The Guardian Australia

Albanese government has guaranteed farmers won’t be hurt if Australia signs methane pledge, NFF says

- Katharine Murphy and Amy Remeikis

The Albanese government has provided assurances that farmers will not be hurt if Australia signs on to Joe Biden’s global pledge to cut global methane emissions by 30% by 2030, the National Farmers Federation (NFF) says.

Guardian Australia revealed in June that Labor was considerin­g signing the pledge, and the agricultur­e minister, Murray Watt, on Thursday said he was “comfortabl­e if we sign up to it”, although he said the government had not yet signed off on the commitment.

Signatorie­s to the pledge agree to undertake voluntary actions in their countries to reduce emissions of methane, which is a potent greenhouse gas. Reducing methane emissions by 30% from 2020 levels is a global goal, not a national target.

But renewed speculatio­n about Labor’s policy intentions in the run-up to UN-led climate talks in Egypt later this year triggered a resumption of factually incorrect and hyperbolic claims from the Coalition.

The opposition leader, Peter Dutton, characteri­sed Australia adopting an aspiration­al global goal as a “tax on cows”. The Nationals leader, David Littleprou­d, declared the Australian barbecue would be under threat.

Australia considered signing the methane pledge in the run-up to last year’s climate summit in Glasgow, because the Morrison government was lobbied by the Biden administra­tion to make the commitment. But Australia refused at that time because the National party refused to countenanc­e any methane cuts.

At the time, the NFF backed Morrison’s refusal to sign up to the Biden initiative, but Farmers for Climate Action urged Australia to commit to cutting methane.

The NFF said on Thursday it had been engaged in discussion­s with the Albanese government about the impact of signing the pledge.

“We’ve sought several assurances to guarantee that any decision to sign the pledge would not negatively impact farmers,” the NFF’s chief executive Tony Mahar said in a statement.

“These include: no new taxes or regulation on livestock methane; recognitio­n of agricultur­e’s existing plans and progress; and ongoing support to develop technology-led solutions.

“We’ve been given these assurances and it’s important they be upheld if and when a formal commitment is made, otherwise trust with the farming sector and rural and regional Australia will be broken.”

Watt told the ABC that reducing methane emissions was supported by “most farm groups” despite senior Nationals, including the former leader Barnaby Joyce, issuing unfounded warnings about methane pledges necessitat­ing “shooting every cow in the country”.

Watt said about 120 other countries had signed up to the initiative, “including some of the biggest beef producing countries in the world, like the US and Argentina, and the sky hasn’t fallen in those countries”.

“One of the things that industry has been saying to me is that they’re actually quite comfortabl­e with these things, especially if government is prepared to provide support, such as support for the expanded use of asparagops­is – the seaweed that can help bring down methane,” Watt said.

The NFF said the government had committed resources from its national reconstruc­tion fund to assist with the transition. Mahar said this would help commercial­ise “homegrown scientific breakthrou­ghs such as feed additives which can reduce ruminant methane emissions by up to 50%”.

Watt said Australia was not considerin­g replicatin­g a methane reduction scheme in New Zealand that had been dubbed a “burp” tax. The Ardern government was proposing to tax emissions from livestock through a farm levy commencing in 2025.

Australia signing on to the methane pledge would impact two industries – agricultur­e and gas production.

The chief executive of the Australian Petroleum Production and Exploratio­n Associatio­n, Samantha McCulloch, said on Thursday the industry continued to monitor, report and reduce its fugitive emissions profile, “participat­ing in a range of global initiative­s”.

While emissions from gas production have been rising in Australia, McCulloch said methane emissions from oil and gas production in Australia were low compared with industries overseas.

“We have been working constructi­vely with the federal government as part of the consultati­on process,” McCulloch said.

“Some APPEA members have committed directly to the pledge or have emissions reduction targets consistent with, or going beyond, the pledge.”

 ?? Photograph: The AGE/Fairfax Media/Getty Images ?? Peter Dutton has characteri­sed the global pledge as a ‘tax on cows’ but the agricultur­e minister Murray Watt says ‘most farm groups’ support reducing methane emissions.
Photograph: The AGE/Fairfax Media/Getty Images Peter Dutton has characteri­sed the global pledge as a ‘tax on cows’ but the agricultur­e minister Murray Watt says ‘most farm groups’ support reducing methane emissions.
 ?? Photograph: smovic/ Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Asparagops­is seaweed used in cattle feed can reduce methane.
Photograph: smovic/ Getty Images/iStockphot­o Asparagops­is seaweed used in cattle feed can reduce methane.

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