Soper: Govt steps up to farmers' plate usually served up by Nats
COMMENT: Farming is a business like no other.
COMMENT: Farming is a business like no other.
Comment: Political and commercial implications can scupper trout farming in NZ.
Comment: The desire to cover farms in trees is farming's biggest challenge at present.
Comment: There have been some big moves in the advertising space.
The science is simple: Don't poison Papatuanuku.
Comment: Federated Farmers is at the National Agricultural Fieldays this week.
Asset sales are only a temporary reprieve.
We say: Government needs to offer certainty on what it expects of farmers and environment.
We say: Meat substitutes are changing trends in West but global consumption still rising.
It started to look like we weren't going to make it.
Comment: Climate change more about burning fossil fuels than the farming of animals.
Comment: It is a relief to see that mental health's getting a much need funding injection.
Comment: New Zealand is in slow motion when it comes to aquaculture.
Comment: Could we get any more hipster than a NZ grown hemp-wool combination?
Comment: Contract milking has had a chequered history.
COMMENT: Will legalising cannabis mean employees will be allowed to come to work stoned?
Comment: Significant gains for farmers who integrate forestry into their business.
Comment: New Zealand is not destined to feed the world; it never was.
Comment: Farming is quickly becoming the most regulated industry in the country.
Comment: Federated Farmers has a Q&A on the Zero Carbon Bill.
Comment: Making a better future requires more innovation, writes Jacqueline Rowarth.
Another Kiwi name is scooped up by an overseas buyer.
Comment: May is a time of year when livestock transportation is perhaps at its peak.
Comment: The PGF of today doesn't look as flash as it did just 18 months ago.
Eugenie Sage's decision over Waihī mining is causing widespread anxiety.
Comment: The Zero Carbon Act unjustly transitions Taranaki toward further uncertainty.
Comment: Provincial communities will shrink if farming land is converted to forestry.
EDITORIAL: Despite hype about Impossible Burgers, global meat consumption is on the rise.
Comment: Most central banks have moved from being hawks to doves writes Nick Clark.