Australia's
National Farmers Federation explains that the recovery of the agriculture
sector from drought and COVID-19 is under threat from ongoing industrial action
by the MUA at Port Botany, with the capacity of the Patrick terminal cut by 40
percent in the past week.
“On the road to
recovery from years of drought, farmers are perfectly placed to help get this
country back on track, what we certainly don’t need now is the breakdown of
operations at Port Botany,” NFF CEO Tony Mahar said
Port Botany is
critical for getting products like red meat, pork, grain, wool and cotton to
overseas markets.
Grounding of passenger flights made farmers far more reliant on
shipping for perishable products
Mr Mahar said the
grounding of passenger flights had made farmers far more reliant on shipping
for perishable products.“More than ever, farmers need Port Botany running
smoothly. Instead, the MUA’s latest stunt has seen vessels delayed by up to 18
days and surcharges pile up.
“Right now, the
parties need to demonstrate common sense and think about the bigger picture.
The MUA’s antics could pull the rug out from under Australia’s
economic recovery
“The MUA’s antics
are putting Australian agriculture’s international customer relationships at
risk, and it could pull the rug out from under Australia’s economic recovery.”
“With delays now
pushing to 20 days and beyond, this situation risks doing irreparable damage to
our international reputation as a reliable supplier of agricultural
commodities.
“Some shipping
lines are now bypassing Port Botany and redirecting freight to alternate ports
in Victoria and Queensland.
Farmers are the end-users of port services; we do not want to be pawns in
an industrial dispute
“Farmers are the
end-users of port services and we have no direct involvement in this industrial
action. What we ask for is that state and federal governments, and parties to
this dispute, resolve the matter without putting the whole agricultural supply
chain in jeopardy.
“We want to farm
and sell our produce to our customers; we do not want to be pawns in an
industrial dispute,” Mr Mahar said.