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Carbon and forestry, increasingly linked to overseas investors, continue to outmuscle sheep and beef but nothing about carbon is simple

Rural News
Carbon and forestry, increasingly linked to overseas investors, continue to outmuscle sheep and beef but nothing about carbon is simple
complex root system
Image sourced from Shutterstock.com

I had intended this week to move away from forestry to other topics. But once again, I have been drawn back to forestry because it is the biggest issue right now facing rural land-use.

For those who are farming sheep and beef there is the disconcerting reality, but also in some cases exciting reality, that carbon farming is now the most profitable land use.

Somewhat ironically, this changing land-use is also relevant to the dairy industry, which in combination with the other pastoral land uses is supposed by 2030 to reduce methane by 10 percent. It is looking as if much of this might now come from the decline in sheep and beef.

When I started writing this series on carbon farming back in July of this year, I used a carbon price of $48 per tonne, but right now it is sitting at $65. I have been rerunning some spreadsheets in recent days and inevitably the economics of carbon farming now look even stronger.

Given that the ETS is controlled by Government, there is no certainty as to where prices will head long term. But as I have said previously, the ETS lies at the core of New Zealand’s climate policy, and the ETS cannot achieve its goals unless the carbon price climbs considerably higher. The Climate Change Commission made that point very clearly.  The only alternative is for the Government to ditch the ETS in its present form and shift to tax and command systems.

The message I am getting from the field is that almost all sheep and beef farms currently coming on to the market are being snapped up by current and prospective foresters.  This week I have been informed of very steep North Island country, distant from a port, selling for $15,000 per plantable hectare, with the investors coming from overseas.  This must be close to double last year’s market value, perhaps more.

These overseas investors are required to commit to eventually harvesting the timber so as to obtain OIO investment approval. However, it is not hard to predict that at some time the Government will agree to these overseas-owned forests being reclassified as permanent forests. Logic says that should happen and investors will already be factoring that in.

However, the whole notion that New Zealand needs overseas investors to facilitate the current headlong forestry investment is very strange. It really does sell the next generation’s birth-right. These overseas investors, typically from Europe, have low capitalisation rates and hence can easily outbid the locals. Of course, it is great for the existing pastoral landholders.

One of the reasons that pastoral land is so attractive for forestry is that it comes with no existing forestry encumbrances such as ‘residual carbon’. Accordingly, foresters can afford to pay around $10,000 more per hectare for pastoral land compared to post-1989 forest land that has just completed its first rotation and is ready for replanting.

Why this is so will be a puzzle to those who do not understand the way that ‘residual carbon’ works. Every step of the carbon journey reinforces that overall message of complexity. 

In the last ten days there has been new information added to the MPI website in relation to the rules for the new carbon averaging system to be introduced on 1 January 2023. One issue that is now explicit is that under this scheme no credits can come from second rotation forests, even if the first rotation was outside of the ETS. This means that as from 2023, a second rotation forest on newly ETS-registered land can only earn credits if it registers as a permanent forest.

More important is that the amount of carbon that can be credited under the averaging scheme is no longer, as the MPI website previously stated, simply the carbon sequestered “from when it is registered up to its long-term average carbon stock”.  Rather, it has become explicit that it has to be earned during the first 16 years of the forest’s growth. 

I admit to being surprised by this third statement. I had previously read the website many times and had taken it at apparent face value. To repeat, it said that a “first rotation forest using averaging accounting will earn units from when it is registered up to its long-term average carbon stock”.  That would have meant, for example, that a forest first registered at 16 years of age could still have earned units in subsequent years up to its long-term multi-rotation ‘average age stock’. The key phrase was ‘average age stock’ and there was no mention that for an existing forest it actually had to be earned within the first 16 years.

I regard the new limitation, or perhaps it is a clarification, as being anomalous and somewhat unfair. But of course, ‘fairness’ is always subjective and there will be diverse views on that. I apologise if my previous interpretation gave false hopes to some of these owners.

However, nothing in the ETS is as simple as it might seem. For example, there is a webinar from March 2021 on the MPI website, where MPI Te Uru Rākau Director Oliver Hendrickson, who is in charge of forestry within the ETS, said that the Cabinet work programme for later this year would consider extending the averaging system more broadly across the post-1989 forestry estate. It is unclear as to whether this is still ‘on the table’, despite still being on the website, but at least some experienced foresters think it has gone.

