The $60 million cull of 22,000 cattle infected with disease Mycoplasma bovis is underway, the Minister of Agriculture has confirmed.
Damien O'Connor told reporters on Tuesday that support was being offered to farmers from 22 properties in Hawke's Bay, Canterbury, Otago and Southland who have cattle that must be killed to prevent the disease spreading further.
"We need to reduce the risk of any spread of this infection throughout the country," he said. Under the Biosecurity Act, farmers from infected properties will be entitled to compensation, which could cost $60m, O'Connor said.
Operating costs for investigating and stopping the disease spreading for the Ministry for Primary Industries have been more than $35m to date, but ongoing costs of eradicating Mycoplasma bovis fully from New Zealand had yet to be fully calculated, he said.
"There will be fair compensation for farmers - every animal is priced differently, with different production potential, so there is a process to go through," O'Connor said. There was no issue with New Zealand's cattle numbers, O'Connor said.