If adopted this is likely to drive considerable change for rural communities. In simple terms, this means it is certain that we are going to continue to plant more trees (and lots of them) because it is a vital part of the lowering of emissions strategy.
The debate heats up considerably when you start asking about the type of planting that is planned. Is it exotic or native planting, is it planting trees for logging in 25 years' time or is it planting permanent forestry for carbon capture and then, when you have these things sorted, where should these forests be planted?
The catchphrase is "right tree, right place". This seems a fairly legitimate goal but to achieve it, the policy settings need to ensure decisions are being made on the correct basis. The potential to transform significant swathes of sheep, beef and wool-producing farmland to production forestry and permanent carbon forestry is very real and is already occurring, despite some current short-term constraints.
Figures provided by Beef and Lamb New Zealand show that the average annualised farm profit before interest, tax and rent for 2019, 2020 and 2021 is: hard hill country $300 per hectare, hill country $450 per hectare and finishing country $700 per hectare. Compare this to the equivalent analysis for pruned production forest regime incorporating carbon averaging at current prices that generates $2000 per hectare/per annum for the first rotation of trees.
This will become an even greater imbalance as the price of carbon, currently, around $70 per tonne, is predicted to soar in the future. Commentators believe that speculative institutional investment not linked to emissions or liabilities is now a factor accelerating the trend.
To combat this, some options have been suggested to change the behaviour of forestry investors that include: amending or abolishing tax incentives, land use regulations imposed, overseas investment office approvals can be reviewed.
So, what happens to the local farmer wanting to exit his traditional sheep and beef farm? Often these farms will have been in their families for generations and developed by sheer hard work, grit and determination. Often there will be a strong desire to keep the property within the family and hopefully, maybe the next generation wants to take it on, even though the financial returns aren't always brilliant.
The desire to farm livestock and the attraction of lifestyle sometimes prevails, which means the property remains without significant change.
But now sitting on the other side of the fence looking at the same land is a complicating factor; it is a forestry investor that is willing and able to pay substantially more for the property. Once acquired, they will still make a damn sight more money than the livestock farmer and will have a significant impact on the broader community.
Traditional land use or forestry, generations of work maintained or undone, rural de-population, commercial and social impacts all come into play. What a dilemma for the farmer selling the property? right tree, right place.
Next week, the impact of forestry on rural roads.