Had a discussion about this last night at our family meeting. I still feel like keeping my feet in the mud, and saying that no matter what the offenders have to pay, it doesn't change the fact that they are still polluting.
I agree with you Randy that it will entice more landowners to manage land properly, but define proper management. From what I've read, there are no payment plans yet for grasslands here in Canada, which is absolutely ridiculous. Grasslands will sequester far more carbon than no-tilled farmland. A friend of mine spoke with a credit broker earlier in the fall, and it looked like he'd be eligible until he mentioned that he uses sweeps on his cultivator to control weeds, instead of spraying more chemical. They told him that makes him ineligible. So he's doing good on one hand by using less chemical, but he's ruining his chances of getting paid for his carbon credits. I'm not an expert on sequesteration enough to know if the one pass he does actually releases what carbon his soils have sequestered, so I won't dispute that. The whole system seems to have a lot of holes in it is all.
My Dad made a good point last night I must admit. He said, "If they pay $45/acre, I'd take the money for 4-5 years until the land is paid for. Then scrap it. They can buy them from someone else."
Basically he's saying use it, but use it wisely. Don't become dependant on it. As I said, he's got a point.
I agree with you Randy that it will entice more landowners to manage land properly, but define proper management. From what I've read, there are no payment plans yet for grasslands here in Canada, which is absolutely ridiculous. Grasslands will sequester far more carbon than no-tilled farmland. A friend of mine spoke with a credit broker earlier in the fall, and it looked like he'd be eligible until he mentioned that he uses sweeps on his cultivator to control weeds, instead of spraying more chemical. They told him that makes him ineligible. So he's doing good on one hand by using less chemical, but he's ruining his chances of getting paid for his carbon credits. I'm not an expert on sequesteration enough to know if the one pass he does actually releases what carbon his soils have sequestered, so I won't dispute that. The whole system seems to have a lot of holes in it is all.
My Dad made a good point last night I must admit. He said, "If they pay $45/acre, I'd take the money for 4-5 years until the land is paid for. Then scrap it. They can buy them from someone else."
Basically he's saying use it, but use it wisely. Don't become dependant on it. As I said, he's got a point.
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