New Zealand Angers Its Farmers By Proposing Taxing Cow Burps (npr.org) 179
New Zealand's government on Tuesday proposed taxing the greenhouse gasses that farm animals make from burping and peeing as part of a plan to tackle climate change. From a report: The government said the farm levy would be a world first, and that farmers should be able to recoup the cost by charging more for climate-friendly products. But farmers quickly condemned the plan. Federated Farmers, the industry's main lobby group, said the plan would "rip the guts out of small-town New Zealand" and see farms replaced with trees. Federated Farmers President Andrew Hoggard said farmers had been trying to work with the government for more than two years on an emissions reduction plan that wouldn't decrease food production.
I have an idea (Score:4, Insightful)
How about you tax New Zealand lawmakers for farts, pee and burps. Let's see how that goes over.
Re:I have an idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Well thats all farmers are being asked to do, pay for someone to clean their mess up, because they can't.
That mess is ruining other peoples crops, causing slips, eroding the foreshore, damaging our native flora and fauna. And when that happens to them, blocking roads, floods, they expect the rest of us to pay to fix it. Likewise for droughts, they expect financial assistance. Global warming is going to make both of these situations worse.
The argument of "I" should not be punished because "Someone else" is worse, is garbage.
Should boy racers be "OK" because they are not ram raiding jewellery stores ?
Having farmers held to the same standard as other polluters is fair and reasonable, they are NOT being picked on.
Farming and tourism are at their peak, we need better, smarter, less invasive and more profitable options.
In real, inflation adjusted terms "peak" export value for meat was in the early 1900s, ever since then $ per ton has fallen in real terms, its just that we have made more of it that it looks as though there has been real growth.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Or just for talking shit. That would make a fortune for the government.
Re:I have an idea (Score:5, Insightful)
How about you tax New Zealand lawmakers for farts, pee and burps. Let's see how that goes over.
If people were a significant source of methane then I would agree that they should be taxed. However, since they are not a significant source of methane, there is no purpose in taxing them.
Re: I have an idea (Score:2)
Because taxing something magically makes the problem go away. Green credits, total bullshit. The companies just go and pollute in a different spot on the same planet. But it sure gives the good feels and fee fees are more important than anything, right?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
No one in the world but you, eh?
I'm guessing you dont have kids. I do, and it is trash everything nutters like you that are threatening their lives.
Tell me, how I should feel about that?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I find this comment quite funny - The steak eater with no kids is far more environmentally friendly than the person with kids.
The human population size, and its continuing growth is the SINGLE cause of all of the environmental problems - how you live doesn't change much
Re: I have an idea (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
USA's (and many other developed countries) population would be steady or decreasing, were it not for immigration.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/u-s-population-growth-down-immigration-birth-rates-drop-new-n1108816 (old news, but the trend has been holding)
Re: (Score:2)
Considering that the average person in the USA produces ~160 times more CO2 than the average African, who do you think should be limiting their population?
The Africans need to reduce their population more.
Africa's population is growing rapidly. America is already at ZPG.
Africans produce little CO2, but that is likely to change as their living standards rise.
Americans produce a lot of CO2, but it is declining and many of the solutions to global warming, such as better batteries, better solar panels, and better EVs, are developed by Americans.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
No one in the world but you, eh?
I'm guessing you dont have kids. I do, and it is trash everything nutters like you that are threatening their lives.
Tell me, how I should feel about that?
There's a clever scene in the UK version of UTOPIA where a woman at the bus station gets chatting and says she's thinking of the environment and so rather than fly, she's doing the trip by bus, and the other guy replies with a long, well thought out monologue, which basically boils down to, if you're worried about the environment, why the F*** did you have kids?
Now the other guy is part of a well organised extremist conspiracy to cause depopulation. So he's in the wrong. But his monologue is rationally and
Re: (Score:2)
Lets imagine for a moment that every environmentalist did everything they could on the environmental front.
Perhaps they die the moment they decide to be an environmentalist, in order to reduce resource usage.
There are still nutters like the OP that will "roll coal" on everything to mock environmentalism and deny it's existence.
On bringing kids into this, sure. But the argument presupposes that I had the kids at a time when I was as aware of our impact on the environment, and as aware that we would be as st
Re:I have an idea (Score:4)
No kidding. The enviro nutters have really really lost it. If I have to choose between 2 degrees of warming after I die and a steak, and screaming Formula 1 V8 engines.... I mean, that's honestly not even a choice, right? I'll take the steak medium rare, and wake me up when the race starts from my post-steak coma.
Current F1 cars are hybrids with a 1.6 liter V6 and a battery pack making around 1000HP in total. Apart from that I concur with your choice of medium rare.
