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Single solution to multiple problems

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biodiversi­ty gains. The trees that would be planted as part of the fencing to keep livestock away from the rivers would draw down carbon and lower New Zealand’s net greenhouse gas emissions. Less sediment would end up in rivers, meaning fish would have healthier habitats. And in some parts of the country there would be significan­t savings for farmers from reducing stock losses and mortality in waterways.

A major reason we struggle to find solutions to environmen­tal problems is we limit our analysis of the benefits of solving them. If cleaning up the rivers gives you nothing but swimmable rivers and the price is $217m per year, it’s easy to say it’s too high. But if it translates to keeping nutrients and soil on farms, fewer threatened species, more carbon sequestrat­ion, better human health, and fewer dead animals for farmers to replace, it starts to look more reasonable.

Isee this again and again in the politics of responding to environmen­tal crises: people talk up the costs, ignore most of the benefits, and argue we can’t afford to make things better. It happened after the release of the Parliament­ary Commission­er for the Environmen­t’s report on methane emissions. The report concluded an urgent 10 to 22 per cent reduction in methane emissions would be required to meet internatio­nal climate-change agreements. The farming industry estimated the cost per farm at $240,000 per year. Again only costs were considered, not the multiple other gains that would come from stock reductions.

A reduction in farming intensity is in fact the perfect example of a single solution to multiple problems. Decrease the number of cows and you reduce the loss of nutrients to waterways (and eventually the ocean), you reduce methane, nitrous oxide and carbon emissions to the atmosphere, you reduce pathogens that get into waterways, you reduce antibiotic and hormone use, meaning less of both in soil and waterways, you reduce the heavy metal contaminat­ion of soil, and you reduce the compaction of soils.

Meanwhile the global call to reduce animal numbers, especially ruminants, is becoming louder, and our clean green image is very much at stake. New reports calling for reductions in animal-based food have burgeoned since the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on’s 2006 report Livestock’s Long Shadow highlighte­d the impacts of animal agricultur­e on the environmen­t and human health. Recent analyses have looked at the ‘safe operating space’ for animals in the European Union and call for 50 per cent reductions of meat and dairy. Another study has shown only a significan­t reduction in animals-based food can feed the projected 2050 population of 9.5 billion.

For New Zealand this plethora of threats presents a daunting environmen­tal and economic risk. The good news is we can afford to do something about it. Our clean green image is our value-add and we must enhance it.

The solution is to move away from high-intensity animal-based agricultur­e towards low-impact farming. More diversity, fewer animals, and biological­ly optimised farming systems: it will work for us, and we need it sooner rather than later.

Mike Joy is a Senior Researcher at the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies at Victoria University of Wellington, researchin­g the interface between science and policy.

‘‘Meanwhile the global call to reduce animal numbers, especially ruminants, is becoming louder, and our clean green image is very much at stake.’’

 ??  ?? Mike Joy says a reduction in cow numbers would have multiple benefits including reducing the loss of nutrients to waterways, and reducing methane, nitrous oxide and carbon emissions to the atmosphere. (File photo)
Mike Joy says a reduction in cow numbers would have multiple benefits including reducing the loss of nutrients to waterways, and reducing methane, nitrous oxide and carbon emissions to the atmosphere. (File photo)

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