The coalition government has announced greenhouse gases from agriculture will not be covered in the country's Emissions
Trading Scheme (ETS) next year.
Cabinet is also disestablishing primary sector climate action partnership He Waka Eke Noa from today, and will instead develop a new "Pasture Sector Group". Today's announcement also included further
investment in technologies to lower on-farm emissions.
Dr Sebastian Gehricke, Director, Climate and Energy Finance Group; Senior Lecturer, Finance, University of Otago, Ōtākou
Whakaihu Waka, comments:
"Agriculture, making up about half of our national emissions, has never been included in the ETS, so this is really just
a stop in plans to price agricultural emissions. These were meant to be priced in their own scheme or enter the ETS by
2025. Really what is happening now is just avoiding the pricing of these emissions.
"The National Party has previously stated that the ETS is their single policy tool to fight climate change, yet they are
not enabling it to be that tool, by fixing the issues in the ETS. Further, if half our emissions remain outside of the
ETS and are not priced, how can this tool impact those emissions at all?
"I have heard the referral to New Zealand farms being the most carbon emission efficient in the world many times. First
question one should ask to understand this is, where do those numbers come from? Who funded the research? And if you
look at the limitations of the research would we draw the same conclusions? Even if we are 'some of the most
carbon-efficient' we are still emitting huge amounts of greenhouse gases as a country.
"If the government wants to avoid farms being 'shut-down' a more effective mechanism may be removing exotic forests from
the ETS.
"He Waka Eke Noa proposals were inadequate and far from ambitious, so disestablishing that makes sense, but not if
agricultural emissions are to not be priced at all.
"Starting fresh after so many years of delay is preposterous.
"Is it more R we need or actual changes and incentives? This seems to focus fully on technocratic unproven technologies, much like
carbon capture and storage in other sectors. Where is the support sustainable and high-value approaches such as
regenerative agriculture, permaculture, organic farming etc?
"Do we care only about GDP? Or actual citizen well-being and outcomes?"
No conflicts of interest.Dr Robyn Dynes, Senior Scientist, AgResearch, comments:
"The Government’s announcement that it will be engaging directly with the pastoral industry on the methane issue through
its new Pasture Sector Group is a positive one. As reviews of current methane targets are worked through, farmers will
be looking for certainty on what is going to be expected of them.
"It is crucial that any regulation to reduce on-farm methane emissions is workable and has buy-in from the farmers who
will need to comply with and report on it. Emissions pricing, as has been previously proposed, is one potential
approach. But if farmers do not have access to effective and affordable tools to reduce their emissions and have no
other choice than to reduce stock numbers then that has real impacts for rural communities around New Zealand, and the
country as a whole. Carbon sequestration is one potential avenue to offset methane emissions, but there is an ongoing
challenge here around the data and cost-effective ways to measure and monitor that sequestration.
"The further investment by government into research and development is also welcome, as we know there is some highly
promising research happening on the likes of low methane genetics, methane-reducing vaccines and feed supplements, and
modified/alternative pastures to reduce emissions from livestock. This research takes time and investment, but in some
cases increased funding can help accelerate the research and bring products to the market faster. While methane-reducing
products are coming to market overseas, and products like DSM’s 3-NOP have received approval by New Zealand’s Environmental Protection Authority, there is still a challenge to design
products that will work in our pasture-based grazing systems."
No conflicts of interest.