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Fonterra CEO Miles Hurrell resigns after eight years in role

By Thomson Reuters Mar 15, 2026 | 2:49 PM

By Roshan Thomas

March 16 (Reuters) – New Zealand dairy company Fonterra Co-operative Group said on Monday that Chief Executive Officer Miles Hurrell had resigned after eight years ​in the role and a 25-year career with ‌the company.

Hurrell, who was appointed CEO in 2018, will remain in the role during a six-month notice period to support an orderly leadership transition, the company said.

The board has begun a search for a ‌new ​chief executive and expects to appoint ⁠a successor in the ⁠coming months, Fonterra added.

Hurrell led a strategic reset that refocused the dairy cooperative on its strengths in New Zealand’s pasture-based milk production, sustainability and higher-value dairy ingredients.

“Miles Hurrell ​leaves Fonterra in a much stronger position than when he took over in 2018,” said Jeremy Sullivan of ⁠advisory firm Hamilton Hindin Greene.

Hurrell previously ⁠held several senior roles across the cooperative’s ​global operations, including chief operating officer of Farm Source and ​general manager for the Middle East, Africa, Russia and ‌Eastern Europe.

“Fonterra’s entering the next phase in its strategic implementation, which marks a natural turning point for a new leader to step in while I consider what’s next for ⁠me,” said Hurrell.

Fonterra Co-operative Group said in October last year that its farmer shareholders had agreed to the divestment of its ⁠global consumer and ‌associated businesses to French dairy group Lactalis.

“The ⁠bigger question is succession quality rather than strategy. ​With ‌the consumer divestment largely mapped out and ​capital return ⁠plans already approved by shareholders, the market will be looking for a chief executive who can execute the next leg of the plan rather than reinvent it,” added Sullivan.

(Reporting by Roshan Thomas in Bengaluru; Editing by Edmund Klamann, Bill Berkrot ​and Diane Craft)