Otago Daily Times

Struggling to see the good in all the trees Twoway traffic

The issue of forestry versus pastoral farming is never far below the surface in rural communitie­s. Jamie Gray ,of The New Zealand Herald, investigat­es.

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MENTION Tuscan Hills in the Tararua district and you’re bound to get a reaction.

The hill country farm was known for generation­s as a successful sheep and beef operation, and for producing some of the area’s best lambs.

But last year Tuscan Hills was sold to New Zealand Carbon Farming and is now being planted in trees that may never be harvested.

That change from livestock to pine trees is one that farmers fear will spread — thanks largely to efforts to cut New Zealand’s carbon emissions — in the process reducing agricultur­al output and gutting rural communitie­s.

The Tararua district stretches from Mount Bruce in the south to Dannevirke in the north, and east to Akitio on the wild Wairarapa coast.

With 424,000ha and just 17,900 residents, the trick is attracting people to the district and not losing them, which is what locals fear will happen if forestry takes hold. As things stand, the planting crews come in, do their job and leave.

The locals are worried that as the trees advance, the shearing jobs will go, along with the shepherds and the truck drivers. Then there are the ancillary services: vets, mechanics, schools . . .

The fabric of rural living frays at the edges. Finally, all that is left is the sound of trees growing.

Tararua Mayor Tracey Collis says the issue of forestry versus pastoral farming is never far below the surface in rural communitie­s — particular­ly in the Wairarapa and Hawke’s

Bay.

Some people see the resurgence of forestry as a direct result of Coalition partner New Zealand First’s One Billion Trees policy, which offers grants for tree planting over the next decade.

The Labour Party last month proposed to curtail the conversion of highly productive land into forests.

Forestry spokesman Stuart Nash said any conversion of such land to forestry would require a resource consent, as a way to ensure rural communitie­s were wellsuppor­ted during the economic recovery.

Mr Nash pledged that within the first six months of its next term of government, Labour would revise the rules to enable councils to once again determine what classes of land could be used for plantation and carbon forests.

New Zealand’s soils are graded on a scale from 1, the very best, to 8, which is suitable only for conservati­on use.

Under Labour’s plan, resource consent would be required for plantation or carbon forests on land use capability classes 15, above a threshold of 50ha per farm to allow farmers flexibilit­y in creating small plantation­s to support environmen­tal goals.

New Zealand has about

12.1 million hectares in farmland. Another 1.7 million hectares or so is in forestry, down from two million hectares in 2002. Last year, about 22,000ha of farmland was converted to forestry. Reaching the One Billion Trees target by 2028 will require the planting of an estimated 43,000ha a year.

Mrs Collis says that even if Labour’s plan was in force today, it would not have saved Tuscan Hills from forestry.

‘‘When I had a look at the policy announceme­nt from Labour, Tuscan Hills is classed as [soil classes] 6, 7 and 8, so that would not fit into that policy, yet it is one of the strongest farms in the community because it really was performing, was wellmanage­d, with good infrastruc­ture,’’ she said.

She welcomes Labour’s initiative, but says it will it not make the issue go away.

‘‘Forestry came very quickly. We had a significan­t number of properties sold over a very short, 12month period.

‘‘It happened very fast and it was hard for people to cope with that rate of change.

‘‘It’s an emotional concern, because once that land has gone to trees, it’s not like it can be taken out easily.’’

As well as concern about the loss of pastoral farms, Mrs Collis says there are also worries about fire risk from forestry, and the problem of ‘‘slash’’ — unwanted wood clogging up waterways after big floods.

She likens the current situation to the rapid expansion of dairy in the early 2000s, which sparked debate over land use.

Mrs Collis talks of the wider economic impact of forestry on communitie­s and feels the issue is not well understood in urban New Zealand.

‘‘These farms are continuall­y spending money on goods and services. When farms go into forestry, suddenly the economics of running support businesses become more strained.’’

But she concedes it’s a challengin­g issue to tackle, ‘‘because you also have these things called property rights’’.

Further south, the pressure group 50 Shades Of Green arose after Austrian aristocrat Countess Veronika LeebGoessS­aurau last year bought the 1727ha Hadleigh Station, near Masterton, for tree planting.

As it stands, New Zealand encourages overseas investment in forestry and offers streamline­d ways to achieve this.

Generally, overseas investors buying less than 1000ha of forestry rights per year are exempt from having to get consent.

