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Planned Southland plant-based milk factory now heading elsewhere

southlandtribune.substack.com Planned Southland plant-based milk factory now heading elsewhere

A planned Southland plant-based milk manufacturing factory will now be built elsewhere, most likely in Canterbury.

Planned Southland plant-based milk factory now heading elsewhere

Southland just can't seem to get decent investment rolling :( I had been looking forward to a locally manufactured, plant based milk alternative.

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  • It seems they have decided to go with a bigger plant than originally planned so perhaps they need to be closer to Christchurch's port. I do worry about how much water will be needed, Canterbury isn't exactly known for an oversupply of water.

    • Oat milk production uses a lot less water than Cow milk production? (>1/10th) and won't shitty up our rivers.

      Perfectly good port at Bluff.

      Instead, they want to grow Oats down here and then transport to CC for processing - yeah nah - makes little sense to me.

      • Oat milk production uses a lot less water than Cow milk production? (>1/10th) and won’t shitty up our rivers.

        I'm not worried about oat milk instead of cow milk (that would be great), I'm worried about oat milk production on top of cow milk production.

        Perfectly good port at Bluff.

        There is a port at bluff. It handles significantly lower volumes than Christchurch and this may be a concern if they want to be world leading at oat milk.

        Instead, they want to grow Oats down here and then transport to CC for processing - yeah nah - makes little sense to me.

        It would use a lot less fuel to transport the oats than to transport the oat milk, if they still had to go to Christchurch.

        It would be interesting to know what led to the decision. They originally planned the factory for Southland, so must not have been concerned about it at the start. I wonder if they came across political problems with councils or consent or something and decided it was too hard and to try somewhere else.

        • I'm not worried about oat milk instead of cow milk (that would be great), I'm worried about oat milk production on top of cow milk production.

          In Southland, there are some areas in production now, but the idea was to do conversions of dairy as the industry grows.

          There is a port at bluff. It handles significantly lower volumes than Christchurch and this may be a concern if they want to be world leading at oat milk.

          Southland needs more income - growing the port would help achieve that?

          It would use a lot less fuel to transport the oats than to transport the oat milk, if they still had to go to Christchurch.

          Not if it is transported OS. And if it goes in my coffee it has to come back again as oat milk :(

          If I hear the reasoning, I'll post back here.

          • In Southland, there are some areas in production now, but the idea was to do conversions of dairy as the industry grows.

            That would be great. Thinking about it, dairy and oat growing land probably share a lot in common so it makes sense to do that conversion.

            Southland needs more income - growing the port would help achieve that?

            This is the politics bit. The company wanting to set up an oat milk factory would look at what they need. They would approach the port to ask about this, the port would approach the council about expanding, the council may approach central government about support. Talks go round and round, but if they are going nowhere then they may end up going to a backup option like building the plant in Canterbury. It's hard to know what made them change their mind, though if you're local there may be rumours.

            Not if it is transported OS.

            The cost of shipping from Christchurch to Europe instead of Bluff to Europe is probably minimally different, but the cost of trucking from Southland to Christchurch port vs Canterbury to Christchurch port may well be a big difference (remembering one truck can take a tiny fraction of what a ship can, and each truck needs a driver, and each driver needs breaks if the trip is long). The shipping cost per litre may well be less than the cost to ship it to the other side of the world.

            If I hear the reasoning, I’ll post back here.

            That would be great, I'd be interested to know.

19 comments