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The carbon forestry rules are going to change, with high likelihood of unintended consequences

Rural News / opinion
The carbon forestry rules are going to change, with high likelihood of unintended consequences
Native forest
Indigenous forests can be very challenging to establish

There is considerable evidence that the Government plans to change the carbon-farming rules and to do so in the coming months. The big risk is that unintended consequences will dominate over intended consequences.

Forestry Minister Stuart Nash has made it clear that he does not like the idea of permanent exotic forests.  In an opinion piece published in the Herald on 1 February of this year, he stated there are 1.2 million hectares of marginal pastoral lands that should be planted only in native species. He says that there is another 1.2 million hectares that is also unsuitable for pastoral farming but that is suitable for production forestry.

Minister of Agriculture Damien O’Connor states his opinion somewhat differently. On January 26 he was reported in the Herald as saying that he too disagrees with permanent exotic forests, but that it is up to famers not to sell their farms to people planning to plant forests. Instead, they should sell to those who will farm the land.  Well, my experience is that this is not how markets work.

Minister Nash is convening a workshop in early March with groups described as key stakeholders. Production-forestry groups, plus Beef+Lamb, plus various local councils will be there. However, I am not convinced that there is anyone, and that includes Beef+Lamb, who truly represents the interests of the existing farmers.

The role of Beef+Lamb includes protecting the sheep and beef industries from other land-uses. In contrast, the challenge for sheep and beef farmers is to find a pathway that protects their livelihood, which is not quite the same thing.

One of the key issues is the role of indigenous species. A lot of people are part of a bandwagon saying that only native forests should be permanent. But a lot of people on this bandwagon don’t seem to understand the challenges therein.

For example, Dame Anne Salmond, who is an emeritus professor of anthropology from Auckland University, has authored multiple articles at Newsroom. Her plan would include incentivising native plantings by granting them carbon units (NZUs) at the same rate as pine forests despite the fact that native forests grow much more slowly than exotics. 

This proposal would take all integrity away from the concept of a carbon unit, just like the Ukrainians did with the Kyoto units about 12 years ago. This illustrates how influencers can easily get it wrong, when they latch onto apparently simple solutions to complex problems.

If New Zealand wants to incentives native plantings, then it will have to be by direct subsidies.  All such subsidies have an opportunity cost of other activities that have to be foregone. Those activities might be less ICU beds in hospitals, less houses built for the homeless, or less police officers. 

When put in this context, then the issues are no longer quite so straight forward. Nor do large-scale native plantings make sense in relation to meeting New Zealand’s short and medium-term commitments to greatly reduce the net emissions of greenhouse gases.  

Native plantings are very expensive. Let there be no doubt, there is no commercial justification for large-scale native plantings. It has to be for other objectives.

These plantings may well be justified in relation to ecological issues on the most fragile lands, but that is a very different set of objectives. In most cases it is going to be very expensive.

As it stands, and here I quote some figures used by Minister Nash in his opinion piece, “New Zealand has 10.1 million hectares of forests, covering 38 per cent of our land. Eight million hectares is native forest and 2.1 million hectares is plantation forests.  Of the plantation forest, 1.7 million hectares is productive and the remainder is in reserves or unplanted areas near water and infrastructure.”

These numbers put things in perspective. We do already have a lot of land in native forests.

There are good reasons why we might put more land into native forests, but we also need to be clear that this is not the way to meet the targets that Climate Minster James Shaw promised at COP26 last year, with those targets endorsed by the Labour Government.

New Zealand will get itself into big trouble with these COP26 commitments, with Minister Shaw acknowledging that they will require large-scale purchases of carbon units from overseas. They will be purchased with hard-earned export earnings. Where will that money come from? And what will be the opportunity cost of that?

If New Zealand is truly going to meet its new commitments, then it has to be by rapid sequestration of carbon in New Zaland. And that means exotics.

In recent weeks some of my farming-forestry mates have been showing me something of the diversity of afforestation options. I have seen some magnificent native regeneration including in association with grazing.

I have also seen plantings of pine trees on steep erosion-prone country where natives trees, at least in the short and medium term, are not an option. Quite simply, on much of the fragile land, the necessary conditions for natives to thrive do not exist.  And I don’t at all like the notion that those pine trees might be harvested if permanent pine forests are removed from the ETS.

In another location, I have seen exotic plantings in which a wonderful understory of natives is now coming through.

These last two examples illustrate that implementing the ‘right tree in the right place’ is complex.

I have also seen land, currently in very productive pasture, which some years back was in pine trees. The farmer removed the pine trees because he considered they were not the right trees in the right place.

