Alex Worker, Future Food Aotearoa chairman.
Each transaction, viewed in isolation, may seem commercially rational. Together, they reveal a troubling trend – New Zealand is becoming a price-taker in its own primary industries, with farmers and communities bearing the risks while profits flow overseas. This is a generational hospital pass.
Why New Zealand is losing control – four forces driving this exodus
1. Short-term pressures override long-term value. When quarterly earnings disappoint, governance boards face intense pressure to deliver immediate returns. Selling assets becomes the fastest path to showing results, even if it means surrendering strategic control. Few governance structures reward patient stewardship through inevitable industry cycles.
2. Capital scarcity meets offshore abundance. Primary processing requires large, lumpy investments – often hundreds of millions for a single plant upgrade. Domestic capital markets struggle to fund these multi-year commitments, particularly during downturns. Meanwhile, well-funded offshore buyers arrive with deep pockets and patient capital, but control comes as part of the package.
3. Policy drift replaces strategic thinking. Beyond aspirational slogans like “values and value over volume”, New Zealand lacks clearly defined guardrails for strategic assets. Without a framework to distinguish between welcome investment and problematic control transfers, fire sales get rebranded as investment wins.
4. Ideology constrains options. Successive governments have treated state ownership as an ideological liability rather than a strategic tool. This philosophical stance has narrowed our options precisely when creative solutions are needed most.
The cost of losing control
When ownership migrates offshore, decision-making inevitably follows. The power to determine where processing occurs, how supply chains are structured, and whether regional facilities remain viable shifts to boardrooms in Paris, Shanghai, Dublin, or Singapore — not Fanshawe St, Wairoa, or Invercargill.
This transformation carries profound consequences. We evolve from price-makers to price-takers. Our farmers become suppliers to offshore-controlled processors rather than partners in value creation. Regional communities lose their economic anchors when distant owners prioritise efficiency over local employment.
Most critically, we surrender the ability to shape our own New Zealand food security and economic destiny.
A sovereignty strategy that works
This isn’t an argument against foreign capital, it’s a call for strategic thinking about how we engage with it.
Many advanced agricultural nations successfully protect strategic food assets while remaining open to international investment. We should learn from their approaches.
· Define what matters most: create a clear list of strategic assets that should remain under majority New Zealand control: major processing platforms, iconic national brands, critical logistics infrastructure, seed and genetics IP, and essential storage facilities. Establish “golden share” mechanisms or ownership caps for designated entities, preventing control transfers without national consent – consistent with practices in France, Canada, and Australia.
· Build domestic capital at scale: establish an Aotearoa Food Security Fund anchored by the NZ Super Fund and ACC, with iwi and retail KiwiSaver participation. This vehicle would hold strategic stakes, co-invest with private owners, and provide patient capital for modernisation. The NZ Super Fund’s strong long-term performance demonstrates that professional, arms-length stewardship is entirely achievable. It needs to be very different in vision than what has been set up by AgriZeroNZ to focus on methane mitigation. Grant the fund first-refusal rights on designated assets and create time-bound safeguards during downturns to prevent fire-sale dynamics.
· Accelerate value-chain innovation: Target R&D support toward biomass fermentation, novel proteins, advanced processing technologies, and high-value nutraceuticals with IP retention and commercialisation pathways anchored in New Zealand. Provide accelerated depreciation and concessional finance for processing upgrades tied to export value-add and resilience metrics.
· Align governance with national interests: Require institutional investors and Crown entities to adopt stewardship codes integrating long-horizon value and New Zealand ownership considerations. In parallel, refresh New Zealand Trade and Enterprise’s export-centric and facilitation-focused operating model. For entities receiving state co-investment, embed public-interest objectives in governance structures. Publish an annual Primary Assets Register tracking ownership patterns, reinvestment levels, rate of return on investment (ROI) – similar to how venture funds track performance, and regional employment impacts.
Addressing the sceptics
Regular critics will raise their concerns against this.
“We need foreign capital,” they’ll argue. Absolutely, and quality investors prefer clear and consistent rules. Co-investment models provide certainty while retaining domestic influence over strategic decisions.
“Trade rules won’t allow this,” others will claim. Yet comparable frameworks operate successfully in Canada (Investment Canada Act), Australia (FIRB), France (golden shares), and Singapore (Temasek).
The Irish have a working Ireland Strategic Investment Fund (ISIF), managed and controlled by the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA), a sovereign development fund. The key is transparent, proportionate application that welcomes capability-enhancing investment while protecting genuine national interests.
“The Crown is a poor investor,” generational interests will add. But I’m not proposing ministerial micromanagement – quite the opposite – we’re advocating professional, independent stewardship modelled on the New Zealand Super Fund’s proven approach. This needs to remain arm’s length from the current, damaging three-year New Zealand political circus.
The moment of choice? Or a moment of silence?
The world is pivoting toward food security and supply sovereignty.
Singapore’s delegation to Aotearoa on this very matter two weeks ago highlights this. From the EU’s strategic autonomy agenda to America’s “Buy American” policies to China’s decadal government agendas, nations are recognising that control over essential supply chains matters.
New Zealand should not be the outlier that surrendered its defining assets just as others were fortifying theirs.
We face a fundamental choice: continue the drift toward becoming a processing outpost in our own land, or chart a course that welcomes capital while keeping control. The former path leads to diminished sovereignty and hollowed-out communities. The latter preserves our ability to shape our own destiny while remaining open to the world.
The time for slogans has passed. We need a Primary Sovereignty Strategy that defines what we will protect, builds the capital to do so, and ensures our children inherit more than just the memory of what we once controlled.
New Zealand’s story should be written by New Zealanders first, then our partners. Let’s make sure it stays that way.