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  1. While intensive dairy makes up just under 1/2 of our emissions, the government seems to be increasing and ignoring the other 1/2 coming from many stupid carbon decisions around NZ power, transport and construction industry.

    Would be more useful if Greenpeace and climate campaigners looked at the entire polluting industries NOT just dairy and point out other types of farming is helping keep emissions down or neutral, while suppling food locally. It should be the biggest polluters being called out, not the industry segment.

    Global CO2 emissions from energy use are set to soar by 1.5 billion tonnes in 2021 – the highest annual increase since the world turned heavily to fossil fuels after the financial crisis in 2010, a major report finds.
    https://nz.news.yahoo.com/global-co2-emissions-set-largest-062757141.html

    In NZ just a couple of companies make up a significant source of NZ’s power emissions – both majority foreign owned and receiving hand outs from NZ taxpayers for power.

    Cement is the source of about 8% of the world’s carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, according to think tank Chatham House.
    https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-46455844

    Water is also a big issue with water consents being granted to golf courses and intensive dairy and overseas polluting water bottling, while smaller farmers suffer drought and cities run out of water.

    Have yet to see solar power as a requirement in the NZ building code but plenty of time spent on other building regulations such as compulsory devices like a heat pump in rental properties. Unfortunately many tenants can not afford the power to run the heat pumps, (solar power is free but not a requirement in new builds) due to all the subsidies on places like Rio Tinto and poor power rules in NZ.

    Greenpeace needs to update and change the record on how they talk about this issue in NZ.

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