Foreign-owned "carbon foresters" have ambitions to turn a
fifth of New Zealand sheep and beef farmland into forests and
that will devastate many rural towns, the national farmers'
lobby says.
Federated Farmers president Don Nicolson said the
organisation strongly believed that farm forestry was
integral to farms where suited. This made the Government's
axing of the Afforestation Grants Scheme (AGS) in preference
to the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) "incredibly
perplexing".
"Yet it's the big overseas foresters that can't see our food
for the carbon. The likes of Ernslaw One (Malaysia), Blakeley
Pacific (USA) and Rayonier New Zealand (USA) want to plant
two million hectares of our farmland in trees," he said.
"Two million hectares, if converted to carbon forestry, is a
full fifth of New Zealand's sheep and beef industry. What we
are talking about is the loss of 2800 farms, the loss of 11.4
million stock and the loss of another billion from our $5
billion sheep and beef industry.
"At this scale of planting, vulnerable regional economies,
like the North Island's East Coast, would be levelled. It's
the human scale that is being lost.
"Carbon forestry doesn't need the same labour force as a farm
and in some instances, after planting will require none. What
will become of the shearers, mechanics, stock and station
agents, builders or vets?
"Trees won't support the labour force farming does in the
heartland. If large scale conversion to trees takes place,
it'll rip the heart out of our rural towns and provincial
centres."
Because trees absorb carbon dioxide, one of the main
greenhouse gases being blamed for global warming, money from
the ETS is going to foresters who have planted trees since
1990.
But Mr Nicolson said legislated incentives not to farm
grasses or annual crops for human food production were
misguided.
"And for what end I ask? So that these foreign-owned
foresters who control 72 percent of our pine forests, can all
benefit from our hard earned dollars?
"That's why farmers from Gore to Gisborne are stirred up."
When the Government confirmed earlier this month that the AGS
was to be chopped, Forestry Minister David Carter said there
would be 5000ha of more forests planted next year because
there was money to be made from carbon sequestration.
"We are already seeing interest from land owners with land
suitable for forestry planting and forestry consultants tell
me they are very busy talking to potential rural landowners
about the possibility of planting more trees."
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