Soraya Bradley Soraya Bradley

REQUEST; Gene Tech Bill be referred to the Primary Production Committee.

In my submission on Gene Tech Bill; I noted that New Zealand farmers are one if not the only farmers in the developed world that do not receive government subsidies, as such they are highly sensitive to market demand. That GMO GE farming in the United States in particular is heavily government subsidised. GMO GE is a lower value product, on average reducing crop value by 15-20% to non-GMO crops and 115%+ less than organic crops…NZ’s proposed Gene Technology Bill sets out no liability framework, no obligations to protect indigenous biodiversity, productive and speciality seeds, nor animal welfare. The bill appears to carve out liability- free framework for gene technologies. There appears no requirement to evaluate long tail risk, no obligations for disclosure and law appears to have been developed with only laboratory processes in mind.

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Paige Wills Paige Wills

Open Letter to Silver Fern Farms, Suppliers, and Shareholders

Silver Fern Farms’ decision to kowtow to global emissions agendas is unnecessary and deeply insulting to NZ farmers, the world’s most efficient producers of natural, pasture-fed, low-input food. Instead of championing this which is what consumers actually want, SFF is bowing to corporate-driven demands that misrepresent market realities. UK consumers’ clear rejection of feed additive Bovaer proves there’s no demand for these unnecessary “innovations.” By pandering to these disconnected corporates, SFF are undermining the very advantages that set our farming apart globally.

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Peter Foster, BSc (Hons) Biochemistry Peter Foster, BSc (Hons) Biochemistry

A Letter to MP’s: Unrealistic Targets & Misleading Science

From previous comments there appears to be a fanciful belief that some significant reduction can be made to livestock methane by the use of a technology such as boluses, vaccines, genetics etc. The public reaction overseas to bovaer coupled with the cost and effort to farmers should tell you that that is not a solution.
You will no doubt be hearing from many scientists telling you they are on the brink of a solution, just a few more millions in research needed. Unfortunately they have been doing that for decades and but their claims never eventuate- only the demand for more funding.

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Peter Foster, BSc (Hons) Biochemistry Peter Foster, BSc (Hons) Biochemistry

Methane Review Panel Submission, MSA & Groundswell

Submission to Methane Review Panel for the METHANE SCIENCE ACCORD and GROUNDSWELL, prepared by Peter Foster. The Methane Science Accord and its partners wish to acknowledge the debt that farmers have to the work of the late Dr Jock Allison…

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Hamish De Lautour, Dip Ag Hamish De Lautour, Dip Ag

Submission to Climate Change Commission, HDL

No one has been able to actually translate ruminant methane emissions into warming effect, at least not to a quantum that is measurable or in anything other than a model…
We know full well, and it is not disputed, that grass fed ruminants, as we have in NZ, are only cycling C02 and methane, it is the carbon cycle, it is neutral …

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Helen Mandeno, BSc Helen Mandeno, BSc

Submission to the Climate Change Commision, HM

Emerging new biotechnologies (NBTs) or GE technologies are potentially fraught with unintended and off-target effects showing deleterious mutations. Is temperature reductions of millionths of a degree worth the risk?
Methane mitigation Biotechnology tools: Has a risk to benefit analysis been done for these ‘never before used biotechnology tools’? What price do you put on an entire industry that stands to lose everything if these novel biotechnology tools are released and then subsequently found to be unsafe and or unwanted? Are biotech companies held liable if safety concerns arise further down the track? Or will NZ farmers have to pick up the bill for that too?

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Jane Smith, B Com Ag (FM) Jane Smith, B Com Ag (FM)

Submission to the Climate Change Commission, JS

We suggest that methane emission reduction targets of 24 to 47% were set not because methane emissions need to reduce in order to “stop” global warming (as methane is having a barely measurable impact on global warming, if any) but to actually offset generic CO2 emissions.
… Destruction of Rural Communities Regulatory impacts show that economic growth could slow by $5-12 billion per year between 2020 to 2050 – a loss of around $300 billion. Farming outputs have been modelled to drop by 50 percent from current levels by 2050 – which is both ironic and unpalatable, given that this is the same timeframe that the primary sector was asked to double it's productive capability.

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Neil Henderson, Dip of Sheep Farming Neil Henderson, Dip of Sheep Farming

Submission to the Climate Change Commission, NH

The opening paragraph of your section on agriculture says it is responsible for 51% of this country’s emissions. We then see constant reference to emissions in the sector. But these emissions bear absolutely no relationship to warming. It is now acknowledged that methane is a short-lived gas and does not need to reduce to zero to be warming neutral. But where has it ever been quantified how much warming our livestock cause? How can anyone make a realistic target for methane without this information? Instead, we get targets based on the outdated emissions calculated using the flawed GWP 100 metric. I have known since a 2011 meeting on greenhouse gas metrics I attended, that was presented by IPCC authors, that this metric does not accurately calculate methane’s warming. The IPCC now acknowledges that in the case of stable livestock production, as is the case in New Zealand, it overstates warming by three or four times. So why is the Commission using such outdated metrics?

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Hamish Carswell Hamish Carswell

Submission To The Methane Review Panel, HC

This is a political issue not a scientific one and has become contentious because of those that either derive income directly or are trying to derive income based on GHG emissions being an issue and are subsequently creating an industry around this. Quite simply if the effect of Methane is shown scientifically to be negated then the logical and honest course is to acknowledge this, move on and search for an actual problem where research and action can achieve a result. Methane is not the actual problem.

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Hugh GARDYNE, VFM Hugh GARDYNE, VFM

Methane Advisory Panel and Terms of Reference, HG

The coalition government has a mandate to take the hidden costs out of the productive sector. In this instance it starts with acknowledging the IPCC statement that settings for methane were overstated 3-4 times and the emissions in NZ are not 48%, (or 70% as uttered by Ministry for the Environment only yesterday), but likely of no consequence. An additional requirement is to quantify the warming affect of the methane produced or its longevity in the atmosphere but if the starting point is inaccurate then what will the answer be? …

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Climate Change Commission, Deborah Alexander Deborah Alexander, BAgr Sc (Hons) Climate Change Commission, Deborah Alexander Deborah Alexander, BAgr Sc (Hons)

Submission to the Climate Change Commission, DA

The subject of Greenhouse Gases and Climate Change is an extensive topic and I could happily present and expand on many related topics. I have, however, chosen to limit my submission to just three parts: 

  • Ruminant Methane Emissions: A More Complete View 

  • Methane’s contribution to Greenhouse Warming 

  • Suggested guidelines for reviewing greenhouse gas targets

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