June 4, 2025

Sweet Return of the Herbert’s Sugarcane Crushing Season

With the 2025 sugarcane crushing season set to begin on the 10th of June, it’s heartening to see our agribusinesses doing all they can to get on with the job after what’s been an incredibly testing start to the year.

It’s no secret that the February floods caused serious crop damage across the Herbert District, with many growers suffering losses to their ratooning and plant cane. This will be a wet season most of us would like to put behind us. This year’s crush will be vitally important, with not much room for error. Our farmers, harvesting contractors, and mill workers are potentially looking at a shorter season with crop yields down. This year’s crush will be below average, with Wilmar estimating they will crush around 3.27 million tonnes of sugar cane, compared to an average season of 4.08 million tonnes. Seeing harvesters in the paddocks and cane trains back on the tracks will be a welcome sight and a sign of our district’s ability to wipe the mud off our knees and get up again.

I want to acknowledge the maintenance crews and the navvies at Victoria and Macknade Mills. You’ve worked tirelessly throughout the slack to repair and prepare the mills and the rail network in record time, we’re all looking forward to steam trials and the shredder starting up.

Despite the tough conditions, our growers have put in the hard work to deliver the best crop possible during this year’s wet conditions. Your work keeps our economy ticking and supports jobs right across the region.

As this year’s season kicks off, I’d like to wish our harvester operators and haulout driver’s a safe and productive season. You all work incredibly long hours to ensure our season is a success, it’s pretty simple: without our harvesting crews, we don’t have a season.

As a final note, I urge everyone to be on the lookout for haulout tractors, heavy machinery and cane trains this season. Here’s to a safe and successful crush for everyone involved.