Alan Wood

Mayo farmer on Origin Green Award short-list

CROSSMOLINA beef farmer Alan Wood has been shortlisted in Bord Bia’s Origin Green Farmer Awards.

The biennial awards recognise and reward the exceptional performance being achieved by members of its Sustainable Quality Assurance schemes for beef, horticulture and dairy. These schemes are pivotal in differentiating Irish food products in the global marketplace.

A finalist in the suckler to beef category of the Origin Green Farmer Awards, Alan Wood is based just outside Crossmolina, on the shores of Lough Conn. He keeps a suckler herd and raises both commercial bulls and heifers as well as pedigree Charolais bulls.

Alan’s farm, along with the 38 other participating farms, meets high standards around hygiene, farm safety, traceability, animal welfare, remedy use and commitment to their locality.

The overall category winners will be announced at an awards ceremony at The Heritage Hotel, Killenard, Co. Laois, on December 12.

With the Origin Green programme, Ireland is the first country in the world to audit and carbon footprint its livestock farms, currently at a rate of 650 a week, under what is in effect a national programme providing measurement and feedback to farmers for continuous improvement in how they farm sustainably. The results represent a unique selling point for Irish food exports, proving that farmers are operating with due care for the surrounding environment, resulting in a low carbon footprint.

Chief executive of Bord Bia, Tara McCarthy, paid tribute to the achievements of all the finalists, saying: “The farmers chosen as finalists for these awards are already regarded by the industry as being among the very best. Their commitment to sustainable production through the Origin Green programme and willingness to have their achievements judged by a panel of experts shows their ambition to be the best and to make the Irish food and drink industry a world leader.”

The beef and dairy finalists were visited over recent weeks by the judges from Bord Bia, Teagasc and the Farmers Journal who were impressed with the practices being adopted to raise efficiency and profitability. These include measures to improve animal performance, herd health and fertility, while controlling inputs such as concentrate feed and fertiliser.

The 39 beef, horticulture and dairy finalists represent the most efficient farmers in the country, producing what the market demands in a sustainable manner.