Groovy Map re 'we are going it alone' on price on Carbon.

Wednesday, April 03, 2013

Now, we all know - Australia  is NOT the only country  putting a price on pollution.  

Here is a   Groovy Map  which shows in 'easy to read'  detail.

 What this says to me is that there will be a lovely BIG market  to play in - and we'll need to be competitive -  we need LOTS of experience in putting  'methodologies'  in on our farming land, managing our 'carbon rights'  and trading.   Again, we always also say  - Don't sell all your credits now -  the market might improve over the years.   Stay as informed as you can about what is happening in the markets and get educated about your  'future farm' -  farmers now control a VERY important resource - CARBON - and they can't mine it, so they have to leave you with the right to own it!   

Don't forget that BioMass  is also full of carbon and has potentials as well!  

Regional Australia can generate good income, have job opportunities and be a leader in CO2 reduction -  its worth a good try. 

Carbon Tax: Only Having Chicken Little Effect On Dairy

Tuesday, November 27, 2012
A study by Melbourne University indicates the carbon tax is having little effect on dairy farmers... and chickens coming home to roost (See below)

But 18 months ago: "Dairy industry says carbon tax will cut farm milk prices"
Tuesday, 12/07/2011

Research and development group Dairy Australia that fears the dairy industry will lose international competitiveness under a carbon tax.

Dairy Australia's Chris Phillips says community incomes will fall in dairy regions as farm gate prices drop, because of a 10 per cent rise in electricity costs for both farmers and processors.

"Dairy manufactures are big users of electricity and natural gases, and those prices will go up as well under a carbon tax," he said.


12 months ago: "Dairy farmer faces $40,000 carbon tax"
Newcastle Herald
Jan. 1, 2012, 8:25 a.m

HUNTER dairy farmers are bracing themselves for the beginning of carbon pricing in July, with one of them predicting the scheme could cost each farm $40,000 a year.

That is about $10,000 more than the Australian minimum wage. 

A new Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences report says the dairy industry will be more affected than any other sector, with farm production values dragged down by 4.3per cent, or more than $4000, in 2012-2013, and 4.7per cent, or $4500, in 2014-15. 

Aberdeen dairy farmer and Dairy NSW board member Scott Wheatley said the report probably underestimated the impact because Hunter farm production value could be much higher than the report’s estimate of $97,000, and the region usually relied on irrigation, which meant big power bills. 

‘‘I think it will hit us [Upper Hunter] a lot harder depending on the size of the dairy and because we have a high level of irrigation,’’ he said. 

He said a larger dairy of more than 1000 head could incur costs of between $40,000 and $50,000. 
Mr Wheatley said an operation of about 200 head spent about $45,000 a year on electricity – 5 per cent and 7 per cent of their operating costs. 

The report expects power costs to rise by about 10 per cent


One year ago: "Dairy farming families, exports attacked by carbon tax"
Monday, October 03, 2011

Canberra’s carbon tax will cripple the household budgets of dairy farming families, and give overseas competitors an unfair advantage over Victoria’s major exporter of foodstuffs. 

Bridget McKenzie, the Nationals Senator for Victoria, said this after touring Murray Goulburn’s Global Distribution Centre at Port Melbourne with the Nationals’ leader, Warren Truss. 

“The carbon tax will cost the average dairy farm between $5,000 and $7.000 each year,” Senator McKenzie said. 

 
Read more…

Are the changes to the Carbon Trade good for farmers?

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

With Climate Change Minister Greg Combet's recent announcement that Australia will be scrapping its carbon tax agreement in favour of linking with the European Union's carbon trading schemes, a lot of farmers may be asking how this change will impact them.

Click here to download a fact sheet explaining how this ETS will work moving forward. We'd love to hear your thoughts on this, which you're welcome to leave in the comments section below. For more information, please contact us.

CFI - Monster or Monster Profits? Find out at the 6th annual 2012 Carbon Farming Week!

Sunday, August 05, 2012

SAVE THE DATE! - Carbon Farming Week incorporating the 6th annual Carbon Farming Conference and Expo. Dubbo, October 22nd to 25th. 