Overseas investors can apply to the Overseas Investment Office for consent to buy or lease land that is in forestry, or land to be used for forestry, or to buy forestry rights.

Fifty Shades spokesman Andy Scott says he is ‘‘quietly optimistic’’ that Labour’s plan is a step in the right direction. But he says there is some quite good class 6 land and he would be happy if forestry was restricted to classes 7 or 8.

And Mr Scott says the Government still needs to tighten up on Overseas Investment Office requiremen­ts for land intended for forestry.

He notes that carbon prices have surpassed $30 a tonne ‘‘and there’s nothing to stop it hitting $50 a tonne’’.

Under the emissions trading scheme (ETS), the primary unit of trade is the New Zealand Unit (NZU), also called a carbon credit. One NZU represents one tonne of carbon dioxide. Carbon emitters can go to the market to buy carbon credits to offset their emissions, and forest owners can sell them.

Federated Farmers vicepresid­ent Andrew Hoggard’s concern is that the price signals coming from the ETS are driving the push into forestry. For him, emissions trading smacks of ‘‘greenwashi­ng’’, and he likens it to some kind of extreme, oldschool religion.

‘‘We know we have done wrong, so we flagellate ourselves rather than knuckle down and ask: how do we do air travel without aviation gas? How do we do energy without coal? And how [do] we get cracking on things like cold fusion, or whatever the solution might be?’’

Carbon prices

Having grown up near Kaikoura, Nigel Brunel has sympathy for those who fear losing their rural lifestyles to forestry. But as head of institutio­nal commoditie­s at OM Financial — which runs the carbon trading platform — he says carbon prices can only go up.

All of a sudden, forestry is offering a better return on land than other activities.

Raising sheep and beef might return only 2% a year, whereas rates of 5% to 15% are not uncommon for carbon, he says.

‘‘Carbon prices are going to continue to go up, in my view, so this pressure [on land use] is going to remain,’’ he said.

‘‘So I think there needs to be some sort of selfmanage­d solution to all of this — not regulation.

‘‘Part of it is that you don’t need to plant everywhere.

‘‘If some Queen St farmer wants to buy some land and carpet it with trees, maybe there does need to be some resource consent around that.

‘‘But the government of the day also has an obligation under the Paris agreement to reduce emissions to 30% of 2005 levels by 2030. The only way that that can be done domestical­ly is by planting lots and lots of trees.’’

In theory, the price of carbon will at some point get so high that emitters will be forced to use more sustainabl­e energy sources.

It hasn’t always been oneway traffic with trees.

From 2009 to 2014 there was deforestat­ion and the afforestat­ion that’s going on now is not as extensive as it has been in previous years.

And tree planting can take different forms. There is the permanent — carbon sink — style of ‘‘no cut’’ forestry and then there is plantation forestry, where the trees are eventually harvested. For both types, pinus radiata is the tree of choice.

Mr Brunel says the pastoral versus forestry debate is another example of tension between potential land uses.

‘‘It’s come down to the simple premise that if someone owns some land, what do they run or put on that land for a return?’’

‘‘They can run sheep or beef, and it can make them a return, but that’s ongoing. Or they can plant trees permanentl­y and get a stream of carbon credits for 25 years.’’

While he expects the carbon price to rise, Mr Brunel does not see it racing away like some share prices.

‘‘This is not the price of Apple shares or Pushpay.

‘‘This is a price on fossil fuel usage. As the price of carbon escalates, the pressure on emitters escalates to seek energy alternativ­es.

Contrived market

‘‘It’s a politicall­y created market to put a price on fossil fuels, to move the world from a fossil fuel economy to a renewable energy economy, so there needs to be a price put on fossil fuels.

‘‘The implementa­tion of that can mean unintended consequenc­es.

‘‘If carbon prices go higher, you are going to get some good land planted in trees, there is no doubt about that.

‘‘I get the Fifty Shades Of Green argument,’’ Mr Brunel said.

‘‘Having been born in a small community, I know what that will mean.

‘‘Ideally, permanent forests should really be on marginal land, but people should have the right to do what they like with their property.’’

Carbon on the rise

Con Williams, head of investment research at farm syndicator MyFarm, says that as the price of carbon rises, the relative economics of forestry and carbon farming will be further enhanced, compared with more traditiona­l land uses.

‘‘It depends on your time horizon and your longrun views around what New Zealand’s competitiv­e advantages are, from a broad perspectiv­e.

‘‘For a sheep and beef farmer, you are saying that we are very competitiv­e — our farming systems are good farming systems that should be used to produce food and fibre.

‘‘The flip side is that there is this issue of climate change and New Zealand has signed up to reduce its emissions.

‘‘The livestock sector is part of that in terms of current accounting rules and one of the easiest and lowestcost ways for New Zealand — in the short run — to meet its Paris Accord targets is to plant trees and sequester carbon that way.

‘‘The Government is moving a whole range of policy settings to encourage that.

‘‘The fear in the sheep and beef sector is that once you plant that in forestry, that’s a 25year commitment at least.’’

The question then becomes: does that land ever return to farming, and what are the effects on the rural community?

‘‘The other tension is that if we look at the foreign investment rules, the Government wants to get going as soon as possible with their billion trees aims, so they have to let some foreign capital into the market as well. So we have seen quite a lot of debate, which is not going to go away in a hurry,’’Mr Williams said.

‘‘That’s another fear — that these foreign entities are going to pump up that land, claim the carbon credits and walk away.

‘‘If you been a longrunnin­g, intergener­ational sheep and beef business, there has been a lot of attachment and affinity with the land and in making sure that it is being used productive­ly and employing New Zealanders.

‘‘My view is that there is some sheep and beef land that is probably better off planted in trees, but I don’t think it’s a blanket policy, so it’s just about optimal land use.

‘‘The really smart people are buying blocks of land and planting the shitty areas and subdividin­g the other bits to sell to the nextdoor neighbours, or forming smaller, standalone blocks.’’

Ideal world

‘‘In an ideal world, if you had a full, globally interlinke­d emissions scheme, we would be planting trees in other parts of the world — not in New Zealand,’’ Mr Williams said.

‘‘The flip side is that we have had net deforestat­ion in New Zealand in recent years and we need to get planting.

‘‘Ideally, we would have domestic capital doing this and New Zealand farmers doing this, but they are not.’’

And while the pastoral versus forestry argument continues, carbon prices keep rising.

‘‘As the carbon price goes up, the incentive to plant trees is going to be greater,’’ Mr Williams said. ‘‘There are not too many ifs or buts about it.’’

Farming carbon

New Zealand Carbon Farming, the latest owner of Tuscan Hills, is the largest provider of carbon credits in Australasi­a and has been in operation since 2010, according to its website.

The Herald was unable to make contact with NZ Carbon Farming, but the site says it is headed by Kiwis Matt Walsh and Bruce Miller, and is wholly New Zealandown­ed.

The website says NZ Carbon Farming plans to deliver 20% of New Zealand’s 2030 Paris climate commitment and that its activities have so far taken more than 20 million tonnes of carbon out of the atmosphere.

The company says it has so far paid $73 million to its forest owner partners.

‘‘By planting new forests and never harvesting, we are actively contributi­ng to climate change mitigation,’’ it said.

‘‘We will make a significan­t contributi­on towards the world’s ambition to limit global temperatur­e rise to a maximum of 1.5 degrees.’’

The company says it has 81,338ha of forest lands owned or leased and has 60 million trees under management for absorbing carbon.

Market returns

Consultanc­y PwC says permanent carbon forestry can offer comparable returns to plantation forestry — and both can offer superior returns to sheep and beef farming.

PwC notes the current resurgence in planting has raised concerns among sheep and beef farmers about reducing rural employment and the quality of rural life.

‘‘Because of the impacts on rural communitie­s and the sheep and beef sector, questions have also been raised about afforestat­ion’s impact on New Zealand’s economy as a whole,’’ PwC said in an economic impact assessment. — The New Zealand Herald

Corisol New Zealand Ltd has been granted consent by the Overseas Investment Office — under the special test relating to forestry activities — to buy 316ha of land at Manuka Creek, Lawrence, for $1.775 million.

The company, which is the subsidiary of a familyowne­d Swiss company, has undertaken forestry investment­s in New Zealand since 2011. It intends to plant about 290ha of the land in tree crops by winter 2022.

❛ It’s an emotional concern, because once that land has gone to trees, it’s not like it can be taken out easily

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Growing concern . . . Farmers are expressing concern about forestry taking over highly productive farmland.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Growing concern . . . Farmers are expressing concern about forestry taking over highly productive farmland.
 ?? PHOTO: NZME ?? Fears for future . . . Yearold carbon sink planting on Tuscan Hills east of Pahiatua.
PHOTO: NZME Fears for future . . . Yearold carbon sink planting on Tuscan Hills east of Pahiatua.

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