This all goes to the nub of the situation that foresters face. Foresters have to make decisions in the very near future but with regulations still to be fully developed. I regard early drafting and gazetting of the regulations, which are central to current decisions, as being of particular importance. As MPI says on its website, MPI “cannot accept any liability for the accuracy or content of material on this website”, yet that is all that decision-makers have.

In regard to the averaging scheme, I have asked MPI whether I can see the draft regulations. A key reason they can’t send them to me is that the regulations have not actually been drafted. It seems they will not be published for another year. However, MPI has indicated to me that Cabinet policy decisions on which the regulations will be based are likely to be released very soon.

My current assessment is that for most owners of post-1989 forests it is still worth giving close consideration to joining the ETS and putting in claims for the current five-year ETS period of 2018-2022, initially under the stock accounting scheme. This is the best way to retain optionality. However, until all fog has dissipated from around the new regulations, it is much safer to then retain those units rather than sell them.

For many of these forests, an important option will be to convert the forests to permanent forests, where credits will be claimable for 75 years and beyond as long as the trees are still growing.  Also, for those who planted in 2003 or later, there are some credits that will be retainable under the averaging scheme, but once again they must be claimed prior to 2023. My spreadsheet analyses indicate that claiming these credits for 2018-2022 could be of considerable importance to the overall economics, and hence retaining optionality is important.

One issue that I have been giving considerable thought to is the need for independent consultants, independent of those who are actively involved in buying and selling forestry land, or seeking to manage that land, who can give specialist consultancy advice on the ETS to rural land owners. I am getting lots of requests as to where to obtain such advice.

I am becoming aware of some consultants who offer these services, but they are few and far between. Although there is existing legislation enacted in 2020 requiring log traders and forestry advisers to be registered, there appears to be no requirements for independence. In any case, the system appears to not be operative despite legislation having been enacted and there are no professional development requirements before advising professionally on the ETS.  This is a big issue.


*Keith Woodford was Professor of Farm Management and Agribusiness at Lincoln University for 15 years through to 2015. He is now Principal Consultant at AgriFood Systems Ltd. You can contact him directly here.

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40 Comments

I may have the wrong end of the stick....

My understanding is that when a block is planted for carbon farming it basically loses it's capital value. Because to bring it back into food production would require repayment of the carbon credits accrued during it's life and that cost would be prohibitive. And it seems most of the planting is monoculture pinus radiata.

Apart from pine being an exotic fire climax species, it seems ironic that the crown is paying people to remove wilding pines.

And as to the fire climax aspect, this is raising serious concern amongst rural based fire brigades, mostly volunteer staffed. Reportedly, because the carbon farms are plant and walk away, no planning is going into provision for emergency services vehicle access, nor access to water sources, necessary for a fire response.

There are questions in my mind over whether this is creating high potential for catastrophic fires with vast amounts of sequestered carbon release to the atmosphere. And the foreign owners/investors won't give a toss.

Have I got the wrong end of the stick.....?

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No - I think you're spot on. And it's worse than that; as society finds it harder and harder to keep all the balls in the air, maintenance will be the first thing to go - even of access roads, let alone f/f ponds.

My comment is to add another option to: 'and shift to tax and command systems'.

I see tax as problematic, given that it requires there to be something to take a slice of. It is more likely we go to energy rationing - TEQs or vouchers. At which point, who is paying the carbon-sinkers again?

After which. we are left with acres of the lousiest timber, a one-gene monoculture (wait for the disease) and a wilding problem of indescribable proportions - with never-less energy to apply ourselves to it.

Madness.

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Yes, I think the "command" end of that coupling will be more likely where we go in future. 

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powerdownkiwi,
The tax would be on emitters.  
The problem for NZ in relying solely on taxes without also having incentives for sequestration is that NZ could never then become 'carbon neutral' unless fossil fuels and any other non renewables were at zero levels.
NZ's current commitments for 1950 are not for zero carbon, but for carbon neutrality with emissions and new sequestration in balance.

As I understand it, the USA is giving consideration to a taxing of emitters but no incentives for sequestration.  Once again I am not offering an opinion here as to the merits or otherwise of that approach, I am simply saying that this is what they are giving consideration to.
KeithW

 

 

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That's (carbon neutral by 2050) a straw-man argument.

We actually have to hand on a liveable planet to our offspring, and theirs. When did that become c/n by 2050 and that then set in stone? Key?

So yes, your 'all fossil fuels at zero levels' is a valid target. And if Greta and E/R are right, between them, we have to be there by 2030.

