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BusinessDesk: Henry van der Heyden to leave Fonterra, Ralph Norris to join board

Rural News
BusinessDesk: Henry van der Heyden to leave Fonterra, Ralph Norris to join board
Henry van der Heyden

Fonterra Cooperative Group chairman Henry van der Heyden is to step down next year after a decade in the job and the cooperative has tapped Commonwealth Bank of Australia chief executive Ralph Norris to join the board.

Van der Heyden will step down at the 2012 annual meeting, Fonterra said in a statement. His departure marks a changing of the guard at the top of New Zealand’s biggest company, with Dutch dairy executive Theo Spierings having replaced Andrew Ferrier as chief executive in September.

The announcement was made at Fonterra’s AGM in Whangarei today. The statement says the board began looking for a new CEO two years ago and at the same time started work to identify a new chairman.

“I stood for another term because it was important we had stability through the transition to a new CEO,” said van der Heyden, who has chaired the company since 2002 and been on the board since Fonterra’s inception.

Norris won’t become a director until May 2012, because of other commitments, Fonterra said. John Ballard, who was due to retire at today’s meeting, will stay on the board for another six months with Norris’s appointment being put to shareholders for ratification at next year’s meeting, it said.

At today’s meeting, Spierings urged the farmer-shareholders to get in behind the Trading Among Farmers (TAF) scheme, which would create a market for the shares.

“If I am going to get you the best returns, I need permanent capital – and that means I need TAF,” Spierings said.

He said farmers had indicated some unease about the legal title to any shares going into the Shareholders’ Fund and as a result Fonterra is looking to see if there is a “workable solution where we can get legal title for shareholders if they place shares in the Fund.”

Fonterra will let shareholders know the outcome by Christmas, he said.

(BusinessDesk)

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3 Comments

Fonterra & New Zealand has been made better through the contributions of Henry van der Heyden .

No body is perfect, and his decisions have not always been agreeable but his performance has been good for farmers and the rest of this country.

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Theo, I would prefer the best returns on a consistent and sustainable basis. The NZ dairy industry, has prospered under a co-operative structure for over 100 years, like many other primary industries. Can someone please provide an example of a co-operative hybridising it's structure, with lure of riches, that has endured to serve it's supplying shareholders? TAF is dividing the co-op through creating different classes of shareholder. It is designed to give the farming speculators a bit of breathing space, at the cost of disenfranchising future soverigntly for those of us who want to earn a genuine living off the land, without Gareth Morgan, Brian Gaynor, or the exclusive bretheren clipping the ticket.

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I remember Henry puting a veto on the proposition of farmers buying dairy foods outside of the Fonterra stable, then Fonterra buying back a fraction of the business from Graham Hart for multiple times the original sale. So you are correct goldenfox no one is perfect.

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