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Fay-led group won't budge on Crafar offer

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Fri, 17 Feb 2012 2:09p.m.

The 16 Crafar farms would be split by an unnamed "lifelong responsible dairy farmer"

The 16 Crafar farms would be split by an unnamed "lifelong responsible dairy farmer"

The Crafar Farms Independent Purchaser Group, the rival bidder for the Crafar family farms led by Sir Michael Fay, will not raise its $171.5 million offer for the land but is promising to spend $18 million upgrading the land.

CFIPG would spend the funds over three years and buy additional shares in the farmer-owned Fonterra Co-operative Group as production rises, Bell Gully partner David Cooper said in a submission to the Overseas Investment Office on behalf of the group.

That will lead to an extra 13 or 14 employees on the farms, based on an estimated 25 percent to 30 per cent lift in production.

The new submission comes after Justice Forrest Miller sent Shanghai Pengxin's successful application back to the OIO for consideration, saying it had "materially overstated" the economic benefits of the sale for New Zealand.

Pengxin reportedly offered more than $210 million for the farms, and would spend $14 million over four years improving the degraded farm land.

The OIO has insisted it will make a new decision within days of the judgment earlier this week, and the farms' receiver, KordaMentha, has given Pengxin until Wednesday next week to regain approval.

CFIPG said it would meet the same environmental and cultural commitments Pengxin offered.

The submission dismissed any benefit Pengxin's proposed investment will bring to New Zealand.

CFIPG based its productivity forecasts on Sir Michael's Baytown Investment acquisition of the Broadlands Farm in Reporoa last year. More than $2 million was spent on capital expenditure and it's on track to boost productivity by 85 per cent in the first year, the submission said.

The 16 Crafar farms would be split up among the CFIPG, with Taharua Farm acquired by Tauhara Hapu Trust, Ferry View Farm and Tiwhaiti Farm by an unnamed "lifelong responsible dairy farmer". Plateau Farm would be bought by an unnamed party and controlled by a different entity which "has an outstanding environmental farming record".

NZN

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