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Home / The Country

Fonterra boss rejects discounted butter prices for New Zealanders

RNZ
24 Jul, 2025 05:12 AM4 mins to read

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Fonterra CEO Miles Hurrell says the co-operative won't offer different butter prices for local and overseas customers. Photo / Alyse Wright

Fonterra CEO Miles Hurrell says the co-operative won't offer different butter prices for local and overseas customers. Photo / Alyse Wright

By Anan Zaki of RNZ

The head of dairy giant Fonterra says the co-operative cannot and will not have different butter prices for local and overseas customers.

It comes after soaring prices for the household staple, with Stats NZ data showing the price of a 500g block of butter rising 46.5% in the year ended May.

Other dairy products such as milk and cheese have also recorded steep price increases amid global demand.

Fonterra chief executive Miles Hurrell fronted the media in Christchurch on Thursday, after a highly publicised – but regular – meeting with Finance Minister Nicola Willis on Tuesday, where the pair discussed the price of butter, among other things.

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He sympathised with households feeling the pinch but said price increases were a reflection of supply not being able to keep up with demand.

Hurrell said for a block of butter at the supermarket, roughly 80% was determined by the international market.

He said globally there was a growing need for both dairy fats and dairy protein, underpinned by strong demand from China and other nations.

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Hurrell rejected that Fonterra had a social responsibility to offer cheaper products to local consumers.

Hurrell attributes the 46.5% rise in butter prices to global demand and supply issues. Photo / Alyse Wright
Hurrell attributes the 46.5% rise in butter prices to global demand and supply issues. Photo / Alyse Wright

“We know we have an obligation to sell here in New Zealand, and we do that, and we support the New Zealand economy,” he said. “But our job is to not come in with a two-tier pricing system ... and discount here in the New Zealand market, when we have an international obligation to operate as well,” he said.

“If you’re going to get into discounting by product - this is not a game that we’re playing.”

Hurrell said Fonterra’s responsibility was to its farmer suppliers, a comment he had made earlier.

“We’re a co-operative, and our job is to go and support the 8500 family farms that we support here in New Zealand,” he said.

“I know for a fact that when they get their share of $25 billion [in estimated] revenue that comes back, they do a heck of a lot ... to support their own communities.”

He said strong dairy prices were in fact a “good news story” for the New Zealand economy.

“It talks to the economic recovery that I know the New Zealand Government has been talking about.”

Recent economic data showed annual inflation rose to its highest level in a year in the June quarter, partly driven by food prices, which, in turn, were driven by dairy prices.

Hurrell said the final prices on local shelves were set by retailers, who set their own costs and margins.

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He said he explained all of this to Finance Minister Nicola Willis on Tuesday.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Finance Minister Nicola Willis. Photo / Mark Mitchell

In response to the strong public debate around the price of butter, Woolworths New Zealand, one of the country’s two big supermarket operators, said it was “working hard to keep butter prices as low as possible, for as long as possible”.

“Market conditions have changed significantly in the last few months and international butter prices are now at record highs,” a spokesperson said.

“While this is great news for our farmers, it does mean we have to pass on these increased prices to our customers, which is why we’ve changed the shelf price for butter products,” they said.

Foodstuffs North Island, the operator of Pak’nSave and New World, referred RNZ to previous comments made by chief executive Chris Quin on social media last month.

“Analysis as of May 2025 confirms that among major grocery retailers operating throughout the North Island (as distinct from those in a limited number of locations), Pak’nSave offers the most affordable 500g block of butter, at $8.29,” Quin wrote.

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Quin said while tough for households, strong global dairy prices were “ultimately good for New Zealand’s economy”.

-RNZ

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