Whanganui Midweek

Genuine consultati­on will get results

- Mike Cranstone President, Whanganui Federated Farmers

A well-reasoned conversati­on or debate, dominated by facts rather than assertions and emotion, serves an important role in steering the future of any organisati­on. That organisati­on might be a household, a business, local council or New Zealand.

The democratic process has evolved over many generation­s, and previous generation­s have made huge sacrifices to defend it. Genuine consultati­on with communitie­s and stakeholde­rs is essential in writing good legislatio­n and gives it the best opportunit­y to achieve its objective.

The Groundswel­l group was born out of frustratio­n of unworkable regulation­s being written in Wellington without consultati­on with the farmers or even regional councils. The Groundswel­l protests have had large turnouts in many towns and cities . Organisers and many in the agricultur­al sector were concerned the protests might be hijacked by other groups or even individual­s with inappropri­ate billboards.

Despite strong messaging from the Groundswel­l leadership, it proved impossible to control the actions or messages of some individual protesters. Leading up to the protest, the Groundswel­l Facebook page had a 13-point code of conduct with a list of approved banners.

Among tens of thousands of protesters, there are always some who won’t follow the rules, but I hope people make the effort to look past rogue examples to see the common message being expressed by many passionate Kiwis.

New Zealand is very good at producing food for the world, our dairy products have a carbon footprint 52 per cent lower than the average of the world’s dairy producers, and lamb is 26 per cent more efficient than the world average.

New Zealand is a significan­t food exporter with about 5 per cent of our agricultur­al production being consumed domestical­ly.

Statistics can be used in a way to support any side of an argument. With a relatively low human population and an agricultur­e dominant economy, our emissions on a population-based metric are always going to look out of kilter, and do not acknowledg­e New Zealand’s role of feeding the world with carbon-efficient food.

The latest Ministry for the Environmen­t data informs that agricultur­al emissions have

increased 17 per cent since 1990. This is significan­t but NZ’s transport emissions, dominated by long-lived CO2, have soared 90 per cent during the same period.

Farmers are not shying away from the task required. However, just as the nation’s transport fleet cannot be decarbonis­ed overnight, agricultur­e needs technologi­cal solutions to help reduce its carbon footprint.

Agricultur­e is often demonised as being controlled by large multinatio­nal business: in New Zealand this could not be any further from reality.

New Zealand farmers are often multi-generation­al families working alongside their staff for the success of their small businesses and the local community.

Much of their pride and passion is about caring for the land with the hope that one of their next generation will continue the family’s stewardshi­p.

There is some great environmen­tal work happening on farms.

Landowners, predominat­ely farmers, have gifted the use of 180,000 hectares of land to the Queen Elizabeth II National Trust. The conservati­on values of the land are protected for perpetuity.

Within our Horizons Regional Council area, the Sustainabl­e Land Use Initiative has been a very successful example of environmen­tal progress through co-operation rather than regulation.

Twenty-five million trees, many of which are space planted poplar poles on grazed hill country, have been planted over 49,000ha of erosion susceptibl­e hill country.

Farmers are required to fund at least 50 per cent of the cost, with their contributi­on being $33 million since 2007.

All New Zealanders need to lift their environmen­tal game, but farmers are engaged and there is real momentum already under way.

Impractica­l regulation­s that will cause significan­t disruption to how a farmer can farm will slow rather than build this momentum.

 ?? ?? Mike Cranstone with poplar trees planted for erosion control under the Sustainabl­e Land Use Initiative.
Mike Cranstone with poplar trees planted for erosion control under the Sustainabl­e Land Use Initiative.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand