Hard News: Fact and fantasy
628 Responses
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mccx, in reply to
Do you see no prospect of a better arrangement? Perhaps NZ would be better to identify what is most important to us , and attempt to bring it about. It may be that climate is the least of our concerns as a nation.
I don't think you're reading what I wrote. Better long-term climate agreements are possible, but their adoption is very uncertain at present. Kyoto2 is a short-term agreement that extends the current framework and did not interfere with adopting a long-term agreement. The government posed a short-term commitment and working toward a long-term agreement as somehow contradictory, when they are actually steps toward the same goal.
NZ has a moral responsibility to be part of global progress toward effective emissions reductions regardless of the effects of climate change in NZ. We're a long way off of doing our part now. Same goes for a number of other international and domestic environmental issues (which I suppose is what led us to this discussion in the first place.)
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Farmer Green, while I respect your right to refer to yourself in the third person, when you mention swimming in the Manawatu in that way it does rather sound like an out of body experience.
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Matthew Poole, in reply to
is constantly railing about the environmental constraints on farming, the compliance costs, etc but he knows it is the right thiing to do and he complies fully because he believes he is a custodian of the land he farms.
Ah, but would he do the same things if he wasn't required to by law? Does he do more than is required by law? That's the difference between someone who really considers themselves to be a custodian and someone who's just trying to mute the tone they've set by ranting about urban do-gooders and their prissy environmental protection laws.
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Sacha, in reply to
They're not afraid of something they consider fictitious.
True, but they're scared of something. Having their lil weiners oppressed by collective obligations?
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Yeah you have to admire the achievement of Alistair Bisley , the chair of the LWF. It would be surprising if there was as much as 50% in common between the cockies and "environmentalists" when that discussion began.
And look what they have come out with in this third report. Farmer Green thinks Bisley should get a knighthood; talk about herding cats.
Farmer Green was disappointed at the early departure from the discussion here of The Grand Inquisitor, especially when FG still had ten intact fingers. But then , bridging is expensive; FG this year coughed 90 grand for a modest structure over a fairly filthy little ephemeral storm channel that is dry 6 months of the year. Still it will pay for itself next time the Manawatu river gets over 7 metres of flooding. The cows won't have to get wet next time. -
Farmer Green, in reply to
You think there is a significant risk , that if Kyoto 2 dies at Doha, then there may be nothing to come out of the whole conference? I would almost agree with that.
I do think there will be some progress towards a cleaner world regardless of the fate of Kyoto 2.
China appears to want to be seen as a responsible senior player : enlightened self interest perhaps , but who cares why they want to clean up their act? -
Farmer Green, in reply to
"The Federated Farmers representative is quoted in the farming press thusly:-
“We know the way we farm will need to change” ."He doesn't sound too fearful to me.
On the other hand he may as yet be unaware of the opportunity these changes will present. -
Angus Robertson, in reply to
Wouldn't developing countries just say that the level of tax they levy should be deservedly less than that of developed countries?
Poor people should pay less burdensome taxation than rich people. As a tax rate governments would be free to set the rate.
The fairest solution would seem to be an equal per capita allotment of allowable emissions that at an aggregate level avoids dangerous climate change.
This will always be seen as unfair by the worlds poorer nations, because developed countries have a declining rate of emissions whilst developing countries have an increasing rate. A level cap places highest marginal costs upon the poorer group of nations to subsidise the technological advancement of the richer group - unfair.
A level cap is "fair", like a poll tax is "fair".
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DexterX, in reply to
Why?
Because I was interested to know what people whoa re climate change supporters do about it.
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Farmer Green, in reply to
Well it's true that the Pohangina river is much nicer, and there are certainly NZ rivers that few would want to swim in. The Manawatu situation is not as some of the MSM would have you believe.
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DexterX, in reply to
an out of body experience
I prefer to see it as "out-of-body experience " and not an "out of body experince" which is something latogether different and if not treated propoerly becomes problematic in the least.
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andin, in reply to
The cows won’t have to get wet next time.
Here's an idea you could designate someone to knit them nifty outfits as well so they dont catch a cold.
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Chris Waugh, in reply to
China appears to want to be seen as a responsible senior player : enlightened self interest perhaps , but who cares why they want to clean up their act?
China's environment is.... well, 'degraded' isn't anywhere near strong enough. My father in law has told me of catching huge fish down in the river and the mountains behind his village teeming with wildlife when he was young. He even saw a leopard once - and that's only 70-odd km from downtown Beijing. Now? Forget it. 4000+ years of deforestation with precious little being replanted has left the whole northern half of China extremely vulnerable to desertification and, in the spring, sandstorms. I've been caught out in more than a few sandstorms and I'm pretty sure I'd prefer any other kind of weather. Not long after I moved to Taiyuan a storm came up from the south - typical Taiyuan, it was short and sharp and gone within half an hour, but as soon as the rain hit I had jet black water shooting through the gaps under my windows and balcony door. When I got caught in sandstorms in Taiyuan, on arriving at my destination I'd head straight for the bathroom to clean the dust off face and hands and rinse the mouth at, only to see in the mirror my face pockmarked with yellow loess and black coal dust.
