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Home / The Country

Probe into Fonterra's $50m farmer council asks the right questions

By Andrea Fox
Herald business writer·NZ Herald·
28 May, 2020 05:37 AM5 mins to read

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Fonterra is owned by around 10,000 New Zealand dairy farmers. Photo / NZ Herald

Fonterra is owned by around 10,000 New Zealand dairy farmers. Photo / NZ Herald

After costing Fonterra farmers $50 million with little to show for it, the Fonterra Shareholders' Council may finally have got the message its time is up, say critics.

Waikato shareholder Trevor Simpson is among the fiercest critics of the performance of the 20 year old Fonterra shareholder watchdog, but is comforted by the tone of the council's self-review so far.

"They've asked some very hard questions of themselves" in a survey of farmers, he said.

"I was impressed, the questions were a credit to them.

"If ever a list said it was time for a change, this is the list."

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READ MORE:
• Fonterra shareholder views on their embattled 'watchdog' council to be shared

READ MORE:
• Fonterra farmers 'should be pleased with progress' after record loss: chairman

The survey of 10,000 or so shareholders and sharemilkers received 1400 responses.

Questions asked them to respond on a scale of 1 to 10, and allowed unlimited additional comment.

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No questions were asked about the cost of the council, said its chairman James Barron. The council's budget for this year is $3.2m.

Fonterra Shareholders' Council chairman James Barron. Photo / Supplied
Fonterra Shareholders' Council chairman James Barron. Photo / Supplied

Its annual budget, which farmers are asked to approve at every Fonterra agm, has rarely dipped below this level, but until Fonterra's financial performance started to fray, shareholders batted away journalist questions about the cost of the council, saying it was a tiny percentage of their milk payout.

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The council was created in 2001 when farmer-owned Fonterra was formed under special legislation from an industry mega-merger. The council was to be a watchdog for the cooperative's 10,000-odd shareholders but gripes that it is more a lapdog for the Fonterra board have grown in recent years.

Fonterra's FY19 net loss of $605m on asset writedowns of $826m brought the dissatisfaction to a head, inflamed by the council noting shareholders had experienced around $4 billion wealth destruction in the past two financial years.

The council narrowly beat off two shareholder remit efforts to put it under a microscope at Fonterra's annual meeting in November with a pre-emptive strike announcing it would conduct an independent review of itself. Simpson was among the challengers who want the council scrapped.

The upshot has been formation of a review group. It comprises four farmer-shareholders selected by council chairman Barron from 22 nominations, two Fonterra directors and two councillors. These eight appointed James Buwalda, a former scientist and senior public service executive as independent chairman.

The review is due to report to shareholders in August - providing Covid-19 doesn't slow it down. Regardless, it will have to be finished in time for any shareholder vote that may be required at November's agm.

Fonterra head office, Fanshawe St, Auckland. Photo / NZ Herald
Fonterra head office, Fanshawe St, Auckland. Photo / NZ Herald

While the tone of the survey has won applause, the review process has been criticised by some shareholders for not allowing former Fonterra farmer-directors to be nominated for the review group.

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"When do former directors stop being shareholders?", said one.

Former councillors were also blocked, Barron said.

"One of the reasons we landed on the makeup of the steering group was to balance knowledge of the organisation with some objectivity. Two current board and two current council members would bring that knowledge.

"What we were after from the four farmer members was some objectivity so to balance the group and get the right mix we have four farmer-shareholders, not former board members or councillors."

The review group is Buwalda, shareholders Judy Garshaw, Andrew Hoggard who is Federated Farmers vice-president, Paul Quinn and John Small, Fonterra directors John Nicholls and Donna Smit and councillors Emma Hammond and Mike Montgomerie.

On calls for the council to be scrapped, Barron told the Herald "the rationale for a farmer representative organisation is very strong".

Fonterra is owned by around 10,000 New Zealand dairy farmers.  Photo / NZ Herald
Fonterra is owned by around 10,000 New Zealand dairy farmers. Photo / NZ Herald

Simpson said when Fonterra was formed 20 years ago, shareholders "probably wanted a backup system". But the world had changed, the council had done its dash and he didn't like wasting money.

"It's time to look at it and see if there's a better way. The whole communications thing has changed with social media. The (survey) questions will clearly draw out the need for change. There's a mood for change within the council too."

Waikato shareholder Jim Cotman, among those who in November called for the council's effectiveness and performance to be reviewed by professionals, said the council was "a feel good factor".

"It's not relevant to today's business.

"Now we are saying it's past its use-by date. We want value for money.

"We already pay Fonterra to have field reps who run around and do the same job (as councillors). We don't need two sets of accounts going out to shareholders, there needs to be rationalisation."

Cotman believed the council got in the way of the relationship between Fonterra directors and shareholders.

The once-close relationship between directors and farmers had been lost," he said.

"We have to be given quality information (about the company). At the moment we get our information from the Herald.

"Every cent is critical to a farmer. We need to be a bit smarter with out money."

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