You know, we need to give this Carbon Farming Initiative thing a fair go - after all, it could be a flow of money into regional Australia - we could build resilience in our soils and on farm. We could, as landholders, take our rightful place as heroes of the climate change debate (and be paid to do it)... But gosh (or something slightly more forceful!), it sure is a funny shape! 

Even for us, now its here, it's like giving birth to something you don’t quite recognize as your own! Trading is a reality, but now the rules and regulations are out, do we want to engage? After all, it can’t be done without landholders!

We bring together ALL the latest information and knowledge to answer your very real concerns: 
  • Why are the rules the way they are? What the heck is the 100 years rule about?
  • What is a methodology and why do I need one?
  • Can I do this myself, or hand it over to the experts? 
  • Is it just for the big boys? 
  • Is there ANY money in this that is not just in the too hard basket? 
  • If I get funding from a Grant, does it make it worthwhile?
  • I’m a grazier - when the heck will I be able to be paid for increasing soil carbon?
We’ll also explore a few other areas at the upcoming Carbon Conference: 
  • How to do a ‘project’ (that’s what its called) yourself 
  • How do I know a good deal when a project developer (that’s what they are called) comes knocking? 
  • Planting trees sounds OK - how bad is the paperwork?
  • Could I make a buck if I’m storing soil carbon as well as tree carbon? 
  • Innovation in measuring soil carbon. When can I baseline?
We already have some exciting speakers lined up - including Alastair Handley, coming all the way from Canada to share his experience in trading in soil carbon. His experience helps to put it all in perspective!

Not up to speed with all of the new jargon? No worries - The Carbon Farming 101 half-day workshop the day before the conference (Monday 22nd October) is tailor-made for you! 

Got a great product or process you want to bring to our attention? Be part of our exhibitors expo - always a great place to visit at conference. 

Is there a topic on carbon farming that you would like addressed? Or an innovation to showcase? Well, ‘come on down’ and let me know all about it. You know I want to be the first to know!

 
I am now so ‘tech savvy’, and there is always so much happening in this space now, you can keep in touch by following me on Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn.

For all the latest Conference news and to book your places now, please go to www.carbonfarmingconference.com.au. I am, as usual, your humble carbon servant and can always be reached on 02 6374 0329 or at louisa@carbonfarmersofaustralia.com.au.

Carbon not so expensive?

Thursday, July 26, 2012
So, there seems to be a picture being built up, now that the scary 'price on carbon'  is here. Such a political hot potato has detracted from the job we can all do to ensure the sustainability of our way of life, as well as ensure the security of our soils, and farms.

Firstly, Climate Spectator has reported on the research you may have heard on the news as well. Click here to read the article. Then, Crown Melbourne announced a 'carbon neutral' option for rooms -  and it costs so little to offset your stay, at  $3.80 extra per day down to just 65c per day for a conference room. This is an 'opt in'  system like the airlines.

While these businesses are buying carbon from overseas projects at the moment, once there are Australian Carbon Credit Units available, you might  be able to assist an Australian farmer as you sleep!

We will soon be announcing our first Carbon Neutral company -  a company which we have assisted to walk through this mine field. A regional business that's leading the way in this area.

A word of warning on these prices - If we are to assist our own farmers to become and maintain sustainable (regenerative) practices, the price of a tonne of carbon cannot be as low as what is offered overseas at the moment. HOWEVER, don't forget you will be assisting an Australian farmer to improve the Australian air!   

SAVE THE DATE: 2012 CARBON FARMING WEEK COMING IN OCTOBER

Our 6th annual Carbon Farming Conference and Expo, which is part of Carbon Farming Week, is coming soon - Don't miss the best 2 days (and more) on the calendar. Independent and educational, our aim is to arm people with the tools they need to make their own decisions in this area. October 22nd to 25th Dubbo!  


What Gillard should have said about the carbon tax

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

It is amazing how Governments (of all persuasions) manage to complicate things. Climate Spectator's letter is a wonderful, plain English, easy to understand explanation for why we need a price on carbon! Very hard to say no when things are explained in these terms. 