In all of these situations, knowledgeable farmers with good information have made good decisions. In contrast, I am cautious about a centralised regulatory system imposed from above.  It’s all very well to have a policy of the right tree in the right place. But who is going to make those decisions?

Within this complexity, one thing I am confident of is that the current policy of allowing overseas entities to invest in farms, as long as the dominant purpose is to convert the land to production forestry, is greatly flawed. I am aware of recent purchases of North Island land for production forestry on precipitous land that should never be harvested, where the purchasers are apparently driven by simple objectives of profit. 

As foreign purchasers, these investors are required to commit to harvesting the forests that they will plant.

It was several years back, when carbon was valued much less, that I first became concerned about foreign investors. Since then, my concern has only increased as the supply of global money looking for a home has increased.  

It is too late to worry about what has or has not already happened. The big issue is what is now going to happen, given current policy settings for foreign investors.

In among all of the complexity, I also see excessive difficulty in ETS-registration of land that is naturally regenerating.  It would be great if Ministers Shaw, Nash and O’Connor could get together and sort that out.  There is genuine carbon sequestration occurring that is not in the ETS simply because of the complexity.

There are other issues which need to be addressed with a nuanced approach rather than blanket bans on permanent pine forests. Perhaps one such solution would be to allow up to 20 percent of any sheep and beef farm to be planted in exotic trees as a permanent land use. Most farmers have a good understanding of the parts of their farm where this makes both economic and ecological sense.

Under this system, planting of more than this prescribed area would require meeting some consenting hurdles relating to ‘the right tree in the right place’. This would weed out the business entities, be they local or foreign, that are driven by narrow profit-making devoid of wider issues.

And some final words of caution. If anyone thinks there are simple solutions to the overall situation that we have created for ourselves, then they don’t understand the problem.


*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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41 Comments

Keith if I understand correctly pine performs because it grows faster and thus sequesters carbon faster. Land left unfarmed and unplanted will over a much greater time frame do the same. Thus it will produce income but much more slowly but for longer (a pine forest I assume stops absorbing carbon upon maturity and thus revenue would cease after 30 years or so).

So could we ever get to a point where the abandoned farm converting to native might be a better long term approach? Could a tax change help?

 

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rastus,
Pine trees grow rapidly until around 50 years, and then still grow significantly through to about 80 years, perhaps even more in some situations.

There are some other exotics which grow for longer - such as redwoods. But redwoods need freedom from frosts.

Eventually, abandoned farmland will in many parts of NZ regenerate to natives but availability of a nearby seed source is crucial so that birds can do their work. The vegetation may go through several different species types until a climax ecology is eventually reached with species that sequester lots of carbon. We can be talking 1000s of years.

Intriguingly, there was a time when eucalyptus species were endemic in New Zealand.  There is a related argument that since  we emerged from the last Ice Age over the last 10,00 years, our native species have not evolved particularly well to our current climate, particularly to the east of the main mountain range.  It is the introduced trees that are better adapted.

The pasture species that we use, plus all the fruit and vegetable crops that we grow, have all been introduced.

The growth rates of the natives, combined with the challenges of getting them established initially, means that making carbon units tax free would not in most situations be sufficient to make planted natives profitable. 

KeithW

 

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Ta. So basically the cost of planting native combined with slow growth rates and thus slow carbon uptake makes them both economically and carbon efficiency a no go - no matter how one tinkers with the rules, tax or otherwise.

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rastus,
Yes, that is essentially correct for almost all situations where natural regeneration is not an option.
KeithW

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I've seen some quite high carbon sequestration figures for Puriri, they're certainly easy to propagate, pretty hardy once planted and grow fast.

Your article makes me think we should be doing everything we can to preserve the native forest we have remaining. Allowing farmers who protect fragments carbon credits would be a good place to start.

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The reality is native carbon sequestration is low in regenerating forests - if you plant native plantations on good soils with lots of pest and weed control you will do better on some sites - ie very high cost. These good soils are also our best farming soils.

As an example the ETS lookup tales for native over estimate carbon storge by around 35% compared to the data collected from actually measuring these forests.

Many like Dame Ann will claim this is wrong - well Im sorry this is actual data from 1,000s of hectares and pain staking scientific measurement. Its called reality.

You are 100% right - we need to be concentrating on protecting our existing native forests which are being eaten alive as we write. The volume of biomass and carbon being lost is horrendous. We will get huge gains from this instead of putting in millions - lots of them - to trying to achieve some idealistic dream which will fail.