At zero FF, you don't have anything to tax - which was my point. I doubt if you've got enough surplus energy to run governments, with knock-on question as to laws, penalties, adjudication mechanisms. And from a purely supply angle, we'll be there (zero levels) by 2050 without restrictions anyway. The attempt to offset below-ground carbon by above-ground planting, on a planet where wild animals are already down to 3% of biomass and most of the food-potential land is commandeered already, was always a nonsense. As is paying for a seedling and flying tomorrow, rather than waiting until the tree is big enough to equate to your flight; just another example of over-drawing the planet on behalf of NOW. A lot of these balls are still going to be in the air when the juggler gets called away.

The mechanisms for those foreign 'owners' to lay claim to those bits of dirt, will be one of those dropped balls. Whoever lives here, will reclaim them. Don't know what they'll do about the pine - shake their heads in wonder, no doubt.

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LouB,

If it is to be a permanent forest then the loss of capital value will be very gradual, with the remaining value at any time  being the present value of the remaining carbon credits.

Alternatively, if the forest is to be multi-rotation, and hence with carbon credits only for the first 16 years, then the valuations get more complex. The value at any specific time will reflect the present value of the remaining credits until the forest is 16 years (when these credits stop) plus the present value of the timber to be harvested at say 28 years, 56 years and 84 years.  The harvest at 84 years has minimal present value at the discount rates used by financial folk. The value of the forest will be high whenever a harvest is approaching, low immediately after harvest, and then gradually increasing again as the next harvest approaches.

Valuers have models to calculate these values, with the key variables being the discount (or capitalisation) rate, the future price of carbon, and the estimated price of lumber.
KeithW

 

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Thank you Keith

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  Yes, I was wondering the effect on the resale value in 50 (now 75?)years time. Presumably you pay back the credits at the current price then , not what you paid for them . Perhaps they are assuming , due to the switch to renewable energy , that credits will drop in price by then . So they can harvest the timber , and pay back the  credits for less. Also presumably, the price of timber will rise due to the competition of permament forests, or similar foreign schemes. 

I also presume that in 50 years time , measurement and calculation of the carbon effects of a single tree will be possible , and cheap So the calculation would be able to distinguish the actual carbon saved , and the effect of modifying that land. This could also assist in calculating growing pines as a nurse crop for slower growing Natives , with allowance made for the gradual takeover of the natives, on the total amount of carbon stored. 

 

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solardb,
With permanent forests, the financial modelers would normally assume that the forest is never harvested and has zero capital value at say 75 years. Note that I am not saying this is the correct approach from a societal perspective. I am simply saying this is how the financial modelers would look at it.

The modelers would acknowledge that if the value of the lumber at this time exceeds the cost of repaying the credits then it would be appropriate to harvest the timber, repay the credits, and replant. But that is so far off in the future that it is not relevant to current  decision making of potential investors.  Note once again I am not making any ethical judgements. I am simply communicating the thinking of financially trained people, for example those with finance degrees,  within investor institutions. 
KeithW

 

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I agree with Keith it is a hypothetical argument. There was lots of abandoned farms that grew into scrub but still retained value for hunting and recreational retreats. Rates etc were paid on land providing no return for many years before the honey thing took off. Also there is a real possibility of carbon becoming worthless in the event of new energy technology. In that event there is no reason why forests can't be harvested even if they are 50+. Why there is an irrational fear that we will run out of grazing land due to afforestation  is beyond me as I watch hillsides slipping into the gorges. There is lots of land in NZ that is totally unsustainable to use as pastural farming into the future. 

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Strangely I agree with you about steep, actively eroding land going into permanent forest. But that land is not attractive to production forestry. So why not require such country be planted in mixed species native rather than monoculture pine?

Hunting as an alternative land use? Under pine forest? Maybe okay for meat but the aesthetics of going bush, surrounded by native species diversity is missing.

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I understand what you are saying about the aesthetics of bush. Plenty of people enjoy recreation in Kaingaroa forest. The other thing is converting eroding grass land to forest is no simple task particularly when there are pests. We have 27 yr old pine and are pleased with the amount of native understory coming up as the pine canopy lets more light in. Younger plantations are tight and not so appealing but 30 yrs + with large diameter pines are a pleasing environment. So long as there is native seed source I am confidant that in 100 yrs + the forest will become a mix of exotic and native. 

