Farmers are weighing up options for paying for the greenhouse gas emissions of their industry.
Last week three options were presented at a roadshow in Whanganui, put on by Beef + Lamb NZ and DairyNZ. About 70 attended - mainly sheep and beef farmers and rural professionals.
Governments had wanted to put agriculture into the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) since 2003, Beef + Lamb NZ chief executive Sam McIvor said.
If that happened they would pay for their greenhouse gas emissions through the processors of their milk and meat, and the money would go to the Government. By 2050 they could be paying $6 per kilo of lamb and $3.20 per kilo of milk solids.
"The very clear conclusion for us is that that would have dire consequences for the New Zealand primary sector," McIvor said.