Fonterra looks at plant closure

By Jim Cornall

- Last updated on GMT

Three new Fonterra plants were officially opened at Edendale last month, however, the future for the Kaikoura plant looks bleak
Three new Fonterra plants were officially opened at Edendale last month, however, the future for the Kaikoura plant looks bleak

Related tags New zealand Fonterra

Fonterra is in discussions to close its Kaikoura cheese-making site in New Zealand, with 22 full-time jobs at risk.

Fonterra plans to move the production from the plant, which operates between three and five months a year, to other sites.

The announcement comes shortly after the opening of four new plants​ on South Island.

Exploring all options

Mark Leslie, director New Zealand manufacturing, says a decision is expected mid-March.

“This is a difficult process for our people and supporting them is our priority as we work through the details,”​ Leslie said.

“We will be discussing all options and opportunities available to our staff around their future employment, as well as providing the support they need to make decisions should the closure go ahead.”

Significant savings by closing

Fonterra said that moving production from the South Island community of around 2,000 people to other sites would bring significant cost savings for the business and its 10,500 farmer shareholders.

“The proposal to close the Kaikoura site has not been made lightly and is one intended to help generate cost savings for the benefit of all Fonterra farmer shareholders,”​ Leslie added.

According to Fonterra’s website, the Kaikoura plant is supplied with 37m liters of milk from local farms each season. The site processes 245,000 litres of milk each day while in operation, and creates 28 tonnes of cheese that  is exported to international markets including Japan, the US, Australia, Europe and Brazil.

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1 comment

Plant clousure

Posted by onn cheong,

Har!!, But in the dog eat dog of the business world, the decision makers might prefer to scrap the plant for nothing, just to ensure that you don't have a competitor on your heel. Never mind the staff who had worked hard and long at the plant to be closed. Staff and people are treated as just one of the factors of production. The interest to get good bottom line supersedes human. Such is the cold hard situation of the business world.!!. I feel for the people, but we as the workers, have no influence nor control of the MONEY making mentality of some decision makers.

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