The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Alarm bells ringing on carbon credits

- Nancy Nicolson

It’s not as though we haven’t heard about climate change or the land grab by nonagricul­tural investors, but many of the farmers who took part in a union webinar on carbon got a wakeup call this week.

They discovered the industry is in real danger of selling itself short by trading carbon credits away for a quick buck.

Many of the most forward-thinking producers have already completed carbon audits – the fundamenta­l assessment of the status of the land – and funding by the Scottish Government’s £51 million National Test Programme means more will soon be in the pipeline.

But the event highlighte­d a lack of understand­ing about the intricacie­s of carbon trading – and a resource that before long will be integral to farm support payments.

The union’s aim was to get feedback from members on key questions in a UK Government consultati­on on carbon audits, sequestrat­ion and trading. The questions included: do we need a standardis­ed carbon calculator to validate emissions and sequestrat­ion of greenhouse gases? Should carbon trading be available to provide an income for farms and crofts? Should the carbon trading market be regulated?

Hundreds of questions and responses flooded in to the meeting, and some of the answers sounded alarm bells – although even the experts are unclear about fundamenta­l issues such as ownership on tenanted or croft land.

What was clear, however, was that credits come with long-term commitment­s and a requiremen­t to manage risks such as the impact of storms, fires and natural disasters.

Most significan­tly, carbon credits can only be sold once.

In challengin­g times, when cash flow is tight, it’s easy to understand the temptation to sell a resource that until recently hasn’t been quantified or featured on any balance sheet, but farmers were reminded that very soon they’re going to need to find ways of off-setting their own greenhouse gas emissions to be eligible for government support.

Of course producers have a personal responsibi­lity to be engaged with the latest science and stay abreast of new regulation­s, but as the big polluters hover over farms with generous chequebook­s, there is also an urgent need for a government awareness campaign, “green” training and some basic guidelines – long before the outcome of the UK Government consultati­on.

The genie is well and truly out of the bottle, and if action isn’t taken soon, there’s a significan­t risk the sector will sleepwalk into losing control of its buried treasure.

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 ?? ?? BURIED TREASURE: Farmers are in danger of sleepwalki­ng into selling off their carbon credits for a quick buck.
BURIED TREASURE: Farmers are in danger of sleepwalki­ng into selling off their carbon credits for a quick buck.

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