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Be nice if we could use a combination of carbon and some sort of incentive scheme to get those eroded hill country areas (Wanganui, Gasbourne etc) back into native. There is a reason the Whanganui flows with mud, So much of that stuff should never have been cleared. A Muldoon livestock inventive disaster.

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Before that you have to get the landowners to agree - waste of time doing anything else until that is done.

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Puriri will reach 5 metres in 10 years . So will Ribbonwood and Kahikatea, Kauri,Kanuka and Titoki. Karaka , Tawa and taraire will reach 6 metres. 

I find Akeake very hardy and fast , but only listed at 4 metres after 10 years. I don't know if cabbage tree qualify as a tree but also do 5 metres. .   

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We're going to need some carbon look-up tables for gorse and blackberry, coz around here that's the dominant 'crop' being farmed, abandoned farm or otherwise.... unless the fields out the front that have rusty Toranas and Commodores grazing in long grass can capture CO2 at a better rate.

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A Cautionary Take indeed, KW.  But given the heavy influence wielded by the disastrous combination of know-nothing urbanites, sincere but misguided zealots, central gubmint departments subject to the Peter Principle, and no doubt others, is there realistically much chance of dodging a whole slew of unintended consequences out of this crew?

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I'm glad you said it is a complex issue Keith. I've been struggling with it for a while now & am still not Shaw what is what.

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Keith your starting to sound like a forester!!!

I cant disagree with a word you have said - I fear, as you do I think, that the baby is going to be thrown out with the bath water and that a range of tools and options that land owners have will be taken away - to the detriment of the land owners and NZ inc.

I personally agree about the overseas buyer reservations. A mix of farmers and NZ forestry investors could sort this out as it wouldn't cost the earth, the money stays in NZ.

Native will come as well, never fear, alongside the exotics.

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Dame Anne Salmond is just one of many examples of those who, expert in one area-in her case anthropology-  seem convinced that their opinion in areas entirely outwith their expertise should be listened to with great reverence. 

I have no expertise whatsoever in which trees should go where, but Keith's views do seem to be both balanced and based on a deep knowledge of the subject.

I do however know that trees are very long lived, while politicians strut their stuff for just a few years and the two do not mix well.

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The standard advice to singers who suddenly develop political ambitions and use their audience to propel said ambitions, is this:

Shut up and Sing.

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Could be applied to so many Facebook Epidemiologists these days too...

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In one Article , she stated pine trees were shallow rooted. Obviously she has never had to remove a pine's tap root , we had to use dynamite on one

 

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thanks Keith

And some final words of caution. If anyone thinks there are simple solutions to the overall situation that we have created for ourselves, then they don’t understand the problem.

That is a quote that extends to most other environmental (and other!) problems. 

"Fools sees certainty where the wise see doubts" to paraphrase B Russell

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A good read. Is there a good source to try and wrap one's head around where the current and future economics will lie?

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"It’s all very well to have a policy of the right tree in the right place. But who is going to make those decisions?" I have someone in mind Keith. ;-)

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The Peter principle applies everywhere. That person will also have to make other decisions that are outside his or her level of competence

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Spare a thought for the poor reinsurance companies struggling under this climate emergency. If any of you have any empathy at all please slip them a few dollars.

"Germany’s Munich Re has reported profit of more than €2.9 billion for the 2021 financial year, as gross premiums written (GPW) hit a record high in the period, leading the reinsurer to forecast group profit of €3.3 billion in 2022.

Munich ReIn 2021, the company’s profit exceeded the target of €2.8 billion and also came in higher than 2020’s €1.2 billion total. In Q4 2021, Munich Re produced a profit of €871 million, compared with €212 million in the prior year period.

Year-on-year, GPW rose by 8.5% in 2021 to over €59.5 billion, which the firm says is the highest figure in its history."

https://www.reinsurancene.ws/munich-re-reports-highest-ever-gpw-as-2021…

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Well thought out article Keith. I'm really concerned that the ‘right tree in the right place’ decision is going to be political rather than scientific or economic.

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Good to see you finally seeing the light SimonP.

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"The big risk is that unintended consequences will dominate over intended consequences." The intended consequences are to end farming as we know it in NZ. NZ farmers need to wake up..

But one example farmers in the US, Europe and Australia are paid for soil carbon but it is banned under NZ ETS. Under the government scheme some carbon is more equal than others - and slush fund flows always in the favour of the carbon bludger, not the farmer, as exemplified but the artificially inflated price of carbon scheme land.

Carbon pricing now so high it is shutting up productive, profitable forests in favour of artificial carbon currency. Ironically even production foresters are being shut out by carbon bludgers too in this perverse market.