Carbon Farming: “Show Me The Money”

Wednesday, June 13, 2012
“By farmers, for farmers” is our motto. We are farmers. Everything we do and have done in the past 6 years ago to get a market started has been to see farm carbon offsets traded and farmers paid fairly for carbon captured and emissions avoided. Carbon farming is now law. The next task is to make sure farmers will want to get involved. Farmers are saying: “Show Me The Money”. This ‘quick-read report’ tells you about 5 ways we are doing this.

  • The Money Tree – The first CFI activity available to the average farmer is environmental plantings. To make it easier for landholders to come to grips with this opportunity we are working on a guidebook called The Money Tree which translates the ‘meth’* into simple ‘how to’ language. It looks at the CFI planting opportunity as well as other ways to make money from trees on farm. Out soon.

  • Opening the Market – Carbon Farmers of Australia has opened an account on an offsets register (Markit Environmental Registry, a robust global registry to provide transparency and credibility) which enables us to assist landholders to sell their offsets. We have also opened an account with the Carbon Trade Exchange so we can purchase offsets on behalf of organizations wanting to ‘go Carbon Neutral’. And we are applying to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission to be registered to provide financial services in emissions units.

  • Soil Carbon Methodology News – Our ‘meth’ has been before the expert panel** and we are working on responding to its requests. We are almost ready to go back to them, once we have nailed the measurement of methane by fitting in with the National Inventory Report methodology (which is designed to report Australia’s National Greenhouse Accounts to the IPCC rather than to measure one farm’s emissions). We are in touch with others working on other soil carbon meths. And we have been told that ‘the Department’ is developing protocols for measurement of soil carbon. (There are at least 3 scientists working on seperate measurement solutions.) It’s the Holy Grail of soil science. There are some fascinating facts about how wool is measured. (See below.***) The most important feature of our meth is the way it uses the wool industry’s solution to a similar problem to ‘defang’ the 100 Year Rule, which we believe removes a major barrier to farmer involvement.

  • Positive List News – For a land management activity (such as bioferts or tillage innovations) to be part of a CFI methodology so farmers can use it to earn offset credits it must first be accepted onto the Positive List. This is a list of activities that the Government has accepted as “Additional” (or capable of producing genuine abatement). If the activity can prove that it is not “common practice” (adopted by less than 5% of farmers in a market or location), it could be accepted for the Positive List (so long as it is not on the Negative List). We are assisting several innovators to prepare their submissions because we believe the more options that farmers have, the more farmers will get involved.

  • Going Carbon Neutral – To help build the market for CFI farm offsets in the voluntary market, we are offering companies wishing to go Carbon Neutral guidance to achieve that goal. Our first client is a bulk haulage company in regional NSW. The process is complex and difficult, but so is everything else to do with the CFI. We have established the baseline, estimated the changes the company will make to reduce emissions, identified the offsets to be purchased to bridge the gap, had a site visit by the verifiers (GHD – one of the world’s leading environmental auditors) and we are responding to their recommendations next week.

  • Don’t Be Put Off – For every negative you might hear about the CFI there is a positive that is not being mentioned. (See an example below.****) The CFI is about innovation which means solutions to problem. The negative voices are not involved in the CFI processes.  The positive are inside the process, making it better.

  • Your Questions – There is a lot to be confused about in the CFI, especially in the “show me the money” issues.. Call 02 6374 0329 or email with your questions.
* A ‘meth’ is a methodology or set of rules a farmer must follow to make money from the CFI.

** The DOIC – Domestic Offsets Integrity Committee. In the period between the return of our meth and our response the Interim DOIC has been replaced by the Permanent DOIC, which has at least three new members who have soil/agricultural expertise, including the Chairman Professor Timothy Reeves an international consultant with expertise in the development and extension of sustainable agricultural productions systems and crop-livestock integration. He is a Professorial Fellow at the Melbourne School of Land and Environment, a director of The Future Farm Industries Cooperative Research Centre, was a Senior Expert for the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) and was formerly the Director-General of the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre. Professor Lynette Abbott is the Vice Dean of the Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Science and Professor in the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Western Australia. Dr Tony Press was the Director of the Cooperative Research Centre for the Sustainable Development of Australia’s Tropical Savannas.

