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New Zealand
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Farmers in New Zealand fight pine forests to save sheep pasture

Pine plantations earn subsidies to soak up carbon emissions, but concern over the farm-to-forest project led to a moratorium on any new conversions

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Sheep grazing at a farm in Ashburton, New Zealand, in 2019. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

New Zealand sheep farmers are fighting to stop the loss of pasture to fast-spreading pine plantations, which earn government subsidies to soak up carbon emissions.

Concern over the scale of the farm-to-forest switch led the government to impose a moratorium in December on any new conversions not already in the pipeline.

But farmers say forestry companies are flouting the clampdown.

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Last month, farmers launched a ‘Save our Sheep’ campaign to reverse the loss of productive farmland.

Sheep numbers have plummeted to around 23 million, down from a peak of around 70 million in the 1980s, according to official figures. Falling wool prices and rising milk and beef costs initially drove the decline, but the emissions trading since 2008 has added to the strain.

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The government is now investigating potential breaches of its moratorium by forestry companies, which have been buying up farmland as recently as June.

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