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Rural News 20 December 2022

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AGRIBUSINESS

Beefing up technology helps to lift cattle breeders’ profits.

PAGE 17

MACHINERY&PRODUCTS

Oamaru-based manufacturer Te Pari Products takes on the world. PAGE 20

NEWS

New strategy launched to boost Maori agriculture PAGE 10

TO ALL FARMERS, FOR ALL FARMERS DECEMBER 20, 2022: ISSUE 766

www.ruralnews.co.nz

Carbon credit conundrum DAVID ANDERSON

CLAIMS BY the Government that farmers will now get ‘full credit’ for all scientifically robust on farm carbon sequestration are wrong. That’s the belief of Waikato-based farm consultant Steve Cranston – a long-time critic of the He Waka Eke Noa (HWEN) proposal and plans

SLAVISH RUBBISH! HORTICULTURE NZ’S chair has hit back at claims that RSE workers are being treated like “slaves” and that ill treatment of them is “systemic”. Barry O’Neil reckons the issues raised are being blown out of all proportion and rejects suggestions that industry is not complying with the strict conditions laid down for the employment of RSE workers. O’Neil says the RSE scheme is very hard to get into because of the strict compliance conditions that employers must meet. – See more page 11

to tax on-farm emissions. Cranston says – despite a recent government announcement that recognition of on-farm sequestration will be a core component of its work to reduce New Zealand’s agricultural climate emissions – it will still exclude the vast majority of on-farm sequestration. “This is due to a poorly understood and almost never mentioned addi-

tionality clause,” he told Rural News. “I would estimate this clause to affect around 80% of the total sequestration currently happening on farms.” Cranston says the ‘additionality clause’ refers to active management over and above base-level sequestration. “To put it into practice, if your farm has a stand of pre-1990 regenerating

native forest sequestering 6.5 ton CO2 per/ha, HWEN will ask you to ensure it is fenced and employ pest control. They will then award an additional 0.5 ton CO2 per/ha for this ‘active management’,” he explains. “However, what the HWEN partners have not explained to farmers is that 0.5 ton is all that farmers will receive, they will not get acknowledged

for the full 7.0 tons per hectare that this stand of trees is now sequestering.” Cranston claims that the Beef+Lamb NZ’s ‘know your numbers’ emissions calculator has only served to further entrench this deception. “There is no mention of the additionality clause anywhere in that calculation,” he adds. “Farmers have been putting areas of trees into the calculator and thinking that they will receive credit for the full amount.” Cranston reckons that there will be some “very upset farmers” when HWEN eventually gives them the actual numbers after factoring in the additionality clause. “This clause is not based on science or IPCC guidelines; it is a political decision by this government to limit the amount of sequestration available to farmers to offset their emissions tax,” he adds. Cranston says regenerating native forest meets the IPCC definition of ‘additionality’ because, at some point in time, farming practices changed that allowed this forest to regenerate. “Farmers have every right to expect full credit for regenerating native forest, something they will currently only get pennies on the dollar for,” he claims. Cranston believes that industry groups are being negligent in not telling farmers what exactly the additional clause actually means. “Beef+Lamb and DairyNZ are obligated to front up and explain to farmers how much legitimate sequestration will still be excluded under the HWEN proposal.”


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Rural News 20 December 2022 by Rural News Group - Issuu