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Some NZ soils are sequestering carbon and others are not.  It is complex and not easy to measure without a lot of monitoring and associated cost.
The reason a lot of NZ soils are not sequestering carbon is that, unlike the Americans, we did not deplete it in the first place by many years of cropping.
KeithW

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Obviously not too complex for US, Europe and Oz so the poor sheep and beef farmer gets a double wammy - foreign farmers get carbon money in direct competition to exports and carbon in NZ all flows to forestry making farm purchase/expansion uneconomic. A undeclared war on farming.

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Do you think this is the "signalled" coming changes to the ETS, or is there more to come?.

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who knows? I would say more to come.

Whatever happens it wont change the emissions problem in front of us.

Funny as a fight - just had a North Island farmer ring me in despair - he had an overseas buyer prepared to pay a huge sum for his farm - emailed this pm withdrawing. Asked ME what to do!!!

I recommended he email FSOG, Beef and Lamb, Dame Anne Salmond etc for advice.

Whats good nationally always costs someone something somewhere.

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Keith,

"According to a statement released by Minister for Agriculture Damien O’Connor “The investment is part of the Government’s Fit for a Better World roadmap, which aims for food and fibre sector exports to earn an extra $44 billion over 10 years,”

I saw this in the article on Pamu and wondered how realistic that figure is in your opinion.

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linklater01
$44 billion might sound impressive but $44 billion over 10 years is not going to solve our problems
The roadmap documents seem to have rather a lot of spin in them. 
And I don't know where the $44 billion came from
I am cautious as to whether our R&D in NZ is well targeted.
KeithW

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Perhaps they could allow permament exotic forests if they met a set planting rate of natives under the exotics , and a minimum pruning / thinning program to maintain them .  

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Where there is a native seed source and adequate moisture native will establish under most exotics including pine. As the exotics age more light is let in and the native understory thickens up with ferns etc. Seedling exotics require light to survive so less establish compared to natives. 

This is basically how manuka, kanuka stands work as well but obviously with much less carbon uptake. In our area, inland Whanganui this is very evident in our 28 yr forests. Another example is in the Coromandel area where remnants of Tairua forest that were never harvested are being dominated by native with a pine component left.

By the way, excellent article Keith. Absolute common sense. As I have always said, the present landowners need to integrate forestry into their business model and the local economy benefits.

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Yes , we used to 'rescue' nikau palms from pine plantations near Whitianga , before harvest  With the forestry owners permission, health and safety would probably rule that out nowadays . There were lots of other natives growing under the pines, we wrenched then dug out what we could. a bit rushed so survival rates wern't great. i also spread Manuka slash for DOC, a low cost way of spreading seed. I just think a bit more effort or help would speed things up considerably. and provide a documented path for "benefit to NZ. 

I also spent a week or 2 at the AhuAhu Ohu on the Wanganui river. That is real hard country . Pest control is what would make the most difference in that kind of country .      

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That is very close to where we are up the Whanganui River, but we are farther Nth. The mature native bush, of which there is a large area, is in a dire condition. That includes DOC reserves. We have been advocating 1080 for sometime as it is the only solution. Unfortunately misinformed opposition is always an obstacle. Bait stations can only do so much in this type of terrain.

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Hans
Are possums the main pest?  What about rats and stoats?  Can you elaborate on 'dire condition'?
Keith

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Keith, it's a combination but possums are the main culprit. Canopy damage is severe including large Mamakus which have there large fronds chewed to stumps. Goats cause browsing damage and up until recently deer were not a problem as we only had fellow which are mainly grass grazers. Unfortunately reds are here now and in the future as they build up the native will be in real trouble.

Enforcing exotic forest owners to ramp up pest control is not the answer as there are large areas of bush and regenerating native with private owners who refuse to be a part of any pest control programs.

If there is to be pest control enforcement then it has to be across all boundries. In fact unless that happens effective control can never happen. 

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Hans
I agree that red deer have very different grazing habits to fallow deer.  Fallow deer, like sheep, evolved on the grasslands and are grazers. In contrast,  red deer come from the forests and forest fringe, and select for young fresh growth. I have seen some spectacular regeneration in mountain-beech forests in situations where the red deer have been hunted out.  Goats are also very selective for any fresh shoots.  Whereas sheep and trees can be complementary in some circumstances, with goats and red deer that is not the case.
KeithW

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Just thinking, a +100ha block , that is +50% native ,and the rest exotic, would still qualify as permament forest . Only problem would be if the measured Ha's were  native , or can you measure the lot for carbon credits?

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Our thoughts exactly. And not only the native pockets but also the substantial undergrowth in our older forests which will only increase as the forest ages and degrades allowing more light in.

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