Gordon Campbell | Parliament TV | Parliament Today | Video | Questions Of the Day | Search

 


Farming must clean up its act

4 November 2004

Farming must clean up its act

Green Co-Leader Jeanette Fitzsimons says farmers should stop seeing environmental concerns as a threat and recognise that it is essential to their economic interests to clean up their act.

She was commenting on the sector's reaction to the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment's warning that intensive agriculture is damaging New Zealand's fresh water and soil.

"This is not a message that farmers are bad guys, but that we must work as a community to fund research into sustainable strategies, help farmers adopt them and insist that they do.

"Ultimately the measure of how successful farmers are at cleaning up their act is not how hard they are trying but how clean the water in our rivers and lakes actually is.

"Project Green, stream fencing and planting, shed effluent management and nutrient budgeting are all good initiatives. Those who have adopted them should be congratulated and the laggards encouraged to hurry up. Unfortunately every time such schemes are launched some farmers resist them.

"The dissenters from Fonterra's Clean Streams Accord, for instance, should view pollution prevention and control as an infrastructure cost that is as basic as their milking shed and accept that Fonterra is acting in their best interests in attempting to introduce such measures.

"As a society we must face the possibility that some limits will have to be put on the rapid growth of dairying. The faster and better farmers respond to the need for changing methods, the more likely it is that we can postpone or avoid this.

"The agriculture sector is still the cornerstone of our export economy, but the fundamental advantage it enjoys today springs from the historical accident of New Zealand's clean, green image. Customers are not going to continue to accept food from a system that is degrading water quality, overusing water quantity, losing soil into the sea 10-times faster rate than the rest of the world.

"It also has to be recognised that New Zealand agriculture is dependent on non-renewable energy that is a major source of the greenhouse gases that is changing the very climate on which our farming depends.

"If farming is to be become sustainable it must be rethought on the basis of ecological systems, not just on the basis of short-term economics. It cannot be economic if it is destroying its resource base and destroying the natural capital on which our future depends," said Ms Fitzsimons.

ENDS


© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Parliament Headlines | Politics Headlines | Regional Headlines

Gordon Campbell: On the Sony cyber attack

Given the layers of meta-irony involved, the saga of the Sony cyber attack seemed at the outset more like a snarky European art film than a popcorn entry at the multiplex.

Yet now with (a) President Barack Obama weighing in on the side of artistic freedom and calling for the US to make a ‘proportionate response’quickly followed by (b) North Korea’s entire Internet service going down, and with both these events being followed by (c) Sony deciding to backtrack and release The Interview film that had made it a target for the dastardly North Koreans in the first place, then ay caramba…the whole world will now be watching how this affair pans out. More>>

 

Parliament Adjourns:

Greens: CAA Airport Door Report Conflicts With Brownlee’s Claims

The heavily redacted report into the incident shows conflicting versions of events as told by Gerry Brownlee and the Christchurch airport security staff. The report disputes Brownlee’s claim that he was allowed through, and states that he instead pushed his way through. More>>

ALSO:

TAIC: Final Report On Grounding Of MV Rena

Factors that directly contributed to the grounding included the crew:
- not following standard good practice for planning and executing the voyage
- not following standard good practice for navigation watchkeeping
- not following standard good practice when taking over control of the ship. More>>

ALSO:

Gordon Campbell:
On The Pakistan Schoolchildren Killings

The slaughter of the children in Pakistan is incomprehensibly awful. On the side, it has thrown a spotlight onto something that’s become a pop cultural meme. Fans of the Homeland TV series will be well aware of the collusion between sections of the Pakistan military/security establishment on one hand and sections of the Taliban of the other… More>>

ALSO:

Werewolf Satire:
The Politician’s Song

am a perfect picture of the modern politic-i-an:
I don’t precisely have a plan so much as an ambition;
‘Say what will sound most pleasant to the public’ is my main dictum:
And when in doubt attack someone who already is a victim More>>

ALSO:

Flight: Review Into Phillip Smith’s Escape Submitted To Government

The review follows an earlier operational review by the Department of Corrections and interim measures put in place by the Department shortly after prisoner Smith’s escape, and will inform the Government Inquiry currently underway. More>>

ALSO:

Intelligence: Inspector-General Accepts Apology For Leak Of Report

The Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security, Cheryl Gwyn, has accepted an unreserved apology from Hon Phil Goff MP for disclosing some of the contents of her recent Report into the Release of Information by the NZSIS in July and August 2011 to media prior to its publication. The Inspector-General will not take the matter any further. More>>

ALSO:

Drink: Alcohol Advertising Report Released

The report of the Ministerial Forum on Alcohol Advertising and Sponsorship has been released today, with Ministers noting that further work will be required on the feasibility and impact of the proposals. More>>

ALSO:

Other Report:

Leaked Cabinet Papers: Treasury Calls For Health Cuts

Leaked Cabinet papers that show that Government has been advised to cut the health budget by around $200 million is ringing alarm bells throughout the nursing and midwifery community. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 

LATEST HEADLINES

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Parliament
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news