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David Fursdon CLA President

Estates in Transition Climate Change, Adaptation and Mitigation Dartington Hall Estate, Totnes 11 th June 2007. David Fursdon CLA President. Challenge of Climate Change for land management in the SW. Impacts Adaptation Mitigation First step – measurement

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David Fursdon CLA President

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  1. Estates in TransitionClimate Change, Adaptation and MitigationDartington Hall Estate, Totnes11th June 2007 David Fursdon CLA President

  2. Challenge of Climate Change for land management in the SW • Impacts • Adaptation • Mitigation • First step – measurement • CALM – Climate Aware Land Management

  3. The climate for farming • Economic climate • Political climate • The climate climate!

  4. Twin challenges for the 21st Century: food and environment • More food • Higher standards of environmental protection • Renewable energy • Climate change increases these challenges

  5. The central importance of carbon • Mankind has to wean itself off fossil fuels • From hydrocarbons . . . to what? • Nuclear energy • Hydrogen • More carbohydrates • What produces these? • Photosynthesis • In the temperate zone or the tropics?

  6. Accounts are vital • Financial and management accounting • Nutrient accounts • Water accounts • Carbon accounts

  7. CALM – Climate Accounts for Land Managers • Work in progress by the CLA, Savills • sponsored by EEDA1 • Applies IPCC2 methodology to farming activities • Measures on-farm Green House Gas (GHG) emissions CO2, N2O, CH4 from • Energy use, Fertilisers, Cultivations & Livestock • Sets against this the carbon storage in • Soils, via land use change • Trees • East of England Development Authority • International Panel on Climate Change

  8. An example, Wiltshire Estate • Land Use 2778 ha • Arable 1374 ha • Grass 620 ha • Woods 777 ha • Other 7 ha • Livestock • 2100 sheep, 160 fallow deer, 70 roe deer • Other data • Energy use – all forms • Inorganic fertilisers used • Animal manure • Crop wastes • Woodland type, age and management

  9. Carbon account for a Wiltshire Estate – summary • Emissions t Carbon% • Energy use 83 14 • Nitrous oxide , ferts & livestock 476 77 • Methane from sheep 57 9 • Total 616 100 • Carbon storage from forest growth 638 • Net carbon storage 23 • We are repeating this analysis on a wide range of other farms and estates. • We explore the difference we can make by switching to renewable energy, and changing land use.

  10. Mitigation options • All industries must improve energy efficiency • Agriculture’s particular tasks • Fertiliser efficiency • Manure management • Anaerobic digestion • Soil andpeat management • R&D is essential

  11. Unique contribution of land managers • Land management is the only sector able to make a positive contribution. • The three main routes are: • Energy substitution • Material substitution • Carbon sequestration

  12. Can these be earners?

  13. Collective actions to launch these developments • Government has to decide who is paying to internalise the climate impacts • Taxpayer • Consumer • Can land management join carbon trading?

  14. Concluding remarks • Excitement at opportunities • Concerns at implications • Long term nature of land ownership • Need for practical accounting • Steep learning curve ahead

  15. Contact details David Fursdon CLA President 16 Belgrave Square, London SW1X 8PQ www.cla.org.uk

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