Winter grazing backdown shows Ardern Govt “owned” by big dairy – GREENPEACE

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Greenpeace says the Labour Government’s delay in implementing already-weak intensive winter grazing regulations is yet another example of them buckling to New Zealand’s “dirtiest industry.”

Environment Minister David Parker and Agriculture Minister Damien O’Connor announced the delay this evening at a DairyNZ function.

“Leaving a bad practice unregulated and thanking industry for their promises to make it slightly better is no substitute for getting rid of it, as the Government should be doing with intensive winter grazing,” says Greenpeace Senior Campaigner Steve Abel.

“In the middle of a climate and freshwater emergency, it’s pathetic and depressing to see our Government so captured by industry instead of doing the right thing.

“Everyone should be able to trust that their drinking water is clean and safe, and that their future will be free of the fires, floods and droughts brought by the climate crisis. We know that industrial dairying practices, like intensive winter grazing, make all these things worse.”

Intensive winter grazing is the practice of overstocking cows on winter paddocks, churning the ground to mud which can then wash into waterways, spread pathogens and smother insect and plant life.

The Government’s decision to hold off on implementation of winter grazing regulations follows similar decisions to renége on regulations proposed to manage freshwater and climate pollution.

This includes the delay on putting a bottom line on Dissolved Inorganic Nitrogen (DIN) in freshwater, which was due May 2020.

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Abel says the agreement to let the dairy sector self-regulate on winter grazing for yet another year echoes the He Waka Eke Noa partnership – a ‘voluntary’ climate agreement between Government and the dairy industry.

He Waka Eke Noa gives big dairy a free-pass on the emissions trading scheme (ETS) on the condition that farmers develop plans to measure their own emissions – but with no need to actually reduce them, states Abel.

“Today’s policy retreat again shows that Ardern’s Government is more fearful of stepping on the dairy industry’s toes than acting on the climate crisis or freshwater pollution. It feels like this government is owned by the dairy industry,” he says.

“Big polluters have a natural terror of regulation. As this country’s most polluting industry, big dairy has done a staggeringly effective job of lobbying to be let-off and to self-regulate.

“The only way to reduce pollution is actual regulation of dirty industries. Until Ardern regulates industrial dairying our rivers will remain fouled, our drinking water unsafe, and climate chaos will intensify.”

5 COMMENTS

  1. I am sorry if the running of dairy is not perfect but when the econony is stretched the $7 .60 pay out will put money in the coffers to build houses and hopefully increase benefits. Tackle one problem at a time and do it properly. Most farmers are as much environmentalist as those in greenpeace the difference is one is practical

  2. Maybe the Government is being pragmatic on this topic and not driven by blind ideology?
    Just saying.

    Accusing Labour of being “”owned”” by Big Dairy is about the stupidest statement I have read from them.
    and Boy they certainly come out with really stupid stuff.

  3. The farmers make life tough for themselves. If they simply allowed the stock green browse in winter, the paddocks respond in kind, the calves would still be history, but that’s the nature of livestock husbandry.
    Fonterra are enslaved to China & the rest of us are just expendable serfs.

  4. I remembered 10 years ago, a group of fishing clubs, and the Federated Farmers paid for a Trout/Salmon expert to come over from Canada to help sort out the declining Trout/Salmon numbers in the South Island Rivers.
    The expert took a helicopter ride up, and down two major South Island rivers, and told the Fishing Clubs/Federated Farmers to get the cows out of those rivers so the Trout/Salmon eggs could survive…The Fishing Clubs agreed, and Federated Farmers said NO to getting the Cows out of the rivers (despite the fact they are not allowed in those rivers due to Conservation Orders on those rivers)…

  5. We are a dirty country compared to some overseas standards. Foreigners I have met have been very surprised when they work here and see what goes on on farms.

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