Photo: The view from a friend's apartment, coal-fired powerstation.
Why should we care why China wants to clean up? If New Zealand's population continues to increase and Kiwis don't clean up their acts, China's now will be New Zealand's future. Personally, I would prefer New Zealand to clean up now and avoid China-degree ecological catastrophe.
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DexterX, in reply to
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DexterX, in reply to
Agreed, we need to clean up our act for our own good.
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mccx,
Poor people should pay less burdensome taxation than rich people. As a tax rate governments would be free to set the rate.
I agree. My point was that it's not possible to imagine carbon taxes without a set of binding emissions limits for countries. The whole purpose of the Kyoto framework to establish and ratchet down these binding quantitative limits. Countries not signing on for Kyoto2 does not make the adoption of carbon taxes more likely, it makes it less likely.
A level cap places highest marginal costs upon the poorer group of nations to subsidise the technological advancement of the richer group – unfair.
Sorry but that doesn't make sense to me. Given how much higher per capita emissions are in developed countries, the marginal costs of reducing these emissions to the level of per-capita emissions in developed countries and below is going to be more expensive in developed countries than in developing countries. There's a reason 'cap and share' is widely seen as fair. It doesn't end global inequality, but it does frame an equitable distribution of emissions allowances.
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Slightly OT: will Helen Kelly potentially be the Mike Joy of industrial relations?
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Science to the rescue...
Greenhouses in the deserts
and
Dirt cheap thermoelectric materials -
Jacqueline Hahn, in reply to
We are not just a country of birds, our native fish, insects and reptile species are in big trouble. Scientific evidence shows that once you get below 20% of a habitat remaining extinction of species follows and a rapid rate. We have lost 85-90 percent of our wetlands, have changed stream-side habitat and water quality, decreased native bush and removed passageways for migration, have biosecurity breaches ( you may have heard about the bee vaeroa bee mite disease in honey bees did you ever think what happened to the native bees? How many orb web spiders do you see these days compared to your childhood?). Birds of course are also disappearing but they are not the only ones.If you are a species that’s not “cute” public funding is hard to come by. I visited wingspan with a school group recently our falcon and owl are in much more trouble than say the kiwi, the long finned eel is another good example a threatened species that is still commercially fished. Plenty of examples in our marine fishing grounds as well. So you see threatened species/loss of species is precisely due to us not being “pure” it is a symptom of illness not the illness itself.
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Farmer Green, in reply to
That's the reality. The other reality is that , as a nation , we haven't got the money to prevent further degradation of the remaining conservation estate. Specifically we haven't got the budget to eradicate the cats , rats , mustelids, pigs, goats, deer, etc. not to mention the cute little bushy -tailed phalangers.
Given that the nation still earns a large proportion of its GNP from the export of basic agricultural commodities (SMP, WPC, AMF etc.) what is the pathway forward?
Clearly farmers accept that change is going to happen , but will that be enough?
Is it incremental change that we need?
Don't we need a total redesign of the dairy industry if it is going to pull its weight , economically speaking.
Is the failure to protect what remains merely a misallocation of resources or is it more fundamental i.e. the country is not making any money? -
Farmer Green, in reply to
It is time Farmer Boy used his verbal jousting to constructively improve the situation we are in.
I'm not sure that Farmer Green has anything for you Ross : he presumes that most here already have a clivus multrum producing nutrient-rich topsoil to service their extensive vegetable gardens . Most will already be exporting to the national grid their excess electricity from their solar panels and VAWTs. Nobody will be still using air travel, especially overseas, and the Sunday drive is long gone along with all the other recreational pollution , i.e. V8 supercars , stockcars , Formula One , jetskis, etc. etc.
Working from home will be the norm here, and people will be entertaining themselves in the evenings with their vinyl record collections [actually that might be true :-) ].
Farmer Green really hasn't got much to offer to the good folk here ; he was hoping for some suggestions for his own farming operation.
What is it that you want to see?
Farmer Green would like to be able to say that he has ticked most of the boxes. -
Sacha, in reply to
Given that the nation still earns a large proportion of its GNP from the export of basic agricultural commodities (SMP, WPC, AMF etc.) what is the pathway forward?
As someone suggested pages ago, to increase the proportion from more sustainable low-impact industries. Not good news for farmers, but them's the breaks.
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Farmer Green, in reply to
But it could be very good news for farmers if it was "clean , green and fresh" added-value products coming from the low-impact agriculture.
Low impact is the easy part which takes care of the environmental sustainability (in the relative sense).
The added-value requires the dairy industry to abandon seasonality , and to produce milk all year round (at the very low stocking rates) so that fresh cultured foods (yoghurt , sour cream , cottage cheese, other cheeses etc ) can be made daily for shipping to the rich (top 10%) Asians.
Year- round production also addresses the rebuilding of rural social capital, the destruction of which has occurred over the last 40 years of dairy company amalgamations and centralisation of processing. -
So let's invest in our export food industry.
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Farmer Green, in reply to
You want to hear about the elephant in the room?
Or should that be dinosaur?
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