September 4, 2024
New UHT cream plant for Fonterra's Southland, New Zealand site to create 70 new jobs
Fonterra is set to invest $150 million to build a new UHT cream plant at its Edendale site in Southland, New Zealand, to meet growing demand through its Foodservice business.
Fonterra chief executive officer Miles Hurrell shared the news while in Malaysia on a senior New Zealand business delegation with New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon on September 3.
In Malaysia, Fonterra is looking to build on solid foundations where half of New Zealand exports to the country are already dairy.
According to Hurrell, the investment is part of the co-operative's strategy to grow further value by expanding its Foodservice business in Asia and increasing production capacity for high-value products.
"Demand for UHT cream continues to strengthen. Globally, we're expecting demand to increase by more than 4% year-on-year between 2023 – 2032," he said. "This is the second announcement we've made in as many weeks about expansions at our sites to cater for growing demand.
"We believe prioritising our Ingredients and Foodservice channels will create more value for Fonterra and this expansion is a good example of the direction the co-op is heading."
The new plant will initially create upward of 50 million litres of UHT processing capacity with the capacity to grow beyond 100 million litres by 2030.
Fonterra chief operating officer Anna Palairet said the Edendale site is well set up for future growth with decarbonisation work well underway along with a good supply of high-quality cream in the region.
"The additional processing capacity will allow us to manufacture more UHT cream products and grow value for farmers," Palairet said.
She added the investment is also good news for the South Island economy.
"Adding to the six new roles created through the recently announced expansion at our Studholme site, we will create an additional 70 new jobs with this new plant at Edendale. This is great news for the local community," Palairet noted.
Additional employment opportunities will also be created through the construction phase, which is scheduled to start early next year. The first product is expected to come off the line in August 2026.
- Fonterra