Please explain (Score:2, Insightful)
Please explain how carbon-neutral methane from cow farts is a problem. If the transformation of biomass to methane wasn't occurring in their stomachs, it would be occurring in other places...
I can understand how removing something from deep in the earth and putting it into the atmosphere is problematic, but what's happening here is the same agricultural process which has been occurring for literally tens of thousands of years. If it was a problem, we'd have cooked ourselves by now.
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
You might wanna keep your ill-informed, reactionary brain-farts to yourself in future.
Re: (Score:3)
You might wanna keep your ill-informed, reactionary brain-farts to yourself in future.
And... this is why global warming is inevitable. Your response doesn't explain at all how carbon-neutral, organically produced methane has become a problem when it comes out of a cow instead of bacterial decomposition somewhere else. You've managed to neither convince me you're right, nor explain how this isn't just a raw power grab in the name of environmentalism.
We have been raising livestock for far longer than
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Please explain (Score:4, Informative)
If the transformation of biomass to methane wasn't occurring in their stomachs, it would be occurring in other places...
There's an incorrect assumption there. The assumption is that the biomass would still exist without the cows. That's not true. It's created to feed the cows. It wouldn't transform to methane another way because it wouldn't exist in the first place.
Re: (Score:3)
Because methane is 20x a worse greenhouse gas than CO2.
https://www.epa.gov/gmi/import... [epa.gov]
Re:Please explain (Score:5, Interesting)
Please explain how carbon-neutral methane from cow farts is a problem.
Cows are not carbon neutral in any environmental definition. They aren't sucking methane out of some source that sequestered it. They are generating it through a biological process in their gut fed from sources that grew by absorbing CO2. Methane has a far larger warming effect so any process, even one which requires no external energy inputs which converts sequestered CO2 into methane is Fucking Bad (tm).
but what's happening here is the same agricultural process which has been occurring for literally tens of thousands of years
Many processes have been occurring for literally tens of thousands of years without problems, this includes wild fires, volcanos, natural methane leaking from the ground, and cows farting. The difference is in the scale. Just as there are more humans than ever before, there are more cows than ever before. We did after all breed those oversized fartmachine for human consumption.
Scale matters.
Re: (Score:3)
Because methane has a good deal more greenhouse effect than CO2. The cow's digestion favors methane production in the biomass rather than CO2.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
why cow farts are an actual environmental problem
They aren't.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Another well thought out post backed by science and sources I see. Please address your ignorance https://www.frontiersin.org/ar... [frontiersin.org] and if you don't like that article you're free to search for the many others on the topic.
Re: (Score:2)
It's not really. This cow fart foolishness needs to stop. Saying that cow farts are damaging the planet just makes the environmental movement look foolish. Besides there are bigger issues to deal with than bovine flatulence.
Re: (Score:2)
Except it is. Industrial farming is a huge problem. It's not foolish to ignore something simply because a larger issue exists. We're not sitting here asking oil companies to go tackle cows next after fixing their methane leaks. The world can address multiple issues at once, and methane from agriculture is a significant CO2 contributor. There are plenty of studies on it.
cow burp (Score:3)
Do you get it yet? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone else starting to finally notice that all of these WEF associated countries are destroying themselves to hit imaginary carbon targets?
Re:Do you get it yet? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Do you get it yet? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Do you get it yet? (Score:2)
But but.. why not deploy the land to a huge monoculture that requires tons and tons of chemical fertilizers just to grow because the soil has been completely depleted of any growing potential? Sounds much better, doesn't it?
Re:Do you get it yet? (Score:5, Informative)
Goats are a lot more efficient than cows, and they can eat crops which grow on much more marginal land. Land which makes good grazing land for cows could also be used for growing food crops for humans.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
This is just stupid nonsense.
I didn't tell you not to eat beef. I'm not attacking your dinner.
It produces substantially less food from the same land as any other food. That's just a fact. Don't be such a moron.
Re: (Score:2)
It produces substantially less food from the same land as any other food.
But that land doesn't have to be converted into a monoculture. Many other species can coexist with grazing cows.
Re: Do you get it yet? (Score:2)
Re:Do you get it yet? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone else starting to finally notice that all of these WEF associated countries are destroying themselves to hit imaginary carbon targets?
Nope. They aren't destroying themselves. Costs are passed on as appropriate. People in China or other places which have no cows are not going out to the lowest bidder. People don't become vegan magically because meat gets a few cents more expensive. Food isn't so widely available on the global market as to be an infinite fungible resource where any change in market price results in a crash of demand.
