The deer industry in Australia has to pay just $265 towards bio levy as farmers do it very hard

Published 2024년 5월 1일

Tridge summary

The Australian niche deer meat farming industry faces challenges, including the new Biosecurity Protection Levy contributing only 0.0005% of the total cost, equating to $265 annually. This is part of the industry's larger problems, such as the cessation of local abattoirs killing live deer, leaving farmers unable to process their animals efficiently and financially strained. The industry also struggles with decreased demand due to restaurant closures during the pandemic and competition from commercial harvesters, who do not bear the same costs as farmers. Additionally, the deployment of commercial harvesters for state-funded deer eradication efforts exacerbates the financial pressure on deer farmers, who are concerned about the potential for reputational damage from wild deer ingesting chemicals and are seeking to be excluded from the levy scheme to prevent competitive disadvantage. Feral deer populations in Australia are expanding, causing significant damage to the environment and agriculture, with an estimated 118,000 deer harvested in Victoria alone in 2021.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The nation's niche deer farming for meat industry will be asked to contribute just 0.0005 per cent towards the government's new $51.8 million Biosecurity Protection Levy - or $265 per annum. After pointing to the paltry contribution, Senator Matt Canavan asked Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry officials appearing before a Senate inquiry into the levy whether an impact analysis had been performed before adding venison to the list. "We are going to pass legislation... to charge an entire industry $265. Have you done a cost-benefit study on whether that is a useful spend of our administration dollars here?" he said. But the new levy is just the latest of the industry's problems, according to Deer Industry Association of Australia president Andrew McKinnon, and only serves to remind farmers how little money is left in the game. For starters the industry is overwhelmingly composed of mainly mixed farmers chasing a side hustle, with his own Mt Gambier operation ...
Source: Farmweekly

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