Bush Telegraph

Fed Farmers: Serious flaws in emissions laws

COVID-19 fallout squeezing businesses

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Federated Farmers is disappoint­ed that emissions trading reform legislatio­n was passed recently without serious concerns raised during consultati­on being addressed.

Federated Farmers climate change spokespers­on Andrew Hoggard says the economic repercussi­ons of COVID-19 are squeezing businesses and households and the last thing

consumers and farmers need is a price hike of services and utilities such as electricit­y and petrol.

There has been no analysis undertaken since the pandemic on how sweeping changes to the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) will impact our economy, our internatio­nal competitiv­eness, and therefore the standard of living enjoyed by all New Zealanders,” he said.

A particular concern for farmers is that the legislatio­n incentivis­es the accelerati­on of productive farmland being converted to pines planted not for wood but for carbon credits.

“We lose farm production from that land, and thus export dollars. We lose real jobs, and the districts’ schools, contractin­g businesses and community networks are gutted.”

“With pine forests grown just to clip the carbon credit ticket, there’s no pruning gangs, no sawmilling jobs at the end of it. The mostly absentee owners will just plant the trees and close the gate, effectivel­y abandoning the land from ever re-entering productive use. And nothing is actually achieved in terms of getting greenhouse gas emissions down. Is that really in the nation’s best interests?” Hoggard asks.

About 70,000 hectares of productive sheep and beef land has already been converted to forestry since 2019, and carbon-related investment has been a key driver for this, he says.

“As an alternativ­e to putting agricultur­e in the ETS under a pointless processor-based levy, Federated Farmers is very pleased the government agreed to take up the Primary Sector Climate Change Commitment. Otherwise known as He Waka Eke Noa, this encompasse­s sector-driven initiative­s to account for, and drive down, emissions on farm.”

However, Hoggard says, the reform legislatio­n fails to deal with aligning the agreed He Waka Eke Noa milestones with the farm production year - the basis for farmers’ software systems - rather than the calendar year.

“It also shows bad faith by persisting with the inclusion of agricultur­e in the ETS as a ‘fall-back option’.

He says Federated Farmers will continue engaging in the He Waka Eke Noa partnershi­p and will advocate for the developmen­t of a fitfor-purpose pricing mechanism that lowers global greenhouse gas emissions while not reducing food production.

With pine forests grown just to clip the carbon credit ticket, there’s no pruning gangs, no sawmilling jobs at the end of it

Andrew Hoggard

 ??  ?? Year-old carbon sink planting on Tuscan Hills east of Pahiatua.
Year-old carbon sink planting on Tuscan Hills east of Pahiatua.
 ??  ?? Andrew Hoggard from Federated Farmers.
Andrew Hoggard from Federated Farmers.

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