By Viv Forbes, Albrecht Glatzle, and others

Any quotes below may be attributed to Viv Forbes

cowfartGrasslands and arable land cover just 10% of Earth’s surface but (with the oceans) they produce all of our food and fiber. But the productivity and health of our grasslands, farms, and livestock are under threat from global warming alarmists and green preservationists.
We are afflicted by climate crazies and methane madness. It is poor public policy that condones restrictions on grazing operations, or taxes on grazing animals, based on disputed theories that claim that bodily emissions from farm animals will cause dangerous global warming.
New Zealand was the first cattle country to propose a “livestock fart tax”. Four hundred farmers then drove 20 tractors to the Parliament in Wellington waving placards and banners saying “STOP THE FART TAX”. The proposal was laughed out of Parliament. But the war on farmers and livestock continues.

Ruminants such as sheep, cattle, and goats cannot make long-termsheepadditions to the gases in the atmosphere – they just recycle atmospheric carbon and nitrogen nutrients in a cycle-of-life that has operated for millennia.
Grazing ruminant animals with their emission products have always been part of healthy grasslands. Only when large numbers of animals are fed artificially and confined on the one patch of land do pollution problems appear.
Many otherwise genuine environmentalists are assisting the destruction of grasslands with their native pastures and endangered grass birds. Blinded by their love for the trees, they neglect the grasses, legumes, herbs and livestock that provide their food. In Australia they pass laws to protect weedy eucalyptus invading the grasslands but ignore the valuable and declining Mitchell grass that once dominated Australia’s treeless plains.
biofuels2Grasslands are also under threat from cultivation for biofuel crops, from subsidized carbon credit forests, and from the remorseless encroachment of fire-prone government reserves and pest havens.
Trying to control atmospheric carbon-bearing gases with taxes is futile and anti-life. Even if CO2 levels in the atmosphere doubled, or more, the climate effect if any, is probably beneficial (warmer at night and near the poles and with more moisture in the atmosphere). More importantly, all life on Earth already benefits from the additional CO2 plant nutrient in the atmosphere, and would benefit even more were CO2 levels to double.
Nitrogen is the most abundant natural gas in the atmosphere, inhaled in every breath and an essential component of all protein. Grazing livestock merely recycle a few compounds of nitrogen, all of which either return to the atmosphere or provide valuable nitrogen fertilizers for the plants they graze on.
We also have the modern methane madness. Mobs of grazing ruminants have been roaming the grasslands since cave-man days. Methane has also been seeping from marshes, bubbling out of oceans, leaking from coal seams and oil seeps and being released in huge quantities from volcanoes. So what more can a few domestic cows and sheep do to affect this? Methane from domestic ruminants is a non-problem.
It is a foolish and costly fantasy to believe that Earth’s climate can badguysbe controlled by passing laws, imposing taxes, attempting to manipulate the bodily emissions of farm animals or trying to prevent farmers from clearing woody weeds invading their pastures.
The Clexit (ClimateExit) Coalition, comprising over 190 representatives from 26 countries, has formed the Clexit Grassland Protection Group with nine representatives from five big grazing countries.

This is an important problem. You can access the full report at —

http://clexit.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/grasslands.pdf

or http://clexit.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/grasslands.doc
The Clexit Grassland Protection Group is represented and supported by:

Viv & Judy Forbes,  Sheep and cattle breeders, Qld, Australia
Albrecht & Eva-Maria Glatzle,  Cattle graziers, Paraguay
Howard Crozier, Former Exec Councillor NSW Farmers Association
Robin Grieve, Chairman, Pastural Farming Climate Research,
New Zealand
, http://www.farmcarbon.co.nz/
Neil & Esther Henderson, Sheep and cattle farmers, New Zealand
Jim and Nancy Lents, Anxiety Herefords, Oklahoma, USA

Don Nicolson, Former President, Federated Farmers of New                      Zealand
Pownall Family, Fifth generations graziers on Carfax Cattle Co.,                 Australia

Petra Scholtz, Wildlife breeder, South Africa

 

NOTE:  Featured cartoon courtesy of www.clexit.net.