A sour taste for beekeepers
The Detail - A podcast by RNZ
Dramatic pictures of diseased beehives going up in flames have spotlit issues with the apiculture industryBeekeepers are crumbling under the weight of diseased hives, depressed honey prices and a lack of industry investment in marketing and researchBeekeepers and apiculture experts are pressing for the return of a marketing and research levy to help the languishing industry.The recently released 2023 New Zealand Colony Loss Survey, by Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research, has found beekeepers have the lowest well-being scores of any primary industry role.This comes as the impact of American Foulbrood hits the headlines, and a North Canterbury beekeeper says he was forced to destroy more than 10,000 beehives.Pike Stahlmann-Brown, Manaaki Whenua's principal scientist for economics, leads the survey. It's been run every year for the last nine years. In 2023, it asked about well-being for the first time."Manaaki Whenua also runs surveys of farmers and foresters and growers and so we were able to compare beekeepers to others in primary industry," Stahlmann-Brown says. Honey producer Springbank Honey of North Canterbury was ordered to burn more than 10,000 of its beehives and beekeeping equipment."We found that beekeepers, at least commercial beekeepers, had lower average responses than dairy farmers or sheep-and-beef farmers, arable farmers, horticulturists or forestry people. So, I think it's pretty serious at the moment."Industry stalwart Barry Foster, a semi-retired Gisborne-based beekeeper, says there are several reasons why well-being might be low." was taken mid last August or thereabouts, we'd just come out of those cyclones - some beekeepers had lost quite heavily," he tells The Detail."Not only that there'd been a market downturn in the sale of honey - both mānuka honey and other honeys. So, the financial pressure was coming on beekeepers."He says the industry's "languished" and is advocating for a return of a levy which helped it fund research being done on mānuka honey."One of the things that launched mānuka honey - and I'm talking back in the late 1990s-early 2000s - was our industry had a commodity levy, and it helped to pay for marketing and research. Some of the money did actually go in to helping with the research at Waikato University into mānuka honey and it definitely helped with the launch of mānuka honey on to the world stage…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details