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Home / Business / Companies / Agribusiness

John Key defends dairy industry's climate change record

John Weekes
By John Weekes
Online Business Editor·NZME.·
16 Nov, 2014 02:26 AM3 mins to read

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Prime Minister of Australia Tony Abbott , left, welcomes John Key to the G20 summit in Brisbane, where climate change has been one of the major issues. Photo / AP

Prime Minister of Australia Tony Abbott , left, welcomes John Key to the G20 summit in Brisbane, where climate change has been one of the major issues. Photo / AP

The Prime Minister has defended the New Zealand dairy industry's record on climate change issues in the wake of a landmark agreement between the world's biggest two polluters.

John Key is a guest at the G20 meeting in Brisbane, where leaders of the world's largest economies have gathered.

Global warming has become a hot topic at the meeting, which follows closely from a major new climate agreement between China and the United States, announced at Apec last week.

In an interview on TVNZ's Q+A programme this morning, Mr Key said New Zealand could not set the agenda for global climate change talks.

And he dismissed claims the dairy industry was not playing its part in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

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Mr Key said methane and nitrous oxide from pastoral agriculture were major contributors to New Zealand's greenhouse gas emissions.

"If the behaviour you're trying to change is something you have no answer for and the farmer can't control - the methane and nitrate emissions from the animal - then aren't you just really putting a tax on them for the sake of it?" Mr Key said this morning.

Methane emissions came largely from farting and burping sheep and cattle and from their waste. Nitrous oxide emissions came from urine, dung and nitrogen fertiliser.

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US president Barack Obama, centre, with European leaders discussing transatlantic trade and the situation in Ukraine. Photo / AP
Back row: Senegal President Macky Sall, Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong; Centre: Canada PM Stephen Harper; Front row: Japanese PM Shinzo Abe and Australian PM Tony Abbott. Photo / AP
France's President Francois Hollande, left, and Russia's President Vladimir Putin. Photo / AP
China's President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan arrive at the Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane. Mr Xi is in Australia to attend the G20 summit. Photo / AP
US President Barack Obama chats with Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel after a leaders' walk around the Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, Australia. Photo / AP
Canada Prime Minister Stephen Harper shakes hands with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi before a bi-lateral meeting at the G20 Summit in Brisbane. Photo / AP
US President Barack Obama and Australia's Prime Minister Tony Abbott get up close and personal with two koalas. Photo / Getty
Canada Prime Minister Stephen Harper speaks with South Korean President Park Geun-Hye as they walk towards a leaders dinner at the G20 Summit in Brisbane, Nov 15, 2014. Photo / AP
US President Barack Obama, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shake hands at the start of their meeting at the G20 Summit in Brisbane. Photo / AP
US President Barack Obama, centre, with European leaders during their meeting at G20 Summit to discuss transatlantic trade and the situation in Ukraine. Photo / AP
Prime Minister of Australia Tony Abbott and President of Russia Vladimir Putin hold koalas. Photo / Getty Images
US President Barack Obama, and British Prime Minister David Cameron meet with other European leaders. Photo / AP
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott greets Russia's President Vladimir Putin during the official welcome at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibitions Centre. Photo / AP
NZ Prime Minister John Key holds a koala. Photo / Getty Images

Image 1 of 14: US president Barack Obama, centre, with European leaders discussing transatlantic trade and the situation in Ukraine. Photo / AP

The dairy industry was currently exempt from some obligations under the emissions trading scheme but Mr Key said dairy farmers were paying in other ways.

"I think we are making them pay indirectly. So they pay through their diesel charges or their other charges," he told Q+A.

Mr Key said rising food production was expected in years to come, so world leaders needed a "pragmatic" and technological solution to climate change.

"Now if you can't actually practically change something then obviously you need to find another way through, and that is technology, and a lot of money is being put [into] that. And this is a long-term issue."

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Mr Key said clean, renewable energy sources provided a greater share of New Zealand's overall power use than in many other developed countries.

The Green Party said Mr Key's comments showed New Zealand was one of the world's "problem children" when it came to addressing climate change.

"John Key this morning repeatedly claimed New Zealand's increasing emissions were okay, and ruled out measures that would cut New Zealand's emissions," Greens co-leader Russel Norman said.

"A briefing from the Ministry for the Environment released last week states emissions have increased by a quarter since 1990, and are projected to rise substantially in the time to 2050," Dr Norman said.

"While some of his ministers are climate science deniers John Key claims he is not. But he's denying that New Zealand's increasing emissions are a problem," Dr Norman added.

"We need a plan to meet our targets, instead of a plan to increase emissions."

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Dairy gaint Fonterra said agriculture was responsible for 47 per cent of New Zealand's greenhouse gas emissions. The Ministry for Primary Industries said methane and nitrous oxide together accounted for almost half New Zealand's greenhouse gas emissions.

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