Forest owners: iwi deal an opportunity lost
FOREST OWNERS ASSOCIATION
MEDIA RELEASE
23 November
2009
Forest owners: iwi deal an opportunity lost
Forest owners say pre-1990 forests are likely
to be worth next to nothing because of the ETS. Owners have
been landed with the massive liabilities of being part of
the scheme, but can’t earn carbon
credits.
“Compensating iwi by giving them access
to DoC land to plant forests for carbon and wood recognises
this fact, but iwi are the only ones getting this special
compensation. It’s unjust, as well as being an opportunity
lost,” says Peter Berg, president of the Forest Owners
Association.
“The compensation will cost
taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars in real and
opportunity costs. It will cost far more than the package
the industry has been asking for: the right to offset these
forests; to plant them somewhere else after
harvest.”
He says that offsetting, if it was
adopted before it was provided for in an international
climate change agreement, would result in the government
paying for the emissions resulting from deforestation on
existing sites. But the government would get this money back
as the offset forests grew on their new
sites.
“Providing offsetting would be a win all
round. It would provide a badly needed confidence boost for
the forest industry and the long-run cost to the taxpayer
would be small. Indeed, if the offset plantings were
designed to maximise carbon storage, the government could
actually make a profit on the
transaction.
“Instead, the government has chosen
to give one sector of the industry free access to DoC land
for planting and full ownership rights of the carbon and
wood produced.”
Mr Berg says it is important to
recognise that iwi who didn’t get their forests as part of
a treaty settlement won’t benefit from the deal. They are
in the same boat as other pre-1990 owners.
“The
only positive the industry can take from the deal is that
the government has recognised the very real valuation issues
relating to pre-1990 forests.
“None of these
forests have been sold since the detail of the ETS became
clear. But if, as the experts expect, they have zero or very
low value this is going to have huge effects on the balance
sheets of many forestry companies. It is also going to
create major issues for local bodies in forestry areas, when
a major chunk of their rating base
evaporates.”
[ends]