Te Puke Times

Trees will displace stock ‘very soon’

FORESTRY: Effect of land conversion­s hidden by lag in plantings and seedling/staff shortages, Sally Rae reports.

-

While the increase in farm sales into forestry is yet to lead to a significan­t reduction in stock numbers, it can be expected very soon, Beef + Lamb New Zealand says.

B+LNZ’S latest stock number survey highlighte­d the extent of farmland being converted to forestry and said the real impact on stock numbers was yet to be realised, while the hidden costs were “the demise of rural communitie­s” and labour availabili­ty.

B+LNZ economic service chief economist Andrew Burtt pointed to a lag between farm sales and plantings, and said planting was constraine­d by availabili­ty of seedlings and labour.

Sheep numbers nationally were steady over the past 12 months and beef cattle numbers fell only slightly, despite unfavourab­le conditions in some regions.

Total sheep numbers came to 25.78 million, compared with 25.73 million last year, while beef cattle numbers decreased by 0.9 per cent to an estimated 3.93 million.

An independen­t report commission­ed by B+LNZ to establish the conversion of farmland area to forestry, which covered from January 2017, to December 2020, reported that 139,500 hectares were being converted.

Two-thirds, or 92,100ha was whole farm conversion to forestry, of which 14,300ha was manuka. One-third (47,400ha) was within farm forestry planting.

The Overseas Investment Office approved new forest areas from January 1, 2021 to December 30, 2021 that totalled an additional 16,340ha and, from January 1, 2022 to July 31, 2022 a further 14,700ha.

The report said there had not been the tree-planting seedling stock available to have planted that area. That meant there continued to be a slower decrease in capital livestock and their production than the new afforestat­ion areas indicated.

The estimated area set aside for afforestat­ion from 2017 to the end of

July 2022 totalled 200,000ha.

Capital livestock on that area was estimated at 1.4 million stock units.

However, in that period, total sheep, beef and deer stock units had declined 0.4 million, mostly between June 2021 to June 2022.

That implied that there would be a turn-off of capital livestock, as land set aside for new afforestat­ion was planted, that would be reflected in future decrease of livestock numbers.

Many farmers had spent money and time protecting, planting and managing trees and other vegetation on farm and would like to see recognitio­n for carbon sequestere­d on their farms.

Meanwhile, carbon farming continued its increasing trend and, based on minimal interventi­on from the Government and an optimistic future for carbon prices, it would continue to be a major land use challenge to the red meat sector, the report said.

The Overseas Investment (Forestry) Amendment Act 2022 came into force last month, changing the assessment criteria for overseas investment­s that result in the conversion of farmland to production forestry.

The primary change is that overseas consent applicatio­ns for farm to forestry conversion­s are now considered under the general benefit to New Zealand test, rather than the more permissive special forestry test.

B+LNZ chief executive Sam Mcivor said there needed to be specific limits on the amount of forestry that could be used to offset fossil-fuel emissions in the ETS. ■ — Otago Daily Times

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Will livestock farming be dwarfed by forestry conversion­s?
Photo / NZME Will livestock farming be dwarfed by forestry conversion­s?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand