Like many New Zealanders I was bewildered by the Jacinda Ardern government media announcement to tax farmers as the primary tool toward meeting Emission Trading Scheme targets. It seemed anathema to me, and I sought alternative perspectives and a reality and fact check.
By chance perspective presented themselves
in the form of farming and forestry friends with conservation, hunting and
fishing experience. These guys go all the way back to Rob Muldoon and ‘Think
Big’. This group have lived and breathed New Zealand’s mountains, bush,
streams, rivers, sea, forests and fields.
In the following discourse I have taken the liberty of paraphrasing, interspersing commentary with documentary narrative recorded in notes from our conversations and discussions.
The Discourse
This is referred to as “the water story”. In
relation to the Emission Trading Scheme (ETS) the government is providing scant
consideration of this valuable resource. Carbon forestry uses considerably more
water than farming and in perpetuity (i.e., forever). Hydro electricity
generation and efficient farming irrigation are permanent losers.
The other primary concern is the carbon
forestry industry and the fact it is overtaking farming and our natural
environment at an alarming rate. Incumbent to this is the, often lauded wilding
pine spread for which New Zealand cannot claim carbon credits. New Zealand is
fast becoming a permanent and random pine plantation.
Currently permanent carbon tree planting is
being driven up by market forces and does not require government incentive
(taxpayer dollars) with value of carbon credits rising from $80 to $200 (anecdotal).
Carbon forestry does not require resource consent. The ETS is based on carbon
prices increasing, leading to increasing tree planting and carbon forestry. Under
the current ETS regime marginal farmland can net 7-8 times more profit than
sheep and beef farming and in general is already more profitable than
mainstream farming.
There are ongoing concerns about the
international trading of carbon credits and reference is made to The Listener article,
Emissions Trading-” We Cheated” of April 2016. Unrestrained market forces can
easily end up taking precedence over protecting the environment.
It is estimated at the current rate of
conversion by 2050 one third of New Zealand will be covered in forestry, mainly
exotic trees and mostly pine. Under the ETS these trees must stay using free
water, forever depriving downstream water catchments, hydroelectricity and farm
irrigation.
The government should conduct an urgent analysis
on carbon forestry water impacts on farming.
There is a huge and permanent impact on
increasing water supply to feed the trees forcing decreased water availability
for irrigation and hydro electricity production. To meet shortfall, without
electricity infrastructure, more coal will be imported, on carbon producing
ships and burnt at Huntly power station, increasing emissions. Currently carbon
investors do not have to pay for water. Predominantly international investors
buy marginal farmland at low prices, squandering free water and potentially
driving profits offshore.
Increasing compliance and the new Emissions
Tax make marginal farming with low stock rates uneconomic and mainstream
farming marginal with negative impacts through the rural socio-economy. This
land will convert at an ever-increasing rate to non-native, non-natural permanently
carbon credit forested land. Investors buy at low prices and have access to
free water with a permanent profit line that probably leaks overseas and provides
minimal rural socio-economic multiplier for the people of New Zealand. It can
be considered as an international trading scam that has been exposed since 2016.
Small town New Zealand
are and will be squeezed out. This is acknowledged in government forecasts. The
New Zealand economy based on farming sector exports is jeopardised in the name
of spurious global climate change ideology, being a market leader in cutting
food production when the world population require efficient increase. So, who really wins?
Government climate change papers direct
farmers to be forced off the land. There is no government regulation to stop
it. Responsibility gets handed over to District Councils, presumably to manage
the resulting socio-economic dislocation while rates decrease as the rural sector
contracts.
The easy profits of carbon farming take
over the farming sector dislocating the rural economy.
Carbon forestry uses more water than
farming depriving natural water catchments, like wetlands, lakes, streams and
rivers of their life blood. I researched a paper stating
that per hectare high country land “converted to pasture had reduced low flows
by as much as 50% and conversion to forest resulted in a 62% reduction”. Otago
farmers affected by carbon forestry in their region are concerned about DOC
reports showing impacts of water yield loss in dry regions of New Zealand.
Conversion to forestry means fewer days remaining farmers can irrigate. A 2006 paper
proves concerns regarding water supply and its quality in this case to Dunedin.
Negative effects on hydro power generation capacity are also highlighted. 2006- this clearly isn’t a new revelation.
We argue and agree on four main drivers of
climate change emissions.
1.
Foremost is population,
especially increases. tourism, immigration, travel and natural population growth
increases the carbon footprint upsetting the ETS balance the most with all the derivative
consequences.