The tax here won't have any negative impact. It will however provide finance as well as motivation to solve the problem as well as companies who are offering solutions, like the Dutch biotech company offering certain food to reduce emissions.
But you want to really destroy something, don't hit any environmental targets. After all, what has the environment ever done for us.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Do you get it yet? (Score:5, Insightful)
By artificial problem you mean a problem we created, then sure. But just realise that most of our economic activity is the result of generating a market to solve an artificial problem.
As for late-capitalist rentseeking, what you are describing is the general process of developed nations. Just think we live in a world with sewage systems and don't tolerate people just shitting in the street. Does that mean building codes requiring connections to sewage systems is "late-capitalist rentseeking"? Not at all. Welcome to a world of high standards. Enjoy the fresh air it created. If you don't like it, well you could move to some parts of the Niger delta where the rainforrest literally smells of oil.
But me, I prefer the late-capitalist rentseeking that is environmental laws and economic pressure for companies to do better.
* Adjusts tinfoil hat * (Score:3)
Unless you actually want Florida to be under water, we have to stop producing greenhouse gases. Beef farming is actually the worst 'optional' source, accounting for around 14% of emissions.
Re: (Score:2)
If you think carbon targets are 'imaginary', you're clueless.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Oh so true, in many ways.
But they don't want to decrease population density, they want to increase it. They want to crowd people into small densely packed megacity malls where foot traffic alone is allowed.
The hinterlands will still be there, but they'd be depopulated.
Re:Do you get it yet? (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Thank you for asking the important questoin!
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
You mock me, but clearly it's from a place of ignorance, intentional or otherwise. Just go listen to their own words about their own intentions.
We've known BG was up to nefarious ends for decades at this point, this is nothing new.
Re: (Score:2)
Taken individually all these articles dont seem significant. Maybe this is the first time youre hearing about it. The farmers in India were going on strike because they are being forced to cut fertilizer use to cut their carbon emissions. Canada is doing the same and many others are doing the same. If you BELIEVE that the environment was about to collapse, its a worthy goal.
Thats not the point of all of this though. THE POINT is that this carbon trading scheme is controlled by a very select few people. T
Encouragement to mix seaweed (Score:5, Informative)
If that is cheaper than the tax reduction, it would be great.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
They're probably not big fans of being consumed as a staple crop either, or at least they wouldn't if they knew that's what was happening.
Well, I'm off to the store to pick up some steaks! Seeing all those bovinae made me hungry
Re: (Score:2)
sounds like an California idea! (Score:3)
sounds like an California idea!
Re: (Score:2)
I thought weed was illegal in NZ. How do they explain their thinking?
What's the point? (Score:2)
Doesn't that all come from organic sources that removed it from the atmosphere in the first place?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
But it breaks down much faster.
Re: (Score:3)
Methane breaks down into ... CO2
Re: (Score:2)
Good. CO2 is a much less potent greenhouse gas.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Methane is a worse greenhouse gas than C02.
Then why do environmental groups ignore it so much unless it comes from a cow? Why give fracking a pass which leaks absurd amounts of methane into the biosphere? Oh right, because natural gas is methane (mostly) and it is needed to make "renewables" viable. And looking like you are solving the problem is much more important than fixing the actual problem. PR (and fundraising) trumps engineering and science for these people. Fix the leaks on the gas wells first. After that, we can talk about things tha
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
There is a problem, see the graphic (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
https://www.boredpanda.com/blo... [boredpanda.com]
Plot twist: New Zealand uses the fact that it's in the Eastern hemisphere to its advantage, making sure that it always emits just slightly less than China so that people stay focused on comparisons with China in graphics like yours while ignoring that New Zealand is right behind the Big C.
(not true, but it'd be hilarious and sad if it was)
Re: (Score:2)
How about that one place that is not doing anything.
Re: (Score:2)
Nah, not disagreeing with you at all. I fully agree with the point you're getting at (while likewise encouraging the rest of us to not let that become an excuse), but I was in a silly mood and the graphic only compared China against the Western hemisphere, neither of which pertains to NZ, so I thought I'd point out the silliness of an alternate reality in which NZ flies under the radar by simply emitting a bit less than the one country everyone is focused on: China.
Probably should have self-edited and not b
Re: (Score:2)
https://www.boredpanda.com/blo... [boredpanda.com]
Nice graphic. It's amazing how you can dishonestly lump one of the world's world's biggest emitters per capita along with a bunch of 3rd world countries with very limited emissions together and compare it to a country which has a population that exceeds that of the entire western hemisphere while also being the country most of that hemisphere has outsourced basically all production to.
There are three kinds of lies: Lies, Damned Lies, and Infographics.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There's a problem with that, China makes a huge proportion of products that the western hemisphere uses, so you're simply shifting emissions for making Western products to China and blaming China for the emissions.
