Gulf Times

Restoring nature could depend on how countries help farmers

- By Jack Graham

Famous for its lamb, New Zealand’s agricultur­e industry was once so well-subsidised that slaughterh­ouse workers were said to earn more than airline pilots, recalled William Rolleston, a farmer in South Canterbury and leading advocate for the sector.

A few decades ago, huge subsidies meant vast swathes of the country’s marginal land was cleared for grazing, fertiliser was overused, and the sheep population boomed to the point where surplus meat had to be destroyed.

Across New Zealand, the subsidy programmes took a toll on nature, polluting rivers and eroding soils, according to a study by the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

Then, in 1984, there was “total upheaval”, Rolleston said.

In a radical shift, the subsidies were removed or phased out. Farming became more efficient while harmful practices decreased: fertiliser use declined by 50% and many farmers’ hillsides were reforested, according to the CBD’s report.

While agricultur­e remains a major source of the country’s planet warming greenhouse gas emissions, New Zealand is still held up by biodiversi­ty campaigner­s as a “poster child” for reforming subsidies that harm nature and the environmen­t.

The issue is expected to feature at the United Nations COP15 summit — which begins in Montreal, Canada, next week — where countries will try to agree a framework to protect biodiversi­ty.

The latest draft agreement includes a target to reform at least $500bn of harmful subsidies annually across sectors including agricultur­e.

Around the world, government subsidies that harm nature amount to at least $1.8tn each year — equivalent to 2% of global GDP — according to a study published in February by the Business for Nature advocacy group.

It said agricultur­e subsidies — at $520bn annually — are the largest drivers of ecosystem destructio­n, along with those for fossil fuels — at $640bn — which have a more indirect impact on biodiversi­ty, mainly through climate change.

Concerns are growing over the world’s ability to control climate change and halt temperatur­e rise, with a recent World Wildlife Fund (WWF) report showing that nature has absorbed 54% of human-related carbon dioxide emissions over the past decade.

Agricultur­al subsidies for things like meat production and fertiliser­s are also considered a threat to long-term food security.

A decrease in fertile soil means 95% of land worldwide could become degraded by 2050, according to the Global Environmen­t Facility, a multilater­al fund.

Decision makers are “counting on” subsidy reforms to close the majority of the financing gap for biodiversi­ty protection — estimated at $700bn each year — said Brian O’Donnell, director of the conservati­on nonprofit Campaign for Nature.

“That is, in my mind, a very risky propositio­n,” O’Donnell said, adding that it will require global political shifts for these funds to be accessed and repurposed. “It means that government­s have to truly commit to this rapidly.”

The issue has been gaining momentum, including support from the Group of Seven (G7) wealthy nations, reforms to the European Union’s Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP) subsidies programme, and a World Trade Organisati­on deal to prohibit harmful fishery subsidies.

However, O’Donnell said there had been several subsidy agreements in the past — including at UN biodiversi­ty talks in 2010 — but overall progress was “minimal at best”.

“Global intentions to reform subsidies often run into domestic hurdles,” he said. “The question is ... will we follow through in country-by-country implementa­tion?”

One of the attraction­s of subsidy reform for government­s is that it involves repurposin­g existing funds rather than having to come up with new money at a time when budgets are stretched.

But these subsidies are complex, consisting of various tools such as payments based on agricultur­al production, minimum price guarantees for goods, and income support for farmers.

The first thing nations must do is assess and understand the full extent of their subsidies and their impacts on nature, said Martina Fleckenste­in, head of food policy at WWF Internatio­nal.

“We know where we want to go. The challenge is how does it look at the national level?” she said.

Analysts say a major reason reform can be so difficult is that many powerful interests are beneficiar­ies of subsidies.

Agricultur­al subsidies tend to disproport­ionately favour large farms at the expense of small farmers, according to research by the World Resources Institute (WRI) think tank.

“Most of this is around domestic politics and dealing with strong domestic constituen­cies,” said Andrew Deutz, director of policy and finance at conservati­on group The Nature Conservanc­y.

He said the politics around agricultur­e should be different to fossil fuels, though, because subsidies need to be repurposed to incentivis­e positive practices instead of being pulled out of the sector completely.

“In the agricultur­al sector, we can envision a world that’s free of harmful subsidies, but we certainly want a world that has food in it,” Deutz said.

For example, he said the EU’s CAP regime has started to funnel incentives towards things like protecting habitats and landscapes.

Whatever new agricultur­al initiative­s are brought in to preserve nature, experts say such changes do not occur overnight — and that those in the agricultur­e sector will need support to adapt.

“You need to have coping strategies, it’s not like silver bullets resolve all the problems,” said Helen Ding, a senior economist and subsidies expert at WRI.

Farmers need to be reassured that they can sustain their incomes and support their families while implementi­ng practices which protect nature, she added.

In Costa Rica, for example, she spoke to farmers who were growing organic coffee on a portion of their land alongside convention­al production, to insure against fluctuatio­ns in yields and the internatio­nal coffee trade.

In New Zealand, Rolleston said farmers in the 1980s were in favour of the subsidy reforms, but still needed support to adapt their practices.

“For farmers, that was a pretty tough period because it happened very quickly,” said Rolleston, a former president of the Federated Farmers advocacy group.

He said the government provided welfare, particular­ly for those who went out of business — with around 1% of farmers leaving the sector at that time — but emphasised that support from other institutio­ns like banks was also essential.

As countries prepare to discuss harmful subsidies at COP15, Rolleston said high food prices globally could make it easier for farmers to change their practices without losing out.

“The best time to do these reforms is always yesterday, and the second best time is when prices are high enough to be able to manage that transition,” he said. — Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ?? ?? CONCERN: Around the world, government subsidies that harm nature amount to at least $1.8tn each year — equivalent to 2% of global GDP — according to a study published in February by the Business for Nature advocacy group.
CONCERN: Around the world, government subsidies that harm nature amount to at least $1.8tn each year — equivalent to 2% of global GDP — according to a study published in February by the Business for Nature advocacy group.

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