Tuesday 27 December 2016

7 OF THE BIGGEST FARMS IN THE WORLD.

The UK certainly has some world-class farms operating on its shores, but when it comes to size, how do we measure up?

The average size of a UK holding is 81ha, which is significantly higher than much of the rest of Europe, including countries such as France and Germany, according to statistics gathered by the EU. Defra statistics also show if you take holdings with less than 20ha out of the equation, the average holding size in the UK rises to 142ha.

But the news that China has begun work on the construction of a 100,000-cow dairy unit to supply the Russian market with milk and cheese has highlighted that in global terms our farms are still relatively small.

1. John Malone, United States:
John Malone is a media mogul and billionaire who is regarded as being the biggest landowner in the US, with a total estate of more than 930,000ha.
Half of this ground is forestry and woodland, located in the Maine and New Hampshire areas, but he also has farms and ranches across the country – the largest of which is based in New Mexico.

2. El Tejar, Brazil:
In 2011, El Tejar was widely billed as the world’s largest arable farming company, with about 1.1m hectares of soya beans, corn and cotton, mainly in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, although much of the ground was rented.

Since 2012, the company has moved operations away from Argentina, set up a new headquarters in Brazil and dramatically cut the area it cultivates in a bid to become more efficient.
The company also farms 30,000ha in Bolivia.

3. Mudanjiang City dairy development, China

The farm in north-east China may be still under construction, but it is set to become the world’s largest dairy. It is a 1bn yuan (£103m) collaboration between China’s Zhongding Dairy Farming and Russia’s Severny Bur.

The idea is that the feed and forage stocks needed to supply the year-round housed animals will be grown on 100,000ha of land most of which is in Russia.

A further 200,000ha of farmland has been earmarked to supply feed once the project is on stream.

4. Anna Creek Station, Australia:If anyone has a few spare million in their back pocket then Anna Creek Station in southern Australia might be just the thing.

The property, along with a series of others owned by the same family, was put on the market last summer for a total of about £175m.

Anna Creek Station is reported to be the world’s largest standalone cattle property and, according to Wikipedia, extends over 2.4m hectares. Add in all the other properties owned by the company, and the business extends to more than 11m hectares and also includes 170,000 head of cattle.

5. Prodimex, Russia

Operating across an eye-watering 570,000ha, Prodimex is believed to be the largest agribusiness operating in Russia.

It is a privately owned company with a heavy emphasis on sugar production. The company runs its own processing plants, which handle the sugar beet it grows across its arable ground. Overall, the business produces more than 20% of the total sugar produced in Russia.
 

6. Al Safi Dairy, Saudi Arabia:In 1998, the Al Safi Dairy entered the Guinness World Records as the largest integrated dairy farm in the world.

The business was established in 1979 by Royal Prince Mohammed Bin Abdullah Al Faisal and is home to more than 37,000 Holstein Friesian cattle, produces 700,000 litres of milk a day and a 1,400-strong workforce operates seven fully automated milking parlours.

In 2001, Al Safi entered a joint venture with French food group Danone. Together, this partnership has secured a 36% share of the Saudi dairy market. The business is fully integrated in that it does everything from growing its own forage to processing and distributing the end product.

7. Ivolga, Russia and Kazakhstan

Ivolga is a farming conglomerate that was put on the market in 2011 and was described at the time as the largest farm in the world.

It’s not clear exactly what has happened since, but the company is known to still be farming at least 500,000ha in Russia, making it the country’s second-largest land holding behind Prodimex (above).

At the time it was put on the market it was said to be in control of 1.5m hectares across Russia and Kazakhstan.

And who has the biggest farms in the UK?

The National Trust owns more than 250,000ha in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, of which 200,000ha is farmed.

Although the bulk of this – 185,000ha – is farmed by tenants, this still leaves about 15,000ha farmed in-hand, managed by National Trust staff and graziers.
The Farmcare business, purchased by the Wellcome Trust for £249m in 2014, operates across 16,000ha, while inventor James Dyson, who farms as Beeswax, now has about 12,000ha in-hand in Gloucestershire, Lincolnshire and Oxfordshire. The business has large-scale arable, forage, vining peas, and root production.

US FARMERS CAN EXPECT MORE SUPPORT FROM TRUMP.

More productive farming and less environmental interference are likely in the USA, once Donald Trump takes office, the farming community has been told.


According to Chuck Conner, president of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives and a key Trump agricultural adviser, farmers can expect to be rewarded for their support for the president-elect.


“Farmers, ranchers and people of rural America feel like they have been under attack and they responded in the presidential election,” he told a recent Farm Foundation Forum in Washington, DC. “President-elect Trump is very aware where his bread is buttered.”


Discussion about the 2018 US Farm Bill – which sets policy for the next four years – begins next year and Mr Conner said the new administration would be keen to reduce the influence of organisations such as the Environmental Protection Agency.


Another particular target is likely to be the proposed Clean Water Act legislation, Waters of the United States (WOTUS). According to Mr Conner, the president-elect’s rural mandate makes WOTUS unlikely in the 2018 Farm Bill.


But it will continue with the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP), which accounts for almost 80% of the farm budget, providing healthy food for low-income families.

Trade worries

Mr Conner also sought to address farmers’ trade concerns, given Mr Trump’s recent rejection of the Trans Pacific Partnership – something US beef, pork and soya producers support.


“Within the upcoming administration, there is strong recognition of the value of agricultural exports to our farm economy,” he said.


“President-elect Trump likes what he sees in agricultural trade, but feels in the manufacturing sector we could do better.


“We are an agricultural export-dependent economy and the president-elect will do all he can to protect that.”


While Mr Trump has yet to name his new agriculture secretary, Mr Conner is believed to be a contender. BY JOHN WILKES.

120 MILLION EURO STATE OF THE ART TOMATO FARM OPENS IN AUSTRALIA.

A high-tech sustainable tomato farm with its own desalination plant and 23,000 mirrors to harness the sun’s energy, has opened in South Australia.

The AUS$200m (£120m) investment by Sundrop Farms is reported by Australian news service The Lead to be the first of its kind in the world. It will produce 15,000t of tomatoes a year for the Australian domestic market.

This produces steam that drives onsite processes and heat to run the desalination unit, which churns out 1m litres of fresh water a day.

Eight trucks a day are currently leaving the farm to freight tomatoes to supermarkets across the country and Sundrop Farms has a 10-year contract with Australian retailer Coles.

Pilot project

The high-tech project has been years in the making and has included a five-year pilot project, followed by 18 months of construction.

Sundrop Farms describes itself as “a global leader in sustainable agriculture, growing fresh fruit and vegetables using renewable inputs”.

Its founder and CEO, Philipp Saumweber said the Port Augusta development was aimed at benefiting people, the planet and generating long-term, sustainable profits.

“With growing resource constraints, our innovative model harnesses renewable inputs such as seawater and sunlight to decouple food production from the finite inputs of freshwater, fossil fuels and land,” he said.

Global private equity firm KKR has invested more than $100m (£60m) into Sundrop Farms’ expansion and the Australian government supported the projected with a $6m (£3.6m) regional development grant.

More about Sundrop Farms

The company uses coconut husks instead of soil in high-tech climate-controlled greenhouses.

According to its website, it does not use GM technology, fertilisers, pesticides or herbicides. Instead, it employs workers to weed and pick by hand and uses biological controls, such as carnivorous insects.

It has offices in London and Adelaide and is currently developing farms in Portugal and the US. BY JEZ FREDENBURGH.

FARMERS REVEAL DIFFICULTY OF HOUSING POULTRY IN FACE OF BIRD FLU THREAT.

Concerns have been raised by free-range producers about chief veterinary officer Nigel Gibbens’ decision to introduce a blanket prevention zone across England to help protect poultry from a strain of avian flu in Europe.

There have been suggestions that Defra and the Animal and Plant Health Agency (Apha) could instead have brought in a regional housing order based on risks linked to wild bird migratory pathways.

Producers are also concerned about what the government will do after the end of the 30-day restriction period, particularly if the situation in neighbouring European countries has not improved.
John Widdowson, who owns Exe Valley Eggs, Devon, said that while he understood Defra’s decision, he questioned the blanket approach.

“I think the risks are significantly higher for producers on the east coast and for those under migratory wild bird pathways, which I’m not.

“Of course, it is better to have this restriction than having a case of avian influenza but it would be good to know if a regional approach was considered.”

Ability to range

Mr Widdowson, who runs five flocks totalling 20,000 birds, said he had one flock at 19 weeks that would have gone out this week and he was concerned the longer they were housed indoors the greater the impact on their ability to range.

He added that he was wondering whether the 30-day order would be rolled over.
He said his birds’ behaviour had already been affected. “We’ve always encouraged our birds to range far and wide. Their welfare is being maintained but they’re not very happy and we are seeing higher stress levels because the pop-holes aren’t open.

“We’ve put down more finely chopped straw in the litter area and they have a range of environmental enhancements, including string hanging from the sheds and footballs in the scratching area,” he said.

Other producers were more resigned to Defra’s decision. Rose Rowley, spokeswoman for Blackdown Hills Westcountry Eggs, said the firm’s 26 producers recognised the need for the housing restrictions.
“Generally, they were OK about it – some quite happy – but they all understood the reasoning behind the decision and the fact that it was protecting their livelihoods.”

Concerns over hobby farmers

Alaistaire Brice, who runs Havensfield Happy Hens, Eyre, Suffolk, said he was relieved by Defra’s decision but concerned that small-scale and hobby farmers would not to house their birds.

Mr Brice, who owns 20,000 laying hens and has 110,000 contract layers for the East of England Coop, anticipated few problems particularly as there were only eight to nine hours of light a day at this time of year.

One small farm, Millcroft Poultry, Dawlish, Devon, said it had noticed some behaviour change among its 200 birds: “They are a bit confused and want to come out first thing in the morning but are coping OK,” said a spokeswoman.  

Mark Gorton, director of Traditional Norfolk Poultry, told the Guardian that the order to keep birds inside was sensible and that it was fortunate the situation had not occurred earlier in the run-up to Christmas.

“Most of the Christmas turkeys are done. They’re safely packed and in cold stores ready for Christmas dinner,” he said. BY JAKE DAVIS.

2016 FARMERS WEEKLY AWARDS: SPECIALIST CROP PRODUCER FINALISTS REVEALED.

The Farmers Weekly Awards celebrate the very best of British farming by recognising and rewarding innovation, hard work and passion for agriculture.

To successfully produce specialist and high-value crops requires professionalism, precise management and technological innovation. Our three finalist deliver on each of those levels.

Joe Cottingham

Hill Farm, Kent

A constant quest for new lucrative market opportunities has seen Kent-based Watts Farms expand its product range to a dazzling array of fresh produce since the start of the millennium.

In 2000, the business was confined to just 70ha at Farningham, just south of Dartford.

Now the diverse enterprise is spread across 10 sites in three different counties, comprising 600ha of outdoor, protected and glasshouse production.

Keeping track of the 60 lines of brassicas, herbs, baby leafs, legumes, onions, asparagus, courgettes, spinach, chards and more recently chillies is no mean feat.

Charged with that task is managing director Joe Cottingham – who works alongside fellow directors Mike, Avril and Ed Gray – and he has been instrumental in the recent success.

It is easy to see why, with Joe showing tremendous passion and enthusiasm for the business as he talked the visiting Farmers Weekly judges through their innovative marketing strategy.

“We are always looking for new and interesting crops with nutritional value and also growing them here in the UK helps the environment by cutting food miles.

 That’s where we differ from other traders,” he explains.
The perfect example is the farm’s now-thriving chilli production, which started off as a few plants in a polytunnel in 2012 and one year later was shifted to a 2.5ha glasshouse in Bedfordshire to extend the growing season and increase yield.

The enterprise now supplies 5,000kg of a number of varieties of chillies to various outlets and end users and this year Joe is trialling 110 new varieties – the largest trial of its kind in Europe.
“I want an edge, so we have done a deal with a breeder to carry out their trials.

