fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 20 April 2018 08:55

More than just dropping numbers

Written by 
NZAGRC deputy director Dr Andy Reisinger. NZAGRC deputy director Dr Andy Reisinger.

The number of animals we have in New Zealand and how we use our land is part of our greenhouse gas emissions profile and must be part of any policy discussions, explains Andy Reisinger. 

The challenge is to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions without economic pain, especially for farmers. One way would be to increase efficiency at farm level. Another would be to develop a methane inhibitor or vaccine to enable animals to perform normally but emit less less methane. 

“To what extent do we have to look at the longer-term rejigging of livestock agriculture?” he asks. 

“This then raises questions about alternative land uses. Because it’s all very well to say ‘just have fewer cows’, for example. But what are you going to do on the land? And what does it mean for the people who are currently farming the land? 

“These are not foregone conclusions but are the issues NZ has to grapple with.”

Reisinger says NZ is seeing the effects of climate change and climate variability on its food production.

“Heatwaves… droughts… floods – these are impacting our ability to produce food the way our farm systems are geared up for, to the point where if we have a major drought we will see a reduction in total milk production.”

NZ is not isolated from the world, he points out. And its dominance in global milk markets means that what happens here influences global milk prices.

Reisinger was speaking after a recent meeting in Christchurch of international climate change experts from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) who are writing a ‘special report on climate change and land’. The panel advises the UN on climate change.

About 100 experts attended the five-day meeting in Christchurch to nut out the structure of their report, which will be formally reviewed then released to the world’s governments in August 2019.

Reisinger says the panel’s function is not to give policy recommendations but to compile the best available scientific evidence on climate change to help governments decide what they want to do.

Featured

Food recall system at work

The New Zealand Food Safety (NZFS) has started issuing annual reports, a new initiative to share information on consumer-level recalls with the public.

High calibre finalists for Fonterra DWOTY award

The chair of the Dairy Environment Leaders, the president of the North Otago Federated Farmers, and a herd health veterinarian are among those nominated for the Fonterra Dairy Woman of the Year award this year.

Rewarding farmers who embrace sustainability

Winners of DairyNZ’s Sustainability and Stewardship awards in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards have their eyes firmly fixed on progressing a positive future for New Zealand dairy.

National

Rural Change to merge with RST

The Rural Change programme, providing free private mental health professional sessions to the rural industry, is set to continue its…

Machinery & Products

Factory clocks up 60 years

There can't be many heavy metal fans who haven’t heard of Basildon, situated about 40km east of London and originally…

PM opens new Power Farming facility

Morrinsville based Power Farming Group has launched a flagship New Zealand facility in partnership with global construction manufacturer JCB Construction.