I dunno, man (Score:2)
Why just cows? (Score:2)
Quite a few of their MPs look pretty gassy to me.
This almost sounds (Score:2)
Like a Monty Python sketch. Especially if you hook the cows up to some sort of meter.
Re: (Score:2)
Factory vs Cow? What is the difference? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I think the "difference" looks something like this:
There are two broad kinds of chemical contaminants.
One kind are our new chemical molecules we are making. The interact with plants, animals and ourselves in ways that we simply don't know and don't understand and are just starting to understand. They are "un-natrual" in the true sense. And while they are very useful, we in the past perhaps didn't spend enough time understand their impact. And now we need to find ways to ween ourselves from them and
Re: (Score:2)
I see. But in reality things are measurable, right? To posit that there are "lots of bugs...that like them", well, if the numbers don't work out then the numbers don't work out. You, as a human, can't exist in a real room of 99% CO2 or CH4 or whatever (extreme example), no matter how many bugs (or plants) in a hypothetical world *like* CO2 or CH4. We exist in a reality where the concentration of molecules are measurable.
I doubt anyone wants the total elimination of anything. The goal is a healthy balance
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Trickyfactory consumes oxygen with Acetalaldehyde to produce Acetic Acid and eventually methane.
Cow has trouble producing anything without oxidative phosphorylation.
Do Buffalo fart too? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I had this same thought too. The Wildebeests in Africa though are probably much more numerous.
Pepto Bismol (Score:2)
sales will increase as farmers mix it into the feed.
Not reported (Score:5, Informative)
There are no magic answers here and I'm sure there will be things they will get wrong but you have to start somewhere.
Re: (Score:2)
Knowing that the meat you chose had a lesser impact on the environment will appeal to many buyers, allowing to be sold at a high price that offsets the extra cost that an environmentally friendlier option cost to produce.
Which sounds great until the boujie assholes order their steaks online to be delivered individually wrapped in plastic and exported on a fucking airplane. Which is what happens.
Exporting beef from an island is one of the stupider things humans have thought up.
Re: (Score:2)
Regardless this is a step in the right direction and longer term is likely to have flow on improvements for locally
Red seaweed eliminates cow fart methane... (Score:2)
Require centralized meat distribution or (Score:2)
The one exception is at a well controlled butcher shop where there is a single display sample and the butcher cuts the meat on demand or gets it from the freezer.
Meat is processed from the time of slaughter until it reaches the store shelf in a frozen state. Meat can remain frozen for months... especially in proper freezers that are maintained. There is absolutely no reason the meat should ever be defrosted for sale.
The
Goddammit (Score:2)
Slashdot owes me a new keyboard after I spit out my coffee laughing at the summary.
Re: (Score:2)
Yea, because poors don't deserve to be able to eat meat. If they can't afford it, they should just work harder. Those damn poors, so many of them and they are always in the way of my SUV on the highway.
PS if you want to solve AGW, stop extracting fossil fuels from the ground. Full stop. Anything else is just you grinding a political axe. If cows were not there, another animal would be and it would be producing methane too.
Re:I'm going to have to agree (Score:5, Interesting)
Most NZ commercial produce is exported, and sold cheaper overseas than it is sold to New Zealanders.
I live in NZ - I took a trip back to the UK last month, and I could buy NZ lamb, NZ beef, NZ apples and other produce at half the price its sold at in NZ. Annually you can buy NZ kiwi fruit in Australia at half the price for twice the size than you can get it domestically.
The “poor” arent suffering here, because the “poor” arent buying it from commercial sources anyway due to it being exported - much better to buy a half cow from a friend with a lifestyle plot (a small freeholding where you can raise a few cattle) and stick it in the freezer (this is a big thing here - doing this can net you a years worth of meat for about a tenth of the price in the supermarket).
If this reduces the number of commercial farmers, good.
Re: (Score:2)
Time and again it has been shown that people rarely do what is in the long term best interests of society (and often even themselves) and would choose instead to do whatever is cheaper or convenient at the time.
The only way that people will stop eating meat is when it becomes more expensive or inconvenient to do so.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, it was about time our cannabis laws where relaxed as most people have used it a some time. If you double check you are not bringing any cannabis in with you you should be ok getting in as using it countries where it is legal is not grounds for stopping entry here, only bring it in is. Residue on clothes we get their attention but if that is all you have it will be ok, just tell them you use it back home but didn't bring any with you. However you would want to bud
Re: more Great Reset BS (Score:2)
Repackaged communism. Enjoy the hours wait bread line.
Re: (Score:2)