*** Like carbon in soil, wool is an extremely variable commodity. A 21 micron wool may have a spread of fibres from 11 microns to 37 microns, according to the Australian Wool Testing Authority. “Wool is an extremely variable commodity and wool testing is used to provide an estimate of its properties based on a sample taken from the bulk. Because wool is variable, no two samples are the same.” To overcome the problem buyers would have wit uncertainty, the industry used a statistical device called the Coefficient of Variation of Diameter. It is a measure of the variation in micron measurements along and between individual fibres, relative to the average (or mean) fibre diameter.” The precision of an individual test result is usually expressed in Confidence Limits. Normally, the precision of a test result is defined in terms of 95% Confidence Limits, i.e., the limits on either side of the "true" result within which you can expect 95% of any repeat measurements to lie.

**** You might get the impression from some presentations about the CFI that the odds are you would be paying back offsets you earned because fire wiped out your trees. The facts are these: Between 2001 and 2005, only 2.5% of Australia’s forests were impacted by wildfire each year. The odds are 37 to 1 of a fire event. The majority of wildfires do not kill the trees. The CFI requires that dead trees be replanted. The odds of that happening are far longer than you’d get on a roughie in the first at Randwick next Saturday, not Black Caviar’s @ $1.10, which is the impression given by some presenters. 

SOIL CARBON CREDITS NEWS

Tuesday, December 06, 2011

The first soil carbon methodology submitted to the Domestic Offset Integrity Committee (DOIC) has reached first base! Submitted only 8 weeks ago, it has been analysed and an issues paper written in response. We should get it in a few days. Stay tuned...

Read more.

Carbon Farming Initiative a world first

Monday, August 29, 2011
The Carbon Farming Bill passed by the Australian Senate is the world's first national scheme that regulates the creation and trade of carbon credits from farming and forestry. It is the first major legislation passed by the government with Greens support in the Senate since the Greens took the balance of power on July 1. "Green carbon is one of the four pillars of the climate package, alongside putting a price on pollution and investing in renewable energy and energy efficiency," Greens deputy leader Christine Milne said.

Australian industries which buy carbon offsets will need to ensure at least 50 percent of the offsets are domestic credits. The government estimates the carbon farming initiative will help cut Australia's carbon emissions by 460 million tonnes by 2050. "There is increased interest in the CFI from across market and the first wave of investment activity will start to unfold now the Act has been passed," said Martijn Wilder, global team leader for environmental markets at law firm Baker & McKenzie in Sydney. "But the really significant activity under the CFI will come with the approval of carbon pricing laws."

The Opposition strongly opposes putting a price on carbon and will scrap the scheme if it wins the next election, due in the second half of 2013. It would have to wait until mid-2016 before they could win enough seats in the Senate to repeal the carbon laws, and its direct action plan for tackling emissions could be delayed until 2018, according to Reuters. These and many other issues will be canvassed at the Carbon Farming Conference, 27 - 29 September, 2011 in Dubbo NSW.

Carbon tax negativity "a beat-up"

Monday, August 08, 2011
Speculation about the negative effects of the carbon tax was "a beat-up" and was causing a lot of unnecessary fear, according to agricultural consultant Steve Hossen.

He believes the effects of the carbon tax on farming will be no worse than seasonal variations. "Agricultural products go through phases of supply and demand and it ebbs and flows. When there is good demand for your product, the price will rise, and when it is over supplied, prices will be weak and will affect the farming sector. The likely impact on costs and potential inflation have been detailed by the Productivity Commission and are not as high as they're being made out to be."

Mr Hossen told Farming Weekly that Australia's carbon tax was similar to New Zealand's emissions trading scheme (ETS) introduced in 2009 with agriculture exempt until 2015, where it had made little impact."The New Zealand farming magazines are full of the normal stuff, sales, technology and farm-based chit chat. I suspect that if you ask a 100 farmers in New Zealand what they know about the carbon tax and what damage it has done, they would say 'I don't know'."

Read more.

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