December 30, 2013

 
Ireland claims 'major breakthrough' on agriculture emissions
 


The Minister for Agriculture and Food Simon Coveney has claimed that the Republic of Ireland has achieved a "major policy breakthrough" on climate change at European Commission level.

 

Coveney said senior officials at the commission were accepting Ireland's argument that agriculture and forestry should be treated differently from other sectors.

 

The EU's approach to climate change may now change because of the case advanced by Ireland that agriculture be treated as a distinct category, or "third pillar".

 

"The commission is now looking at a third category in terms of target setting for the first time. There is the traded sector and then the non-traded sector which includes transport and power. Now they are saying there is a third pillar. It is around food and land use."

 

Coveney has argued it would be counter-productive asking a country like Ireland to slash emissions in agriculture, resulting in a dramatic reduction in food output to the EU and elsewhere from this country. He has said the demand for food would be unchanged and would instead be met by countries which produced food in a much less sustainable manner and with a larger carbon-footprint.

 

Ireland is an outlier compared to other EU countries in that agriculture comprises a much larger proportion of the economy here than elsewhere. Ireland faces onerous targets of 20% emissions reductions by 2020 (compared to 1990 levels) in the non-traded sector, with agriculture accounting for about a third of that amount.

 

At the same time, the State, through its Harvest 2020 programme, is expanding the agriculture and food sector and is targeting substantial continuing growth in the beef and dairy sectors, especially with the ending of quotas.

 

Coveney said commission officials at senior level were accepting the argument advanced by the Government for the first time, in the context of the 2030 climate change and energy framework. However, he conceded it had yet to be accepted at the highest political level.

 

Coveney pointed out that one way or another there was a global need for 50% more food in volume terms over the next 30 years.

 

He denied the Government was seeking a "free pass" on its obligations saying it was arguing that sustainability should be the measurement. He said he wanted Ireland to become the most sustainable food producer in the world.

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