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Home / Business / Companies / Energy

Brian Fallow: Cut the livestock, grow more trees

Brian Fallow
By Brian Fallow
Columnist·NZ Herald·
23 Mar, 2017 04:00 PM6 mins to read

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Cattle numbers would need to fall, says consultant's report. Photo / Brendon O'Hagan

Cattle numbers would need to fall, says consultant's report. Photo / Brendon O'Hagan

Brian Fallow
Opinion by Brian Fallow
Brian Fallow is a former economics editor of The New Zealand Herald
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Report points to big change in the way we use the land

Cutting a track through the forest of myopia and vested interests to the broad sunlit upland of a low-emissions future is a task that is neither scary nor infeasible.

It will, however, require more than wind farms, electric vehicles and heat pumps. It will require some significant changes in land use.

GLOBE-NZ is a group of 35 MPs drawn from all seven parties represented in Parliament, led by Green MP Kennedy Graham. It is the New Zealand chapter of Global Legislators for a Balanced Environment.

It commissioned an independent report from the London-based consultancy Vivid Economics, on pathways to a low-emission economy, mindful of the Paris Agreement's global goal of reducing net greenhouse gas emissions to zero in the second half of the century.

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Vivid's brief was to look at the options for reducing emissions from these islands. It ignores the Government's policy of relying, at least for the medium term, on international carbon trading to outsource up to 80 per cent of New Zealand's share of the global emissions reduction effort to other countries.

Vivid's scenarios all involve deep cuts by mid-century in emissions from the energy sector, including transport.

They see potential reductions of 35-60 per cent from energy efficiency, raising the share of renewables in electricity generation (from 80 per cent now to anything from 90 to nigh on 100 per cent), the electrification of the light vehicle fleet and biofuels.

These options are either low hanging fruit or require cherry-pickers, in the form of technological advances, which already exist.

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They are essential because, as the OECD reminded us this week, New Zealand is among the 10 most energy-intensive developed economies, ranking between the United States and Australia on that measure.

Unfortunately, those changes will not get us anywhere near zero emissions, or even the aspirational national target of a 50 per cent cut in net emissions by 2050, from 1990 levels.

That is because carbon dioxide represents less than half of New Zealand's emissions of greenhouse gases.

Getting serious about reductions requires tackling the 49 per cent of emissions that arise from agriculture, and in particular the bodily functions of cattle and sheep.

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There are some promising technologies for potentially reducing emissions from pastoral farming: selective breeding of cows that emit genteel lady-like burps rather than volcanic eructations of methane, new strains of ryegrass or other forage plants, precision application of nitrogenous fertilisers, and the holy grail of a methane-suppressing vaccine.

We are not talking about throwing New Zealand agriculture under a bus.

John Ward, Vivid Economics

But the Royal Society reckons technical solutions for reducing agriculture-related biological emissions could take a decade or two to reach commercial viability. If they do.

Vivid Economics believes a combination of emissions pricing instruments and regulation will be needed to encourage farmers to adopt cutting edge technology as it does become available.

The Government, however, persists in peddling the line that all farmers could do in response to a price on agricultural emissions is reduce production.

First of all, that ignores the obvious fact that New Zealand is internationally accountable for these emissions. If the farmers don't pay, the rest of us must. That is a subsidy and it is one that just gets capitalised into land prices -- a bigger tax-free capital gain for the vendor when a farm is sold, but a bigger mortgage for the buyer.

And crucially, the absence of a carbon price distorts the signals about land use. It has resulted in a doubling down on dairying, turning rivers into sewers in the process, while forest planting has gone into reverse.

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A more diversified pattern of land use would make for a more resilient, shock-resistant economy.

The farming-related technological advances Vivid considers would reduce the emissions-intensity of pastoral farming -- emissions per kilogram of milk or meat produced. That has been falling already.

But if national policy is to keep growing the output of those commodities, that will offset the emission reduction to be had from those advances.

So central to the scenarios Vivid outlines is a shift in land use: less pastoral farming, more horticulture, more arable farming and more forestry.

What we are talking about is a transformation away from pastoral agriculture towards horticulture, crops and forestry.

But not on a scale or at a pace we have never seen before. "We are not talking about throwing New Zealand agriculture under a bus," said Vivid director John Ward.

"Rather, what we are talking about is a transformation away from pastoral agriculture towards horticulture, crops and forestry. And the rates of switching we see are no more than continuation of historical trends."

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Its scenarios, the serious ones at least, envisage between 10 and 20 per cent fewer dairy cattle by 2050 and 20 to 30 per cent fewer beef cattle. But the economic cost of that would be mitigated by a 15 per cent rise or more in milk or meat production per animal.

Sheep numbers could drop by 24 to 37 per cent. But we have already seen the national flock more than halved since subsidies were axed in the late 1980s.

Forestry is the back-stop. If the hoped-for advances in reducing biological emissions disappoint, that could be offset by more aggressive afforestation.

Vivid sees scope for up to another 2.3 million hectares of forest to be planted, two-thirds of it plantation forests (doubling the present area) and the rest natives. Beyond that the opportunity cost of planting gets a bit steep.

But it is only the expansion of the forest estate that provides an offset to emissions. Once the trees are harvested and replaced, it just cycles around a new equilibrium level.

Afforestation buys valuable time but the time has to be used to come up with permanent ways of eliminating emissions.

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Political parties, Vivid concludes, should look for as much common ground as possible on climate policy, to create the stable regulatory and policy framework needed for a low-emissions pathway which would take decades and involve large investments.

"An independent statutory climate commission could help anchor expectations regarding the stability of climate policy, just as the Reserve Bank of New Zealand helps anchor investor expectations regarding price stability."

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