Press Release – Venture Taranaki The Venture Taranaki initiative Branching Out is a collaborative exercise to investigate, explore, package, and potentially pilot new commercial opportunities that could add sustainable value to Taranakis economy and help the regions food and fibre …
The Venture Taranaki initiative Branching Out is a collaborative exercise to investigate, explore, package, and potentially pilot new commercial opportunities that could add sustainable value to Taranaki’s economy and help the region’s food and fibre sector become more diverse, resilient, innovative and in-demand.
Through the initiative 10-12 high-potential ventures will be identified and analysed for their feasibility.
“In October 2020, we hosted the project’s first in-person event exploring kiwifruit as a high-potential venture. Now we will look at avocado’s potential. Avocados are a proven success story in other parts of the country, so it is worth consideration and further investiga
Tuesday, 23 February 2021, 4:43 pm
The Venture Taranaki initiative Branching Out is a
collaborative exercise to investigate, explore, package, and
potentially pilot new commercial opportunities that could
add sustainable value to Taranaki’s economy and help the
region’s food and fibre sector become more diverse,
resilient, innovative and in-demand.
Through the
initiative 10-12 high-potential ventures will be identified
and analysed for their feasibility. In October 2020,
we hosted the project’s first in-person event exploring
kiwifruit as a high-potential venture. Now we will look at
avocado’s potential. Avocados are a proven success story
in other parts of the country, so it is worth consideration
SunLive - Sustainable beef patties could become new normal sunlive.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sunlive.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Scientists press to put regenerative agriculture to test
13 Dec, 2020 10:15 PM
3 minutes to read
By: Sally Rae
A call for proposals for projects that will investigate regenerative farming practices can t happen soon enough , New Zealand Institute of Agricultural and Horticultural Science president Jon Hickford says.
In a strongly worded statement, the NZIAHS said it was concerned about the dearth of sound science underpinning the hype surrounding regenerative agriculture .
The organisation had published a series of articles from scientists from different disciplines in this month s issue of its online AgScience magazine which showed regenerative agriculture was more hype than reality , it said.