1 / 37

Climate change adaptation: Land-based primary industry

Climate change adaptation: Land-based primary industry. Robyn Dynes, Jeremy Bryant, Paul Newton, Val Snow, Mark Lieffering (AgRresearch) Hamish Brown, Derek Wilson (Plant & Food) Tim Payn & Peter Beets (Scion). Land-based industries. Export earnings $25b Employment

nhi
Download Presentation

Climate change adaptation: Land-based primary industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate change adaptation:Land-based primary industry Robyn Dynes, Jeremy Bryant, Paul Newton, Val Snow, Mark Lieffering (AgRresearch) Hamish Brown, Derek Wilson (Plant & Food) Tim Payn & Peter Beets (Scion)

  2. Land-based industries • Export earnings • $25b • Employment • 156 000 people in Ag, forestry & Fishing • 75 000 in food & beverage manufacture ? • food exports to world • NZ feeds 17 million people [Source: INFOS series http://www.stats.govt.nz/products-and-services/infos/ AgResearch analysis. http://www.stats.govt.nz/analytical-reports/labour-market-statistics-2008.htm Food export: AgResearch analysis from: MAF SONZAF (2008), ibid year to 31 March 2008

  3. Land-based primary industry = $25b [Source: INFOS series http://www.stats.govt.nz/products-and-services/infos/ AgResearch analysis)

  4. Our competitive advantage • Temperate growing conditions • relatively free of pests and diseases • efficient production systems • flexible and innovative producers • farmers are consistently adapting • Adverse weather events • Commodity prices • Labour shortage

  5. 1990 2001 2008

  6. Planted Forests – climate change impacts, mitigation and adaptation Impacts: Productivity, weeds, pests and diseases, fire, wind Mitigation: Carbon Forests Energy Forests Lower GHG footprint productivity Adaptation: Breeding strategies Siting and silviculture New technologies

  7. Focus on fungal diseases • Cyclaneusma and Dothistroma • Needle cast fungi • Prefers warm humid conditions • Lower needle mass = slower growth • Sites with Cyclaneusma average 20% below maximum productivity • Dothi can be treated (copper oxychloride) • Up to 200,000ha sprayed annually • No treatment for Cyclaneusma • Adaptation responses • Spraying • Breed tolerant genotypes • Plant different species • Move the forests

  8. Possible impact of scenarios • Scenarios suggest different impacts on the forests • Regional differences are apparent

  9. Adaptation responses for fungal diseases • Breed resistant genotypes • Likely only to offset 25% of fungal impact • Slow process • Change species • Other species do not get infected • Only good if productivity as high as for current species • Move the forests • Focus on warmer sites where rainfall remains @ today's levels • Land price and infrastructure issues • More chemicals • Only works for dothistroma • Added costs, lower profitability

  10. Adaptation Strategies for Planted Forests • Improved understanding of climate effects on forest processes • In depth scenario analysis to drive development of adaptation strategies • National approach to development of adaptation strategies • A portfolio of approaches will be needed and will include: • New genotypes, new forest systems, establishment of forests on different sites

  11. Broad acre cropping – the arable sector • Grain • Wheat, Barley, Oats, Maize, Peas • Small seeds • Grass, Clover, Vegetable, Forage • Vegetable • Potato, Sweet corn, Onions, Squash, Brassica • Forages • Cereal, Annual ryegrass, Brassica, Maize • Pastoral Phase • Grass/clover pastures

  12. Climate change – the impact on cropping • Increased production potential • Doubling CO2 will increase growth 30% • Decreased duration • Crops develop faster in higher temperature • Crop growing areas shift • Increased nutrient demand • More N, P, K and S needed to exploit increased production potential

  13. Potential production (fully irrigated) High carbon Rapidly decarbonising Current

  14. Water !!! • East coast • Hotter, windier, less rain, more variability • Increased water demand in irrigated crops • Decreased yield in dryland crops • Greater chance of crop failure (multiple years) • West coast • More rain (on average), more variable (???)

  15. Water use and production + ET CO2 - Rain CO2 - Irrig + ET - Rain - Fertiliser

  16. Adaptation in areas getting dryer with adequate water • Irrigated • Increased crop demand • More efficient irrigation systems • More efficient crop species • Irrigation schemes • Dryland • Less rainfall • Drought avoidance techniques • More resilient crops • Financial buffers • Ensure nutrient supply • Exploit higher yield potential • Longer duration crops • Opportunities for multiple crops per year • Wider variety of suitable crops

  17. Fruit Crop Impacts & Adaptations • Poor flowering from inadequate winter chilling • New varieties with lower chill requirements • Increased vegetative vigour • Pruning strategies, dwarfing root stock, chemical flowering • Fruit damage from extreme events (eg hail storms, sunburn) • Longer growing season giving higher quality and yield • Southward movement of production

  18. Pastoral sector adaptation – lambs tailed/marked per ewe put to ram • Adaptive strategies: • grazing systems • pasture quality • Nitrogen • ultrasonic pregnancy scanning • Hogget mating. • Improved ewe prolificacy. [Source: sheep numbers and lamb numbers spreadsheets at http://www.maf.govt.nz/statistics/pastoral/livestock-numbers/, AgResearch analysis. Years are to 30 June] (Photo: AgResearch)

  19. Pastoral farming – case study Dairy Farm

  20. High/low carbon vs case study Dairy Farm

  21. Manawatu dairy farms • Clay & sandy soils 2030 2080

  22. Soil map of part of the Manawatu Palmerston North Coastline Manawatu River Sandy soils Clay soils Tararua Ranges 15 km Source: http://gisportal.landcareresearch.co.nz

  23. Pasture production - increases in Manawatu Annual production Tonnes dry matter 2000 10.7 2030 12.0 2080 12.4 2000 9.4 2030 10.6 2080 11.5 EcoMod

  24. Pasture quality declines • change pasture composition • invasion C4 grasses

  25. Pastoral farming – case study Dairy Farm • Manawatu • 128 hectares • calve mid to late July • 260 days in milk • 340 kg milksolids/cow • Conservation of hay and silage • buy-in maize silage • no nitrogen fertiliser

  26. Cows produce less milk • despite growing more grass • Less energy = less milk

  27. Production and profitability decline

  28. Adaptation- the opportunities • more grass • lower quality • = cows must be allowed to eat more • = high risk further decline quality Target = matching pasture cover

  29. Adaptation- the opportunities Adaptation

  30. Adaptation captures the benefits-more milk Adaptation strategies • Earlier calving date • = more milk in July/Aug • Higher stocking rates • = more milk overall • change with time

  31. Adaptation – the bottom line More cows Cows eat more Cows milk for longer

  32. Adaptation – Land-based industries • unknown: • weeds, pests, diseases • systems complexity • unintended consequences • community & regulator impacts • Adverse events –high cost to business & community • storms • flooding • fire

  33. Adaptation: Land-based industries • adaptation = incremental change = business as usual • enterprise resilience will depend on manager responses • Perceived risk • Tools and strategies to respond • tools, technology and knowledge available in many areas • More tools required • Higher technical skills required for success • adopting these tools within complex farming systems farming within multiple pressures is the real challenge. • unintended consequences • GHG production • Impact of regulation • Community expectations • Current strategies will only in-part meet tomorrows issues

  34. Thank you

  35. Acknowledgements • Barbara Hock, Lucy Manning – Geospatial analysis • Lindsay Bulman – background information on fungal diseases • FRST for support through the ‘Mitigation of Climate Change and the Role of Forests’ Programme CO4X04706

More Related