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Investment needed for net zero transition – Livestock Board vice chair

Environment and climate
Oli Lee

Oli Lee

NFU Livestock Board vice chair and Midlands chair

Livestock Board vice chair Oli Lee

As the Climate Change Committee prepares to work on its seventh carbon budget, NFU Livestock Board vice chair Oli Lee tells us what happened when a member of the committee joined him on farm to see the challenges first-hand.

All farmers are now on the front line of climate change as we’ve seen some of the wettest winter weather on record and one of the coolest summers since 2015. With further recent weather warnings and a month’s worth of rain falling in one day, it looks like these ‘freak’ weather events are becoming the norm.

As a Leicestershire livestock farmer, I believe it’s important that we continue to take collective action on our journey towards climate-friendly farming.

Not least because it has been legislated by government, but because it’s important that we all focus on our productivity, to ensure our businesses remain adaptable to changing weather patterns.

How we get there is challenging and a complicated process. We cannot do it alone. Our sector has the expertise and resources to focus on producing food alongside enhancing the environment and biodiversity of our farms, but we need investment to do so.

This is why I found myself on a mixed farm in Norfolk recently with a member of the UK’s CCC (Climate Change Committee) and two of their staff.

The meeting was organised by the NFU to ensure that farming’s voice is heard as the CCC works on its seventh carbon budget, which seeks to advise government on how emission reductions will be shared out across the economy between 2038-2042.

Barriers to engagement

Feeling a little in awe after finding out that the CCC member walking alongside me in the Broads also consults on net zero transitions for whole countries, including our liberté loving French colleagues, we got to the meat of the subject.

Seeing how the farm’s suckler beef herd grazed next to a hugely biodiverse area, discussions included the sustainable nature of British livestock farming and clearly making our sector visible as a sink for greenhouse gases rather than just a source.

We also spoke about the disconnect between climate policy and trade policy and the value of not offshoring our food security.

And, most importantly, the barriers to farmers engaging with the climate change agenda.

Everything has a cost, including the transition to net zero and it is vital that the CCC and government recognise that.”

NFU Livestock Board vice chair Oli Lee

‘Everything has a cost’

Barriers include the challenges of using carbon calculators, improving the consistency of data inputs which should supported through the livestock information service and provision of other management information that can help drive genetic improvements.

Everything has a cost, including the transition to net zero and it is vital that the CCC and government recognise that.

I’m confident that our sector has the ambition to meet the government’s net zero targets. ʼһlivestock board has developed a sector resilience plan that sets out how climate resilience makes good business sense.

However, we need to have profitable businesses if we are to invest in and use data to inform management decisions on farm. We need investment from government to make these changes.

The best way for the government to treat British farming as an ally for its climate targets is by using the Autumn Budget to announce an increase of the multi-year agriculture budget to £5.6 billion.

Modelling from the fully independent Andersons Centre suggests a budget increase is needed to effectively support the delivery of the government’s own statutory environmental ambitions and a balanced agricultural policy.

This would allow for additional actions under SFI specifically targeting net zero and mean that businesses are able to invest in the latest infrastructure and technology.

The Autumn Budget will be announced on 30 October: Make your voice heard and write to your MP.

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