17th, 2014 at 5:31pm:
maybe I could sell the mrs... shhh.. ;) |
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