CHB Mail

Explaining carbon farming part of job

CLIMATE: Well travelled and educated, Jules Webley helps farmers get a grip on carbon. reports

- Cass Marrett

Ayoung farmer with significan­t overseas experience and diplomas under his belt is now helping other farmers understand carbon farming. Jules Webley, 26, has a diploma in agricultur­e, a diploma in farm management and a diploma in business from Lincoln University and is finishing research for his masters while working for Arrowtown’s Compass Agribusine­ss Management.

His research looks at the Emissions Trading Scheme and carbon forestry in New Zealand. Webley says carbon forestry is driving the biggest land use change in New Zealand since Europeans arrived.

When he left high school, Webley moved to Australia to pursue a profession­al rugby league career and spent time working on a cattle station in the Northern Territory. Now his overseas experience stretches as far as teaching new agricultur­al practices in the rural Philippine­s.

If one thing stood out about his travels, it would be that Kiwis were the best at pastoral farming, he said.

“We’re well advanced and produce a lot from a little. It made me quite proud . . . we’re like the All Blacks of farming.”

The Emissions Trading Scheme was set up by the government so companies such as airlines or petrol stations, which emitted carbon dioxide or equivalent gases, could offset their impact by purchasing carbon credits from people who were sequesteri­ng carbon.

Webley said that, due to price progressio­n over recent years, it was an opportune time for farmers to explore using their land for carbon forestry.

“The price two years ago was $25 per tonne of carbon, it’s now trading at about $75. We’re forecastin­g the peak to be about 2030, where it’s going to be $120 to $130.”

Particular­ly, he said , if farmers had unproducti­ve land, this was a way for them to take advantage of that opportunit­y. But he also said there were downsides to carbon forestry.

“[Sheep and beef farmers are] seeing it as a big threat, because it’s such a profitable thing now for landowners, that lot of land around the country has been sold and just planted outright in pine trees.

“Planting pine trees to sequester is a short-term fix in that it takes CO2 out of the atmosphere and stores it in a tree. It’s not stopping emitters’ behaviour.” ■

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Jules Webley cut his teeth at Queenstown’s Halfway Bay Station.
Photo / Supplied Jules Webley cut his teeth at Queenstown’s Halfway Bay Station.

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