Beef 2024 Report

No emissions target coming to agriculture, Beef 2024 audience told

Eric Barker 10/05/2024

THE Federal Government says it will not make a specific emissions target for agriculture in its pursuit of net zero emissions by 2050.

Emissions regulation was a major topic in the seminars of this week’s Beef 2024 event in Rockhampton, with several speakers showing concern or support for what lies ahead.

With this in the background, Government representatives were keen to emphasise that no specific emissions target will be se in the overall plan to reach the company’s target to become net zero by 2050.

Agriculture is the first cab off the rank in a series of sectoral plans to reach net zero, with details of that plan yet to be released.

In a speech made the annual update for the Australian Beef Sustainability Framework, Federal agriculture minister Murray Watt said there will be no targets set for specific sectors.

“We are not going to be setting an emissions reduction target, just for the agriculture sector,” Minister Watt said.

“But we are saying that every sector has a role to play in making sure we can reach those economy-wide emissions reduction targets.

“There is work to be done on things like measurement of carbon, there are lots of different calculators out there and there is lots to be done to build capacity for the industry, with reliable partners to make the changes that are going to be needed.”

The plan was also addressed in a session with Federal Department of Agriculture secretary Adam Fennessy, Mel Brown from the Division of Farm Resilience and Nadia Bouhafs from the department of climate change and the environment.

Ms Bouhafs said the agriculture industry had set a lot of its own targets and the Government was keen to work out where it can assist.

“People are worried we are going to come in and regulate. But we are keen to lean in, not supplicate and invest where it is necessary,” she said.

“We have a sector where the majority of people don’t know their emissions profile and there are limited options to address that emissions profile. There is also a shortage of trusted advisors for producers and that is where we are looking to direct our attention.”

Many beef industry organisations have made written submissions to the net zero plan, calling for the Government to focus the industry’s targets on warming, rather than numbers of emissions and to recognise recent research suggesting the industry could be “climate neutral” in the next few years.

The panel was asked if “climate neutrality” would be part of the Government’s emissions plan going forward.

Ms Bouhafs said the Government was aware of the industry’s push to make separate regulation for methane and that metrics to reflect that should be investigated.

“We can’t simply say no, it is entirely appropriate for us to do an assessment,” she said.

“That broader conversation around the role of methane is something that we will be doing. We have had a lot of comments from the cattle industry and others outside the industry to separate out methane and I think it is appropriate for us to look at it.”

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Comments

  1. Paul Franks, 11/05/2024

    I am not worried, 2050 is a near lifetime away, and all past history shows the closer these politicians get to a target that was just made by the “pick a number” method they start backtracking like crazy.

    In any case we just need to do what the rest of the grifting carbon spruikers do and just make up any old thing for the paperwork. It is not like bureaucrats in inner city areas are going to be heading out to check up on anything, there are no gourmet coffee shops out here.

    Barring some world war or something the beef industry will still be around largely as it is today in 2050.

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