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LouB,
I am increasingly hearing from production foresters that their interest is in the Class 5 land rather than the higher class numbers of 6 and 7, because harvesting Class 5 land involves a lot less hassle  with environmental and workplace regulations. Also, it tends to be closer to the ports. Class 5 is the softer hill country which typically can be driven over but is not regarded as being arable land. It is also the land which is considered to have low erosion risk under pastoral farming. In contrast, Classes 6,7 and 8 comprise 72% of NZ, and include all of the erosion prone country and the mountains.
KeithW

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Yes, I'm aware of the LUC system. We're seeing this play out in southern hawkes bay.

Class 5 maybe not arable but much of it is cultivated for pasture renewal/forage crop.

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Selling our kids birthright for 30 pieces of silver.

What happens with all this financial wizardry if the forest burns down?

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We've been burning our kid's birthright a litre at a time, for the last 120 years. 200 if you count coal in.

Orders of magnitude bigger theft.

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Brock Landers,
It is currently proposed that as from 2023, if there is a disaster such as fire, then credits that have been received do not have to be repaid. But the forest must be replanted or restored in some other way, and there are no more credits until the restoration of sequestered carbon is complete. 

From a bank lenders perspective, this still means that lending for forests is risky because following a disaster there will be no money to pay interest bills on the borrowed funds. I expect that disaster insurance schemes will develop to bear this risk. There may already be some such schemes, either in existence or in the offing.
KeithW

 

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On the permanent option just be aware that after 50 years you can revert to averaging (as it stands - we await confirmation on the regs on this bit). Its works as follows

You claim carbon every year up until age 50.

At 50 you have a choice - you can leave as a carbon forest and carry on

or

Revert to averaging - under this you would get to keep around the first 26 - 28 years of credits and repay the last 22 - 24 years. You are at the allowed to harvest the forest and have to replant it back into forest. You are allow to replant it in any forest type you like - native etc.

You can also choose to pay back all the carbon and change landuse (RMA rules allowing - which to be fair is problematic).

The key is it is locked in forest for 50 years.

Off course what will be the carbon price in 50 years??? If we see the carbon price continuing upwards its highly likely the price will be falling by then, or well before (I believe well before but I could well be wrong!!)

The key is its not locked up forever - there are routes out.

Keith knows I don't believe the Government will let these overseas owners revert to permanent as timber is important to them plus there are real concerns in the forest industry about permanence on land that could be use for timber or pastoral use. The government will act on this I believe. We will see.

I agree on the overseas buyers - they are massive and no one here can compete with them as they accept very low rates of return and understand the value of holding land. If we took them out or reduce their influence it would flatten the market - its a great time if a farmer/family wants to exit on an individual level - take the money and run time. The dilemma with personal rights

I entirely agree re post89 forest exotic owners not registered - get registered to give yourself some carbon options or else you have none apart from permenant  Selling the carbon from older registered forests is another story and needs careful thought and understanding of the consequences.

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It's incredible isn't it? The proponents and designers of the ETS have assumed a perfectly functioning market scenario in which the market guides the country to net zero via the optimal path; yet the scheme is so fiendishly confusing that there is basically no chance of this happening. And that is before you factor in the fact that investors are sat patiently on hundreds of millions of dollars of carbon credits waiting to cash in big. Depressing.

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Why don't the OIA just stop approving these purchases?

Or is that too simple?

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Muzzled'
It would require at least a Ministerial Directive setting aside the special rules for forestry investment. 

The  special rules for forestry are laid out in amendments to the Overseas Investment Act and if I recollect correctly were enacted in 2018. 
However, I think they could be laid aside by a Ministerial Directive letter from the Government.

The forestry situation has changed massively since the special rules were brought in.
KeithW 

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So quite possibly this could be resolved with the stroke of a pen or a short email.

Disappointing it hasn't happened already.

Especially for something so simple that would be a very popular decision.

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It would be a good thing muzled if forest planting was left to existing farmers to benefit from. Unfortunately many have no interest in forestry so perhaps limit land purchase to local investors. There are however many farmers who recognized the benefits of intergrating forestry many years ago.

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This is perportedly about fixing climate change.  Yet somehow I suspect that the nuances and complexities of climate are still unfathomed.  For example, 95% of the heat dynamics of the blue planet is controlled by water.  Policies to address water cycles could carry more utility than those for carbon (although I believe them to be linked).  Basically our current lack of knowledge is another layer of uncertainty to factor into 50+ yr forestry schemes  So far policy is more driven by media initiated hysteria than science, so expect it to be somewhat changeable. 

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If the policy was driven by actual science, we would be carbon neutral already and dairy farming would be around 5% of the size! 

