Green no more?
OPINION: Your old mate has long dismissed the Greens as wooden bicycle enthusiasts with their heads in the clouds, but it looks like the ‘new Greens’ may actually be hard-nosed pragmatists when it comes to following voters.
Bryce McKenzie, Groundswell says New Zealand doesn’t elect governments to play along with international games.
Get out of the Paris Agreement on climate change – that’s the message from the farmer lobby group Groundswell to the Minister for Climate Change, Simon Watts.
Groundswell is now in the process of running a campaign to get NZ out of the agreement, saying it is uniquely unfair to us.
Their call comes after Simon Watts announced NZ’s second international climate target, which stated that the Government was proposing to reduce emissions by 51 to 55% compared to 2005 levels by 2035.
He says the Government has worked hard to set a target that is both ambitious and achievable and reinforces our commitment to the Paris Agreement and global climate action.
“Meeting this target will mean we are doing our fair share towards reducing the impact of climate change, while enabling New Zealand to be stronger and thrive in the face of a changing climate,” he says.
But Bryce McKenzie of Groundswell says Watts is in a bind and says New Zealand doesn’t elect governments to play along with international games. He says they expect them to look out for our interests.
“They work for us, not the jet-setting global conference elite,” he says.
McKenzie says it’s the politicians’ jobs to stand up for us, rather than sacrifice the future of New Zealand to meet the arbitrary rules of the UN’s climate change process. He says Watts should have broken those rules and told his mates at the conferences why.
McKenzie says under the present system, all NZ can do is less – less farming, less electricity, less transport, less economic activity, less prosperity, less opportunity. Fewer jobs, fewer people, fewer hospitals and schools, fewer reasons for our kids to stay here.
The ACT Party, part of the Coalition Government, is throwing its support behind farmers.
The party’s agriculture spokesman Mark Cameron says, as a signatory to the Paris Agreement, New Zealand is required to sign up to increasingly ambitious emissions targets.
That’s what has led to the Climate Change Minister’s latest commitment, he told party supporters in an email.
“However, ACT has heard serious concern over the economic impact of the Government’s commitment, including costs likely to be lumped on farmers,” says Cameron.
“We know New Zealand farmers are the most efficient in the world, and it does not make sense to reduce New Zealand food production only to see other less efficient farmers overseas picking up the slack.
“In short, ACT is listening, and we encourage you to pass on your concerns to the Climate Change Minister and your local MP.”
Cameron claims ACT’s Ministers in the Government are delivering “common sense, affordable policy in key areas that affect farmers such as replacing the handbrake that is the RMA, simplifying freshwater farm plans, and stopping the implementation of last government’s attack on property rights with their directive on Significant Natural Areas”.
“I’ve also lodged a member’s bill in Parliament’s ballot to stop councils from considering local emissions when granting resource consents.
“ACT is determined not to sacrifice farmers and growers at the altar of the climate gods,” he says.
Fonterra’s impending exit from the Australian dairy industry is a major event but the story doesn’t change too much for farmers.
Expect greater collaboration between Massey University’s school of Agriculture and Environment and Ireland’s leading agriculture university, the University College of Dublin (UCD), in the future.
A partnership between Torere Macadamias Ltd and the Riddet Institute aims to unlock value from macadamia nuts while growing the next generation of Māori agribusiness researchers.
A new partnership between Dairy Women’s Network (DWN) and NZAgbiz aims to make evidence-based calf rearing practices accessible to all farm teams.
Despite some trying circumstances recently, the cherry season looks set to emerge on top of things.
Changed logos on shirts otherwise it will be business as usual when Fonterra’s consumer and related businesses are expected to change hands next month.