US tour underlines Kiwi irrigation leadership
US tour underlines Kiwi irrigation leadership
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US tour underlines Kiwi irrigation leadership

Farmers Weekly 🕒︎ 2025-11-07

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US tour underlines Kiwi irrigation leadership

Reading Time: 2 minutes New Zealand growers are holding their own on the world stage when it comes to irrigation. That’s the message from Sarah Elliot and Haidee McCabe, following their involvement in the 2025 Trailblazer Irrigation Study Tour through the Pacific Northwest of the United States in September. They said the tour reinforced just how technically strong New Zealand already is in irrigation practice, and how important it is to nurture the sense of pride that drives it. The tour was part of the Zimmatic Trailblazer Sustainable Irrigation Awards, which recognise excellence in water management, innovation, and environmental stewardship. Held every two years, the Trailblazer Tour brings together award winners, alumni and sector leaders from New Zealand and Australia to exchange knowledge and strengthen collaboration. This year’s 20-strong tour took participants inside large-scale family farming operations, irrigation districts and leading infrastructure sites. They got a firsthand look at how water reliability, community backing and long-term planning are treated as essential foundations of agricultural success in the US. “Across the board, our growers here in New Zealand hold their own on the global stage,” said Elliot, a senior marketing specialist at Lindsay Corporation. “What stood out on tour was the depth of understanding around water management back home and how deliberately our farmers think about efficiency and environmental performance. We’re definitely not short on capability. We should be proud of the standard our irrigators set every day.” A key contrast between New Zealand and the US wasn’t technical skill, but the environment around it, particularly the level of community backing, industry confidence, and investment in water security. McCabe, managing director at Irricon, said everything starts with reliable water. “In the regions we visited, reliable water is treated as essential national infrastructure. That certainty gives growers confidence to plan, innovate and reinvest. Here, many Kiwi farmers feel they’re fighting just to hold onto reliability through every consent process. That can wear people down.” IrrigationNZ CEO Karen Williams said the tour reinforced for her how reliable water becomes a strategic enabler for productivity and resilience when it comes to food production. “Where water reliability is locked in, everything else follows – investment, innovation, generational succession and community confidence in agriculture. “The lesson from the US is that reliability isn’t purely an operational issue, it’s nation-building infrastructure. For New Zealand to keep leading the world in sustainable irrigation, we need the same level of long-term certainty behind it.” It is clear that New Zealand growers are often the first globally to adopt technology. “The same tools are available overseas, but Kiwi growers are often hungrier to find solutions that work in their environment,” said Elliot. “A lot of the technology that’s now used globally, like Precision VRI, was developed here for exactly that reason. We’re problem-solvers by necessity, and in many cases, adoption is faster here because our farming conditions demand it.”

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