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And which industry would you recommend to replace dairy as the $20 billion export earner?
KeithW

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I would guess a large chunk of that profit finds its way into the coffers of the Aussie banks. Perhaps dairy is like the tourism/foreign student industries, when they were gone we suddenly realise we didn't depend on them after all. Also maybe dairy is artificially inflating the NZD to the detriment of other exporters, e,g. the NZ version of Dutch Disease.

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Straw man question, KW.

At this point in the human trajectory, it's probably an irrelevant one.

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It is wrong, wrong, wrong. But not enough people seem to care. No export income (from real products) for 25+ years. Disaster. Climate change hoax.

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Wood is a real product.  Growing wood takes time.  How do you expect humanity to engineer faster, construction quality, wood growth?  Whether the wood is in the ETS or just in production forestry it still has to have time to grow.

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You could consider it import replacement , as if we didnt do it , we would have to buy credits overseas. 

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What this all points to is the usual Gubmint silo mentality, coupled with the usual Gubmint ignorance of commerce, particularly around arbitrage, the time value of money, and swiftness of action.  It's clear from Keith's excellent series of articles that:

  • The carbon units auction debacle was unexpected by the PTB, although for investors with sharp minds and deep pockets it was a classic first-mover play.
  • Although the devil is always in the detail, MPI seems in no hurry to devise it - the next units auction will have come and gone and land purchases concluded before the Grey Suits deliver.  It feels like policy on the hoof.
  • The OIO issue is a typical silo: clearly little to no thought was given to the interaction between ETS, carbon unit pricing, land use economics and the incentives thus delivered into the laps of avid offshore entities.  Commercial naivety, zealotry, long time frames and hopium are a bad environment from which to expect sensible policy.....
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your assuming the government sees the over subscription as a bad thing , not sure they do . Yes , it costs , but so will any action. 

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It was contrived in the noeliberal era (otherwise described as the nonsense aberration). The flawed idea was that everything is there to be 'made money from'. Thus, instead of addressing the energy-burn that was shitting in our nest, ecologically (threatening to wipe us out, taken to its illogical conclusion), they looked for ways to capitalise from it. As they have done to everything they could extract, as fast as they could.

 

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Maybe. The alternative scenario is that it is a scheme to reward people for planting trees , and charging for the emissions made b y the rest of us . Its not perfect but nothing is . As usual the scheme would work fine if people used it for such , and did not speculate/ gamble / "invest".

but then , we could have a social system that would work better if people were honest and there was no benefit fraud , the housing problem solved if people didnt landbank / speculate , a fair tax system , etc etc . 

I know people working for MPI , who are comitted to trying to help people plant trees , manage land better etc , and are on the ground doing so.

I also believe Shaw is not stupid , and is working to get tresults as best He can , goven the political situation , and the need to ensure the changes survive multiple  election cycles.  

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I have seen zero indication that Shaw gets the bigger problem.

I haven't any problem with trees - quite the opposite, I'm 32 years down that track myself - but the reason for doing this is wrong, as is the selection of pine.

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Hello Keith

Thank you for such an interesting series of posts on this subject. 

A decade ago I wrote a paper investigating the potential for carbon debt markets in which foresters could lend out the carbon credits they earn at a carbon interest rate. (The paper was subsequently published in the Journal of Forestry Economics.) This provides a means of obtaining a return from carbon credits if foresters were wary of selling and then needing to repurchase at a later date. The argument was that there a potential market of borrowers who could finance carbon reducing investments by borrowing and selling carbon units, and then repay the loan from the reduction in carbon units they need to buy. Foresters were wary of an increase in carbon price; investors wary of a reduction in the price (partly because the ETS scheme could be scrapped or at that stage flooded with low cost Ukrainian credits ); the result is appropriate risk sharing. Investors may not longer be wary of the scheme being scrapped, but at current carbon prices they would not need to borrow many units to finance carbon reducing investments either. 

I am curious: have you heard any talk of such a scheme as a means to raise the return and reduce the risk of carbon farming? 

thanks

Andrew          

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Good article in the November Farmlander from Farmlands. not on the Farmlands.co.nz website yet , but should be posted in November . 

Landcaretrust are also holding lifestyle block  mmanagement webinars. Wether they cover carbon famrming , i do not know . https://nzlt.infoodle.com/form_process?g=21dd4805-be2b-41b0-8019-fcdac2…

 

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https://pureadvantage.org/transitioning-plantations-to-native-forest/?f…

Check out the delimber in the comments you tube link. 

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New research Shows better carbon results for planted natives. 

https://pureadvantage.org/carbon-sequestration-by-native-forest-setting…

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