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Home / The Country

Unlikely partnership bearing fruit for Zespri

BusinessDesk
18 May, 2017 02:01 AM3 mins to read

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Zespri has formed an unlikely partnership with the government.

Zespri has formed an unlikely partnership with the government.

The Government's primary growth partnership geared toward driving change in the dairy sector had an unlikely partner: kiwifruit export marketing body Zespri International.

The $170 million innovation investment involving the Ministry for Primary Industries and commercial partners, including DairyNZ and Fonterra Co-operative Group, is in its seventh and final year.

The partnership focused on creating new products, lifting productivity, improving environmental protection and building capability, and includes a raft of projects aimed at boosting the economy by $2.7 billion a year by 2020. The private sector contributed $85m while the Government contributed the other $85m.

Fonterra programme manager Andrew Fletcher said the connection between work that Fonterra carried out as part of the PGP and Zespri "comes back to the way we experience food. It's not just taste that drives our liking, but a big part of it is structure," he said at a briefing in Wellington.

Food structure science was critical to work at Fonterra in its bid to create things like cream that no longer had to be refrigerated in order to whip properly as well as mozzarella cheese, and Fletcher noted kiwifruit has a real "Goldilocks spot" - neither too firm nor too soft. The question became "how do we apply the tools of food structure science to making fruit," he said.

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Kylie Phillips, innovation leader at Zespri, said there have been multiple benefits to consumers, growers and the company itself.

Zespri is currently a $2b industry and aims to be a $4.5b industry by 2025 and "innovation will fuel that next $2.5b growth", said Phillips.

"The research conducted as part of this PGP programme will help us achieve that goal."
The biological variability of the fruit was "quite an issue for us," in particular when it comes to storage, she said.

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The PGP research has made it possible to progress toward being able to predict which kiwifruit can be kept longer in cool storage, something critical given that the fruit is shipped to markets across the globe.

"This programme has allowed us to get a better understanding of kiwifruit physiology and how some of these advanced technologies can be applied to kiwifruit," she said.

The end result is that Zespri has reduced fruit quality costs by managing fruit inventory as it can sell some fruit early if it knows it won't store as well.

The incentives are high as sometimes these costs could be over $100m, Phillips said.
Finally, it helped protect the Zespri brand.

"Consumers sometimes pay double the price for the Zespri brand compared to others so we want them to have a premium eating experience every time."

Fonterra's Fletcher said that a key focus in the final year of the PGP was to make sure the projects were in safe hands.

"We are doing a set of projects that are about catalysing change and the burden is now on industry to make sure that's embedded," he said.

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