Bush Telegraph

The hills are alive with potential

OPINION: It's a great time to be a North Island hill country landowner, says

- Andrew Watters

It's a great time to own North Island hill country; never have landowners had the range of land-use options now available to them. And with these new options the value of the their land is increasing with suitable hill country farms doubling in value over the past two or three years.

Farmers no longer need to see sheep and beef as the only land use. While there is a bright outlook for the red-meat sector it is now possible to see bright future for Ma¯nuka and carbon as well as forestry and carbon.

The challenge is that we are entering a decade of afforestat­ion and it's disrupting local communitie­s, particular­ly in less productive farming areas.

The big structural shift is land being converted to exotic trees. Simply put, it's hard to deliver reasonable profits on poorer quality hill country that typically grows 4–6 tonnes of pasture per ha.

Farms can generate returns of $300 to $400 per ha but this needs to cover interest, tax, living and reinvestme­nt in the property. This compares poorly to Ma¯nuka + honey share farming which on favoured sites can generate $600-$1000/ha and forestry + carbon at more than $1500/ha.

Certainly, there are conversion costs involved and some time to wait, but the bulk of sales with these less productive properties will move to more profitable uses, probably involving trees of one form or another.

While we have built our local communitie­s around sheep and beef farming, put yourself in a landowner's shoes. Given the opportunit­y to trade out of a less productive farm into a better farm and district, who could blame them.

Having a sustainabl­e industry is more than the economics of farming, it's also about the ability to grow wealth to provide for future family succession.

While it's never been that wise to invest based on the whim of government rules and regulation­s, some of the land going into trees was itself the subject of marginal land conversion subsidies provided by the Muldoon government.

And as I consider the future, the science of climate change is proven and the need to decarbonis­e the global economy seems just about as certain as death and taxes.

Anyone paying attention to the COP26 climate change conference would see the forecasts for global warming range from 1.7 degrees (optimistic) to 2.7 degrees (current policy and action settings).

At these levels of warming, farming in many parts of New Zealand could become very difficult. We owe it to our mokopuna to take this extremely seriously.

Trees really are the ultimate renewable fibre resource. Look around you, products made from tree fibres are ubiquitous – from the paper you are reading to the walls of your home.

Our forestry sector generates nearly $6.8 billion of foreign earnings each year (around 12 per cent of total exports) and invests heavily in research and developmen­t. In the future expect to see cellulose fibre from trees being used into all sorts of textile, cosmetics, food, pharmaceut­ical and bio-based fuel/chemical areas currently unheard of.

From an economics perspectiv­e, investment in the forestry and carbon sector is compelling. Our hypothesis at MyFarm is that carbon will need to reach above $100/tonne domestical­ly and globally to effect the change required to decarbonis­e the economy.

At these price levels, cashflow from carbon credits for forests that are still to be harvested could be 15-20 per cent p.a. for most of the first rotation of forestry.

With emission reductions seemingly some way off, my conclusion is that for the foreseeabl­e future planting trees will remain our most logical method to reduce net carbon emissions.

Planting the right tree on the right hill for mixed use is a genuine option both for new and remaining New Zealand Hill Country owners. ■

 ?? ?? Andrew Watters is the chief executive of MyFarm Investment­s which is promoting a new forestry + carbon investment, CQuest Carbon and Forestatio­n Fund. He is also the owner of a 500-cow southern Wairarapa dairy farm.
Andrew Watters is the chief executive of MyFarm Investment­s which is promoting a new forestry + carbon investment, CQuest Carbon and Forestatio­n Fund. He is also the owner of a 500-cow southern Wairarapa dairy farm.
 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Trees can be part of the mix in getting better returns from poorer-quality hill country.
Photo / NZME Trees can be part of the mix in getting better returns from poorer-quality hill country.
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