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29 October 2008
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Beekeeper incomes improve against the odds
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Many Australian honeybee businesses continue to struggle despite an improvement in their financial performance over the past six years.

Increased revenue from pollination services, where honeybees are placed in crops to facilitate or improve yields, and higher honey prices helped the improvement in 2006-07 compared with 2001-02.

This finding comes from the Australian Honeybee Industry Survey 2006-07, prepared by ABARE and commissioned by the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (RIRDC).

The report was released today by Dr Peter O’Brien, Managing Director of RIRDC and Phillip Glyde, Executive Director of ABARE.

The report presents results from a survey conducted by ABARE in June 2008, of 135 beekeepers and presents estimates of production, socioeconomic and financial characteristics of honeybee businesses during 2006-07.

“While the average cash operating surplus of honeybee businesses has risen in real terms by 40 per cent between 2000-01 and 2006-07, their rate of return on capital invested remained negative at -3 per cent on average,” said Mr Glyde.

“Financial performance was substantially better for larger beekeeping businesses - operating more than 1000 hives - which achieved a rate of return to capital of almost 5 per cent, indicating economies of scale.”

Dr O’Brien said an estimated 28 per cent of honeybee businesses provide pollination services, but that this was likely to grow, with 36 per cent of beekeepers expecting to commence or expand pollination services in the future.

“Increasingly beekeepers are not just producers of honey, but providers of pollination services that help sustain agriculture and feed the nation.”

“Despite improved performance, the industry is facing a number of challenges including drought, pest and diseases, access to public land and meeting future pollination demand,” said Dr O’Brien.

“Ensuring there are adequate levels of pollination services to meet future demand in the horticulture sector is of particular concern at the moment,” Dr O’Brien concluded.

The ABARE survey of beekeepers forms part of the RIRDC Honeybee R&D program, which aims to increase profitability of Australian honeybee businesses.

The report, Australian Honeybee Industry Survey 2006-07, can be downloaded from the RIRDC website www.rirdc.gov.au
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For media interviews and comment please contact:

spacer At ABARE - Milly Lubulwa, Survey Analysis Section, on 02 6272 2069, mobile 0408 162 395 or email mlubulwa@abare.gov.au

spacer At RIRDC - Danny O’Brien, Communications Manager, on 02 6271 4175 or mobile 0438 130 445.

For general media enquiries, contact Maree Finnegan, Media Coordinator on 02 6272 2260, mobile 0417 689 567 or email mfinnegan@abare.gov.au
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