News

10 Qld beef families funded to establish co-operative

Beef Central, 31/08/2017

A group of 10 north Queensland cattle producing families has received $157,000 to establish a farming cooperative.

The Beef Collaboration Project, comprising 10 farms, mostly from the Burdekin catchment, and representing more than 40,000 cattle, has received the funding from the national Farm Co-operatives and Collaboration pilot program, known as Farming Together.

Emma Robinson

Group spokesperson Emma Robinson, Caerphilly Station, Charters Towers, said the funds will be used to further develop a co-op opportunity, including strategies to better leverage enterprise scale, efficiency and shorten the supply chain.

The co-op is being built “from the ground up; by producers, for producers”, she said.

“It represents a movement, a model and ultimately a digital platform that will enable beef producers to leverage new value pre-and post-farm gate through collaboration.”

She said the co-op will undertake a combination of marketing, knowledge and farm supply services.

It will also look at researching the model and then extending it to other farm groups.

“The longer-term view is that the model and platform developed will have significant scalability, with potential for application across a broad geographical area.

“The group aims to help other producers see value in taking a collaborative approach, which ultimately contributes to the resilience and longevity of family farming in Australia.”

Lorraine Gordon

Farming Together Program Director Lorraine Gordon said groups of producers across Australia are investigating establish co-ops.

Farming Together recently launched a free online co-op builder for groups considering forming themselves into tax-effective structures.

The simple, DIY template is available at www.farmingtogether.com.au

“People don’t realise how simple it is to form a co-op. You only need five people,” Lorraine Gordon said.

“A co-op structure has so many benefits – including tax benefits. Co-ops help secure discount bulk pricing for farm inputs. They traditionally underpin equipment and infrastructure to value-add primary production. And we are seeing a growing appetite for co-operative marketing structures.”

Developed in conjunction with Australia’s peak body for co-ops, the Business Council of Co-operatives and Mutuals, the online tool has been written by some of the country’s leading experts in co-op law and education.

The Farm Co-operatives and Collaboration pilot program is a two-year, $13.8m initiative from the Australian Government designed to help agricultural groups value-add, secure premium pricing, scale-up production, attract capital investment, earn new markets or secure lower input costs.

The Farm Co-operatives and Collaboration pilot program is being delivered by Southern Cross University on behalf of the Australian Government. It comprises a highly experienced senior team drawn from a wide range of commodity groups from across Australia and is backed by an industry advisory group representing experts from Western Australia, Northern Territory, Queensland, Victoria, South Australia and NSW.

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