2.
Increasing international trade.
3.
Increasing GDP (economic growth).
4.
And last is increasing intensification(efficiency)
of farming.
In response to the need to feed the
planet’s populace, global food production was excluded in the ‘Paris Accord’
yet the government insists on penalising farming (food production) rather than
tackling population-based drivers of emissions.
There is no doubt New Zealand farming
production is highly efficient and already reducing its carbon footprint of its
own accord.
People, population and economic production
drive increasing carbon emissions. Free trade agreements, international
horticulture, incumbent nitrogen fertilizer, shipping, transportation and international
labor movements are all primary culprits. An example is given of the wine
industry which appears untouched by government ETS policy but is a relatively higher emitter.
There is an obvious problem in the
privatisation of electricity. It is in the interest of suppliers to have “shortages to maximise
profit”, keeping prices high. Closing the Tiwai aluminum smelter is an obvious
alleviation. Electrifying the vehicle fleet currently seems a taxpayer subsidised
rich person's option.
Electricity infrastructure is not even
close to being in place to satisfy the bigger picture.
Concluding Commentary
Think through the ‘water story’; do we want
New Zealand to turn into a permanent pine plantation taking over the natural
environment and dislocating our rural sector?
There is now the obvious dichotomy of how a
government manages economic and population growth and wealth creation with the
ETS target and equation inhibition.
The net result of the course that the 6th
Labour government is ‘ploughing’ translates to the possibility of one third of
New Zealand planted in permanent forestry by 2050, free water and easy profits
for offshore investment entities with irretrievable social dislocation of our
rural economy and its productive importance to our national economy being jeopardised.
Right now, rural New Zealand is the primary
target when its production is only a symptom and not the primary cause of
emissions. There is almost an irony as native forest is
pushed aside for the heralded pinus radiata; and the needs of hard-working
small town New Zealanders are swept aside like pine needles after Christmas.
The real drivers are being ignored by the
government. The rural sector is the scapegoat, destined to be marginalised and
divided from the bourgeoisie of expedient centralised decision making. The
people of New Zealand will pay a heavy price with socio economic dislocation,
the negative rural business multiplier and sliding export revenue. The example
of the Sri Lankan socio-economic calamity is highlighted again. International
food shortages adversely affect the poor. Climate change ideology and policy
under this government appear to be a privileged persons
toy rather than a serious attempt to curb emissions.
It's climate change socialism on steroids,
dangerously close to totalitarianism in the guise of green ideology. A command
economy that limits and lowers food production but does not deal with the
primary drivers of climate change emissions being population dynamics and
economic growth.
New Zealanders either comply in the
divisive ‘hermit kingdom’ or pick up sticks and leave for an alternative
country (maybe Australia) craving pragmatic climate solutions that also provide
for the wellbeing of people, which is surely still the government's primary and
immediate purpose. Instead, this confused government is embarking on a high-risk
strategy that fails scrutiny
The brain drain will fast become the rural drain and the planet and New Zealand's population will be no better off, in fact the future of both will be further compromised.
Alistair Boyce is a publican/chef who enjoys hunting, the natural environment and has close connections to rural communities.
2 comments:
A certain irony - paying to get rid of wilding pine, and then encouraging others to plant more ?
Does anyone else have the forethought to consider the inherent risks in continuing this monoculture of radiata pine ?
Look at all the dead Leyland cyprus shelter belts around NZ due to a virus.
Maybe just the kiwi fruit growers?
PSA equivalent for pine ?
Dumb thinking by idealists
There is no good evidence that reducing carbon or other 'greenhouse emissions' will make a blind bit of difference to global warming. Can anyone refute this, and if so, where is that evidence? Did we see the planet's atmospheric and surface temperatures reduce during the period of COVID19 lockdowns associated with much reduced fossil fuel use (as reflected in large reductions in demand for and price of oil)? No.
The idea that 'greenhouse' gases are causing global warming is based on one of the most fundamental errors in science, that of assuming cause from correlation, in this case not even very good correlation. Allowing this faulty theory to extend to animal farts and belches is really the height of stupidity. The huge unintended (yet long predicted) consequences of carbon trading and now fart taxing look to be severe, as Alistair's article highlights regarding just a few such consequences.
Carbon trading always promised to be a convenient, state-enforced way for the wealthy to profit much more from the commoners. There is no evidence that it will change global warming at all.
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