“We get to help develop new varieties and if we like them, we get exclusive access,” he adds.
Pushing for other new markets, Joe and his team managed to successfully grow a commercial sweet potato crop and this season, production is increasing 300% in an attempt to reduce reliance on foreign imports.

Joe also has his eyes on expanding the farm’s legume range and is developing a market for UK-grown borlotti beans, with the intention of pre-shelling and selling in ready-to-eat packs for the booming health food trade.

And the innovation doesn’t stop with product development – the farm recently developed a machine that allows mechanical harvesting of fresh cut herbs, with 50% expected to be cut this way during 2016.

“It won’t necessarily save us money, but it will take out the difficulty of finding staff and cut the amount of time it takes to get the herbs from the field to packhouse.

“We also hope to add refrigerated trailers to the harvesting operation to ensure that the herbs arrive in the packhouse in the best condition possible,” says Joe.

Walking into the packhouse, the first thing that hits you is the powerful aroma of freshly cut herbs and you see further evidence of investment in technology to optimise the company’s offering.

A “high-care” unit with high-tech washers and driers enable ready to eat products such as bagged baby leaf salad to be offered and an optical sorter to grade leaf lines ensures top quality with least labour input.

Software is also becoming increasingly important to the Watts Farms operation in an age where traceability is paramount.

Muddy Boots taking care of all cropping information from seed to the packhouse door, where a bespoke version of Produce Star takes over, which has been rolled out over the past 12 months and will be working to its full potential in the near future.

“It allows every minute detail of every bunch, box, tray and pallet rolling through the various packing lines to be recorded to ensure it reaches the customer in tip-top condition,” says Joe.

Nathan Dellicott

Sefter Farm, West Sussex
By taking the decision to put soil health at the core of its veg-producing business, Barfoot Farms hopes to continue intensive but sustainable production across its land for generations to come.

The farm produces predominantly sweetcorn, brassica, legume and cucurbit crops across 2,430ha from Bognor Regis in West Sussex to the north western edge of Southampton in Hampshire.Producing these high-value vegetable crops can often be hard on the grower’s most precious natural resource, requiring intensive cultivations and operations such as harvesting in sometimes less-than-ideal conditions.

This can lead to significant soil structure issues that have a negative impact on production, and it’s this symptom of intensive modern agriculture that prompted farm director Nathan Delicott to make a significant change.

The farm had been using a traditional plough-based system to work its soils, which vary from gravels to silt loams, and sometimes required two subsequent passes before planting, leading to 65% of the field area
being trafficked.

 As a result, Nathan and his team switched to a controlled-traffic farming (CTF) system four years ago, with
RTK guidance technology enabling every machine to work on the same 5m grid on every pass and min-till has made the plough redundant.

As such, no plant root has to push through compacted tractor wheelings, resulting in improved crop yields and in some cases increasing margins by up to 10%.
“Soil health has been the main driver and no seed goes where the wheels have been. Fuel use savings have also been a factor.

“Previously we did what we needed to do to survive as a business, but now our production is spread over more land, so we can afford to look after our soils much better,” explains Nathan.
The company has also been experimenting with overwinter cover crops since 2012, using variations of
radish, vetch, westerwold ryegrass and specialist tillage mixtures to further improve soil health, break compaction and capture nutrients.

A by-product of the Bognor Regis site’s 2.4MW anaerobic digestate plant also helps, with the plant fed by a mixture of hybrid rye grown on the farm and the waste that comes from the neighbouring packhouse.

The facility packs sweetcorn during the domestic season between mid-July and early September and imported corn grown on Barfoot’s farms overseas.

Cleaning, topping and tailing of the cobs generates about 27,000t of waste annually.
Nathan explains with this problem comes a solution, with everything fed into the digester, which in turn powers the whole site with renewable energy and also exports electricity to the grid.

The digestate has helped to cut the farm’s inorganic fertiliser use by about 30%, with the phosphate and potash requirements of every sweetcorn crop supplied by applying the liquid.

At present this is carried out by contractors using 10m dribble bars to fit the CTF system, but eventually the company wants to pump it through their irrigation network and use an umbilical application system.You also get some organic matter and it is absolutely full of microbes and very good for the soil,” adds Nathan.

