News 
 State News 
 Agribusiness and General 
 Finance 
 Growing landholder interest in carbon sink opportunities 

Growing landholder interest in carbon sink opportunities

06 Feb, 2012 03:00 AM
THE number of landholders investigating carbon sink opportunities with CO2 Australia, the largest provider in the sector, has increased by 681% since the introduction of the Federal Government’s Carbon Farming Initiative (CFI) in August 2011.

“Over the last six months, we’ve seen a massive increase in the number of farmers asking about establishing carbon sinks on their farms,” CO2 Australia land acquisition manager Mark Ritchie said.

“This high level of interest is very positive for Australia’s growing carbon industry and also indicates that landholders understand how carbon sinks can enhance farm productivity and improve the landscape.

“A number of landowners are enquiring about registering existing tree plots for carbon credits for the CFI.

However, in the vast majority of cases these plantings are ineligible for the federal government scheme," Mr Ritchie added.

CO2 Australia has more than 22,000 hectares of carbon sink plantings (equating to more than 33 million trees) under its management and is the largest and most experienced operator in the sector.

The organisation said that the advantages of landholders partnering with CO2 Australia in carbon sinks on their properties are numerous.

As well as the financial benefits landholders receive, carbon sinks provide fantastic shelter belts for livestock, and reduce waterlogging, salinty and wind erosion.

"CO2 Australia-managed tree plantings have contributed enormously to livestock production including lambing. The shocks and stresses of the hot and cold weather to sheep and cattle can cause mortalities, but a farmer near Dubbo, NSW, was shearing his sheep when it was pretty cold in October and he didn’t lose any sheep due to the shelter provided by the trees," Mr Ritchie said.

Most carbon sink plantings under CO2 Australia’s management consist of a small range of mallee tree species, another reason landholders have not been able to cash in on past tree plantings.

“The trade off for using the one variety is being able to consistently supply carbon to clients and mallee trees allows us with certainty to determine the amount of carbon to be sequestered,” Mr Ritchie said.

“Mallee trees have a long lifespan and are also fire tolerant. They will regrow after a fire, so any loss of carbon is temporary.

“We also need a species which can handle harsh climatic conditions and is drought tolerant.”

CO2 Australia has carbon sink sites in NSW, Victoria and Western Australia, and is also investigating opportunities in Queensland.

The minimum landholding set aside for a plantation is 50 hectares (125 acres) and the life of the agreement is usually 100 years, which gives certainty to the amount of carbon which will be sequestered from the trees.

The CFI allows landholders to participate in carbon reduction projects including planting trees, increasing soil carbon and reducing on-farm emissions.

CO2 Australia has been operating since 2004 and was the first organisation to achieve accreditation for reforestation projects under both the NSW Greenhouse Gas Reduction Scheme and the Federal Government’s former Greenhouse Friendly™ Program.

Print
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size

comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Yeah, right, these people will say just about anything to catch a sucker. "Pretty cold in October" indeed.

Sign up for this crap and you will deserve every bit of contempt from your children that they heap on you in twenty years time.

Planted trees behave just like weeds. Put them in your paddock and pretty soon you will have a paddock full of trees. And any tree that grows from seed is treated as native forest that you cannot clear.

Don't say you weren't warned.

Posted by Ian Mott, 6/02/2012 11:27:50 AM, on The Land
Landholders can receive carbon credits for natural regeneration under certain circumstances. For more information contact Australian Carbon Traders

We have orders for 225,000 tonnes now

enquiries@australiancarbontraders.com

www.australiancarbontraders.com


Posted by Ben Keogh, 6/02/2012 3:26:51 PM, on The Land
Anyone stupid enough to alienate their land in perpetuity for only $23/tonne will deserve every ounce of contempt their children heap on them.

These carbon spivs refuse to recognise that the permanent alienation of part of your land only makes the rest of the operation less viable. $230/tonne would still be high risk.

If you must gamble then put it through the pokies so at least some community benefit might result.

Posted by Ian Mott, 8/02/2012 10:22:41 AM, on The Land
Beware Bureaucrats Bearing Gifts with apologies to the orginator of 'beware of strangers bearing gifts'. Pretty much the same thing though. After all what is stranger than a bureaucrat bearing a gift.

We had a local presentation by a pair from the Dept of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency last Oct about Carbon Farming Initiatives.

Exciting stuff - if you are a koala.

Tree planting was about the only 'initiative' on the radar and who in there right mind would risk that for a 100 years. If the trees die before then you have to surrender your payment.

Posted by daw, 8/02/2012 4:16:42 PM, on The Land
That was "beware of Greeks bearing gifts", Daw. And it was a reference to that wooden horse at Troy. But it is still most appropriate to the climate mafia.

Plant trees in one paddock and all your other paddocks will have a serious and constant seedling problem. If you postpone your pasture maintenance activities for any reason the departmental scum will map it as "remnant vegetation". The trees get bigger and bigger and the grass grows less and less until the farm is no longer viable. And your kids get the rates bill on a national park.

Posted by Ian Mott, 9/02/2012 10:52:18 AM, on The Land

post a comment


Screen name  *
Email address  *
Remember me?
Comment  *
 
We invite and encourage our readers to post comments. Comments are moderated and will appear as soon as our editor has approved them. When posting comments you agree to be bound by our Terms and Conditions.

Most popular articles




The Land







Weather brought to you by:

Weatherzone

Classifieds

Front Page

Current Issue
Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use | Advertising Terms | Copyright © 2012. Fairfax Media.
 SEND...
 SAVE...
 SHARE...