Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Joanna Plains Cataby

HIGHLY regarded Western Australian grazing property Joanna Plains has changed hands after private negotiations, for an undisclosed sum.

Carpenter International sold the 9500ha property, located near Cataby, 140km north of Perth, to a newly-formed joint venture involving two stakeholders.
>New owner, the Central Agri Group, represents a partnership between Lawsons Angus, Australia’s largest Angus beef seed-stock producer; and Shark Lake Food Group, the operator of the export lamb and beef abattoir near Esperance.
Victorian-based Lawsons has had a long-standing bull breeding and marketing business in Western Australia, with Harry Lawson and wife Ruth earlier spending three years in the west, developing the enterprise.

Full Published story here....

The buyers say they plan to complete a partially-built abattoir on the site, ‘in due course’.
The new business aims to create a world-class integrated beef supply business at an attractive time in the beef economic cycle, joint venture spokesman Harry Lawson said.
Carpenter Beef general manager John Berkefeld will head up the new group, which has been formed to expand the integrated supply chain of high quality Angus and Wagyu brands into global markets.
“The new Central Agri business model will create the integrated seed-stock and breeding company that we need to secure supply for our export Angus programs,” Mr Berkefeld said.
“Lawsons Angus has been our major genetics supplier for twenty years so it really isn’t a major change to our strategy,” he said. “Our integration into Central Agri Group will enable us to expand the business significantly and better serve Lawsons Angus customers in WA and on the East coast.”
“This is a great result for Carpenter Beef and WA agriculture in general,” Mr Berkefeld said.
“Our Japanese customers are looking to increase the volume of high quality grain fed Angus, and we wanted to secure a supply of cattle with the right genetics to fit that market. For a long time our company has recognized the value of Lawsons Angus genetics and the consistency in producing a high quality product.”

“Our Japanese customers want to open the box and find the same eating quality every time. This is only possible with a long-term disciplined approach to every part of the supply chain starting with the genetics.”
The Joanna Plains farm at Cataby will continue to be used as a custom feedlot for northern producers as well as a facility for finishing cattle to be slaughtered at the Shark Lake abattoir. The feedlot has in the past fed up to 13,000 head.

The 10,000 head backgrounding facility will be expanded to include a  Lawsons Angus Bull Unit and Research Centre.
Lawsons Angus head Harry Lawson said the Joanna Plains sale represented a “once in a lifetime opportunity.”
“We are excited to be part of a dynamic fully-integrated breeding company. The facility we have at Joanna Plains is a similar concept to that used by our US partners, Gardiner Angus Ranch,” he said in a statement.
Gardiner Ranch, one of the largest US seedstock suppliers, also operates a large commercial cattle business built around progeny buyback schemes among co-operator breeders using Gardiner Ranch genetics.

“Central Agri Group will offer our clients in the East and the West an opportunity to work with the end-customer and see the value of their genetics in a transparent way,” Mr Lawson said.
“Having a fully traceable supply chain including genetics puts us in a truly unique position,” he said.
The sale comes after years of speculation about the future of the 8700ha grazing property near Cataby, where construction of a boutique-scale abattoir stopped in 2007 after owner Ric Stowe’s Business Empire collapsed.

With Central Agri’s ‘multimillion-dollar cash injection’, the property is likely to boast a 400-head-a day abattoir, feedlots and prime grazing land.






Friday, October 16, 2015

A New Player For Cataby Abattoir

A new WA-based beef supplier is set to be launched to focus on the world’s premium markets based near Dandaragan.

Carpenter Beef has sold the iconic Joanna Plains property to new company Central Agri Group, which was has only recently been incorporated.
Central Agri is backed by Esperance-based export lamb and beef abattoir Shark Lake Food Group and Australia’s biggest Angus beef seedstock producer, Lawsons Angus.

The announcement comes after years of speculation regarding the future of the 8700ha farm near Cataby, where construction of a large-scale abattoir ground to a halt in 2007 in the wake of the collapse of owner Ric Stowe’s empire.

In a bizarre twist of events it was rumoured earlier this year that Malaysian investors had joined forces with the embattled former owner to finish building the abattoir.
With Central Agri’s multimillion cash injection, the property will boast a 400-head-a-day European standard abattoir, feedlots and prime grazing land that will be a genetics driven “jewel in the crown” of the group, using the facilities to employ American breeding principles to inject extra value for their supply chain stakeholders.

Plans are also under way to incorporate a world-leading research centre and Angus bull unit to offer partner breeders sophisticated genetic information on potential sires.
It is an attractive time in the beef economic cycle, with world prices continuing to boom.
Carpenter Beef general manager John Berkfield will head up the new group, which will be a one-stop-shop for the supply of Angus and Wagyu brands into global markets.
The combination of an integrated seed stock and breeding company will secure supply for the new company’s export programs.

The Joanna Plains farm will continue to be used as a custom feed-lot for northern producers as well as a facility for finishing cattle to be slaughtered at Shark Lake.
A 10,000 head backgrounding facility on the farm will be expanded to include the research centre and bull unit and complete the partially built abattoir by early next year.
“Lawsons Angus has been our major genetics supplier for twenty years so it really isn’t a major change to our strategy,” Mr Berkfield said.

“Our integration into Central Agri Group will enable us to expand the business significantly and better serve Lawsons Angus customers in WA and on the East coast.

“This is a great result for Carpenter Beef and agriculture in general because our Japanese customers are looking to increase the volume of high quality grain-fed Angus.”
Mr Berkfield said the new company was formed to secure a supply of cattle with the right genetics to fit that market.
“For a long time our company has recognised the value of Lawsons Angus genetics and the consistency in producing a high quality product for our Japanese customers who want to open the box and find the same eating quality every time,” he said.

“This is only possible with a long term disciplined approach to every part of the supply chain starting with the genetics.”


compliments of Rueben Hale of the online west australian