While sustainable production practices are key in the field, the wider farmed environment is also high on the list of priorities for the business and a number of initiatives have helped to increase biodiversity.

Higher Level Stewardship environmental schemes are in place across the various land parcels and additional margins and other habitats have been created for birds, bees and other species.

Nathan explains that a recent link-up with Brighton University’s department of apiculture (beekeeping) to assess the impact of neonicotinoid insecticide seed treatments has paid dividends.
Neonics have been widely used on the farm’s sweetcorn crops for a number of years and collaboration on the research project and scrutiny of its findings have enabled Barfoot’s to increase bee health on the farm – crucial for the pollination of crops throughout its rotation.

“We have learned a lot from the connection and it has resulted in us getting more pollinators into our crops,” adds Nathan.

Antony Snell

Windmill Hill, Herefordshire
It is said there are no secrets to success – it is the result of hard work and learning from
your mistakes.

And there couldn’t be a more appropriate way to describe the meteoric rise of Antony and Christine Snell from struggling veg growers to high-quality soft fruit producers with a healthy turnover.
With no opportunity to be involved in the family farm after leaving college, Antony’s farming ambitions had to be satisfied elsewhere.

Fortunately, just 12 miles from home, at Harewood End, a general farmworker role cropped up.
Within two years he was part of the management team at the farm, which sits on the north-western edge of the picturesque Wye Valley, producing cereals, grass seed and potatoes.

After the unfortunate passing of the owner, Antony and his wife Christine had the chance to buy 40ha of bare land of their own. They initially grew conventional arable crops and rented a house away from the farm.

With the business haemorrhaging money, they moved to intensive veg growing and then salad crops in an attempt to increase profits, but they struggled to make it work in an increasingly commoditised market.

Antony recalls a meeting with the bank manager, who likening his business to a hospital patient in an intensive care unit.

“We were in financial trouble in the early years and we had to sell half of the land and then rent some more off family and neighbours,” he explains.

Learning from their experiences, Antony and Christine made the brave call to switch to 100% berry production in 1998 – a decision that would lay the foundations for impressive growth into the booming business they run today.

“We put absolutely everything into soft fruit, investing all our time and energy into it over the past 18 years.
“It turned out to be the right thing to do,” says Antony.
Initially planting raspberries, the couple purchased a strawberry farm and has since extended its range of crops to include conventional and organic blackcurrants, blackberries, blueberries and redcurrants for both the fresh and frozen markets.

Production is now spread across 182ha of fertile Herefordshire sandy loam soils, with about 61ha under polytunnels.

“We are not growing a commodity and we are not the biggest producer, but what we do want to do is have a reputation as a quality producer of a specialist crop,” says Antony.

That quest for quality has been fruitful, as Llysun was the first farm to win a gold award in Marks and Spencer’s own quality-assurance scheme – From Field to Fork. They also produced a class-winning Jubilee strawberry for the National Fruit Show in 2015.

The adoption of new technology has been instrumental in this drive for quality, such as shifting to substrate table-top strawberry production for a proportion of the crop.

The installation of a state-of-the-art irrigation system and using weather stations to support agronomic decision-making has also resulted in quality gains and some of the best yields in the industry.

Co-operation, however, has been at the heart of the business from the start and has helped not only the production, but also opened doors for marketing of the farm’s fruit.

Antony was instrumental in setting up the Hereford Fruit co-op, which subsequently merged with Berry Gardens – now a 56-strong grower group that has forged strong links with all the
major retailers.

As a result, the business now supplies Marks and Spencer, Sainsbury’s and Tesco with its fresh berries, while a new packhouse, complete with a £750,000 blast-freezing and mobile racking system, has allowed them to break into the frozen fruit market.

Outside of the marketing group, Antony also forged links with Ribena and supplies the squash maker with conventionally grown blackcurrants.

A successful meeting with Yeo Valley bagged a contract to supply the dairy with organic
blackcurrants.

“Every berry has a home and we are also experimenting with pureeing and juicing. Two of our landlords have anaerobic digesters that take the minimal waste we generate,” he says. BYADAM CLARKE.