Deer Industry New Zealand is disappointed by the government’s announced emissions reduction targets for agriculture.
Dr Ian Walker, Chair of Deer Industry New Zealand (DINZ), says that under current conditions these targets would result
in significant reductions in stock numbers. Even if tools and technologies were available to reduce methane and nitrous
oxide in the future, the level of reduction would effectively mean that the agriculture sector was being asked not just
to cease its own contribution to global warming, but also offset the contribution of other sectors.
“The deer industry as part of the pastoral sector is prepared to play its part in climate change mitigation. We do not
deny human-induced climate change nor our responsibility to mitigate. The pastoral sector is willing to target net zero
global warming impact from agricultural gasses. But the targets for methane announced by the Government go beyond net
zero global warming impact. DINZ cannot support these targets,” he says.
“The rationale for methane to be reduced by anything between 24 per cent and 47 per cent by 2050 has not been made clear
to us. We can only assume that the Government expects agriculture to make 'headroom' for other sectors to continue
emitting.”
Dr Walker says this is unfair for the sector, but also a bad choice for New Zealand because in the absence of new
mitigation technology, a 47 per cent reduction in agricultural methane emissions will require a 47 per cent reduction in
pastoral farming outputs. This could reduce rural employment and export revenues from meat, milk and fibre by half, or
about $12 billion a year.
“The government has expressed no plan for how this employment and export revenue could be replaced and New Zealanders'
living standards maintained.”
He also says reducing agricultural methane emissions is a temporary solution - it buys time, but does not address the
fundamental cause of climate change, which is the release of fossil carbon into the atmosphere.
“The deer industry alongside other pastoral industries supports the pastoral sector reducing nitrous oxide to net zero
and gradually reducing and stabilising emissions of methane so that its levels in the atmosphere do not increase (i.e.
no additional warming effect from livestock agriculture). Accepted atmospheric science suggests that current annual
reductions of 0.3 per cent in agricultural methane will result in a 10 per cent reduction by 2050 and ensure that the
gas causes no additional atmospheric warming,” Dr Walker says.
“The pastoral sector including DINZ, will continue to support research on agricultural greenhouse gas mitigation options
and development of a robust framework to enable farms to transition to lower emissions. But DINZ considers there is
little sense in sacrificing New Zealand's economic backbone, when all this does is delay the need for New Zealand and
all other countries to address the fundamental issues of fossil fuel emissions.”
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Deer Industry New Zealand is a levy funded industry-good body established by the Deer Industry New Zealand Regulations
2004 under the Primary Products Marketing Act 1953. Deer Industry New Zealand’s levy payers are producers and processors
of venison and velvet