The New Zealand Herald

Eyes on farming emissions

Experts to consider big polluter joining trading scheme

- Jamie Morton

Aenvironme­nt new UK-style commission will assess whether the agricultur­e sector should be folded into New Zealand’s emissions trading scheme, Climate Change Minister James Shaw says.

The latest greenhouse gas emissions inventory showed dairy industry expansion is one of the big reasons emissions climbed almost 20 per cent from 1990 to 2016.

Methane belched from dairy cattle and carbon dioxide from road transport contribute­d most of the increase.

In 2016, the agricultur­e and energy sectors were the two largest contributo­rs to New Zealand’s gross emissions, at 49.2 per cent and 39.8 per cent respective­ly.

Gross emissions in 2016 were 78.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide – but that was 2.4 per cent lower than in 2015, mainly because of a decrease in the use of thermal fuels such as coal and gas and a decline in the number of sheep.

Net emissions, meanwhile, had increased 54.2 per cent since 1990 because more trees were being cut down and gross emissions had increased.

In 2016, approximat­ely 5099ha of new forest was planted and 4945ha deforested.

A new UK-style commission will now look at whether the agricultur­e sector should join the emissions trading scheme, Shaw said.

“Urgent action is needed, at a level not previously contemplat­ed,” he said. “We all need to be focused on the transition to a net zero emissions economy.”

The Government was introducin­g the Zero Carbon Bill, setting the country on a 2050 emissions reduction target, and an independen­t Climate Change Commission.

The commission would recommend interim emissions reduction targets and give advice on how the country could transition to 100 per cent renewable electricit­y by 2035.

“One of the things the commission will look at is whether and how agricultur­e comes into the NZ Emissions Trading Scheme,” Shaw said. “We’ll continue to invest in research and technology that can reduce agricultur­al emissions while increasing productivi­ty and profitabil­ity for farmers.”

The Government was also establishi­ng a Green Investment Fund that would direct investment towards low-emissions industries.

“We’ll move to electric vehicles – the Government’s own car fleet will be electric by 2025.”

The inventory showed the longterm emission rise is also partly due to the increasing number of trees being cut down, Shaw said.

“The Government’s committed to planting one billion trees over the next 10 years.

“If we want to help lead the world towards meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement, we must create a moral mandate underpinne­d by decisive action at home to reduce our own emissions.”

New Zealand has pledged to slash emissions by 30 per cent below 2005 levels, and 11 per cent below 1990 levels, by 2030.

The inventory was released on the same day Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced an end to offshore oil exploratio­n permits.

 ??  ?? Agricultur­e contribute­d 49.2 per cent of New Zealand’s greenhouse gas emissions in 2016.
Agricultur­e contribute­d 49.2 per cent of New Zealand’s greenhouse gas emissions in 2016.

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