2026 Nuffield NZ Farming Scholarship. Apply by 17 August 2025. Read More...

Apply for 2026 Nuffield NZ Farming Scholarship by 17 August 2025. More details...

The Organic Sector With No More GE Free

Matthew Scarf

Executive Summary

This report investigates how potentially ending New Zealand’s GE-Free (Genetically Engineered-free) status could affect the nation’s Organic Food and Fibre sector. The organic industry currently depends on its GE-Free reputation for market access and premium pricing. Potential Policy changes allowing genetically engineered organisms raise important questions about the sector’s future integrity, perception, and economic viability.

Given the growth of organic markets globally and in New Zealand, it is vital to assess both risks and opportunities of these policy changes. As the industry faces possible change, understanding these impacts will inform growers, exporters, policymakers, and consumers navigating this transition.

The methodology for this report was a literature review of already completed work in this area, which was then complemented and challenged through 10 semi-structured interviews with a mixture of professionals and experts related to the topic.

Key Findings:

Loss of GE-Free status may impact the premium currently being achieved in New Zealand organic products, threatening both current margins and future growth.

A reduction in market trust from a cotamination issue can result in less streamlined trading environments and potentially fewer customers; New Zealand establishing more organic product equivalency agreements could counteract this to a degree.

Uncertainty over coexistence and allowable GE presence increases costs and risks for organic farmers, discouraging new entrants.

Moving away from GE-Free could create market uncertainty and lead to questions about the organic sector’s identity, its values and possibly result in unsatisfactory narratives in the market.

If confidence and investment decline post-GE policy change towards an already small-scale sector, it will struggle to achieve economies of scale.

Globally, the organic sector is rapidly growing, offering major opportunities for New Zealand’s organic and food industries if they respond effectively.

Recommendations:

To the Stakeholder and Policy Makers – Create a clear, government-backed pathway for farmers to transition to organics, modelled on the USDA’s TOPP, making the process easier and more appealing.

Integrate organic farming directly into environmental programmes like CarboNZero Toitu, build a fast-track way / reduce crossover for small Organic farms to achieve certification.

The government should fast-track the completion of the Organics Standards Bill so NZ can secure more Organic equivalency agreements to strengthen global market access. it should also, set clear GMO rules on buffer zones, liability, compensation, and labelling to give organic farmers certainty.

MPI and MfE should actively promote a trusted national food and fibre brand focused on integrity, traceability, and innovation.

To the Organic Farmer – Learn about the GE Bill, GM farming, collaborate with neighbours, and minimise contamination risks.

Matthew Scarf

Download and read the full report here:

Grow. Advance. Lead.

Do the Kellogg Rural Leadership Programme.

More Kellogg reports:

2025

Evaluating the Potential of Increased Carbon Stocks and Biodiversity Outcomes to Fund Native Vegetation Management on NZ Properties

Cameron’s report examines whether monetised benefits from increased carbon sequestration or positive biodiversity outcomes could offset the costs of pest management and protection of native ...
Read More →
2025

Collars, Costs and Returns: Assessing the Value of Cow Wearables in NZ Pasture Systems

Wearable technologies offer real benefits in monitoring, labour efficiency, and safety on NZ dairy farms. David March’s report discovers that for high-performing operations, financial returns ...
Read More →
2025

Are Biodiversity Credits an Opportunity for Sheep and Beef Farmers?

Farmers show strong interest in biodiversity credits, but high administrative costs and unclear financial incentives remain challenges. This report by Tim Orlando-Reep recommends simplifying measurement ...
Read More →