Video | Business Headlines | Internet | Science | Scientific Ethics | Technology | Search

 


NZ Greenhouse Gas Research Centre opened

Broad science partnership to tackle New Zealand’s agricultural greenhouse gases
New Zealand Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Research Centre opened

Increasing agriculture’s ability to create wealth for New Zealand in a carbon constrained world is the mission of the Government’s New Zealand Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Research Centre opened today by the Prime Minister John Key in Palmerston North at AgResearch’s Grasslands campus.

The Centre is a partnership between AgResearch, DairyNZ, Landcare Research, Lincoln University, Massey University, NIWA, Plant & Food Research, the Pastoral Greenhouse Gas Research Consortium (PGgRc) and Scion.

Centre Director Dr Harry Clark welcomed the opening of the facility. ‘“The Centre will lead and co-ordinate research to reduce methane and nitrous oxide emissions, and to increase the rates of soil carbon accumulation. This research will underpin the development of novel, credible and cost-effective low greenhouse gas (GHG) emitting production systems that provide farmers with practical options for reducing emissions,” said Dr Clark.

The Centre will also play a key role in New Zealand’s science input into the world-wide initiative, the Global Research Alliance (GRA), announced in Copenhagen last year.

“The Centre co-ordinates research and brings together key scientists from up and down New Zealand as they work on one of the biggest challenges of our time,” said Dr Clark.

“While agriculture creates about half of New Zealand’s GHG emissions, it also generates around 44 per cent of New Zealand’s merchandise export earnings and so is a critical contributor to New Zealand’s livelihood. The challenge is for the Centre to find ways for New Zealand to meet its international GHG emission obligations without reducing agricultural output.”

The Centre will:
1. Manage projects which are directly contracted through the Centre.
2. Undertake appropriate co-ordination of activities both within New Zealand and internationally.
3. Manage reporting of progress against strategy and communications both within New Zealand
and internationally.
4. Coordinate ongoing development of a national research strategy in the area.
5. Actively engage in the promotion and widespread adoption of proven cost effective technologies.

Research projects will be undertaken throughout the country, with details of the projects supported and co-ordinated by the Centre to be announced in April 2010.

ENDS

 
 
 
 
 
Business Headlines | Sci-Tech Headlines

 

Stats: Rugby World Cup Visitors Spent $390 Million

Visitors to New Zealand for the Rugby World Cup spent around $390 million, according to the International Visitors Survey released by the Ministry of Economic Development today. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: SCF Accused Name Suppression Lapses

Name suppression for the last two people accused of committing a $1.7 billion fraud though failed lender South Canterbury Finance lapsed today. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Over—paying Just As Risky As Underpaying, Says Hudson

Overpaying employees is just as risky as underpaying them, according to recruitment firm Hudson’s latest report, as no organisation wants to be represented by someone driven by price. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Business: Lloyd Morrison Leaves Big Shoes To Fill In NZ Leadership

With the untimely death of Wellington businessman and identity Lloyd Morrison at the age of 54, New Zealand has lost one of its singular characters, let alone business leaders. More>>

ALSO:

NIWA: Experts Set Sail To See How The Ocean Creates Clouds

Next week, NIWA’s research vessel Tangaroa will set sail for the Chatham Rise, for an international study of how microscopic organisms in the surface waters may affect the creation of clouds. This work is important because, “We need to understand ... More>>

ALSO

 
 
 
 
 
Sci-Tech
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news