02/11/06
            The recently published Stern Report has highlighted the fact that
              climate change raises a number of challenges for every industry,
              not least the farming industry. NFUS is stressing that farming
              has huge potential to contribute to the fight against climate change
              and to be instrumental in addressing food security concerns at
            the same time. 
              
              James Withers, NFU Scotland Deputy Chief Executive, said: 
              “Scottish agriculture is ready and willing to contribute
                to the fight against climate change and there are a number of
                ways in which this can be done. 
              “Renewables projects with an agricultural component have
                enormous potential and must be supported. These range from biomass
                plants which process woody material, animal carcass waste processing
                for electricity and biodiesel production, the manufacture of
                crop derived roadfuels and methane recovery and use from digested
                slurry. 
               “Scottish producers should be preferred suppliers of
                food and fuel so as to maintain productive capacity in case climate
                change or other effects elsewhere in the world threaten food
                and fuel imports into the UK. This would also help mitigation
                of climate change pressures by reducing food-miles and fuel-miles.
                In many cases, fossil fuels are burnt needlessly to import products
                we are perfectly placed to produce in this country. 
              “However, increased ‘green taxes’ aimed at
                the agricultural industry are not the answer. Increasing taxes
                on 4 x 4 vehicles for example will hit completely the wrong target.
                For the farming industry 4 x 4 vehicles are a necessity not a
                luxury. Blunt economic instruments have always been successful
                in raising revenue for Treasury but not in delivering meaningful
                environmental benefits. 
              “It’s not what farmers drive that’s important,
                but their ability to ensure driving is much more environmentally-friendly.
                Far better that effort is put into assisting them to produce
                green fuels than imposing green taxes upon them. We need agriculture
                within the UK to continue in its efforts to ameliorate climate
                change, but also to provide us with food security when faced
                with global food shortages.” 
            
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