What's everyones opinion on Viterra's carbon credit program?....good,bad or ugly?
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can't disagree to that but why should he be able to. Hes not the one farming it. He's not the one who chose to do no till? I Don't understand why he would get a say. It should be up to the person farming it. Does this mean then that the landlord can file for it?
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The carbon credits are only going to be good for a certain undetermined amount of years to sell to the point of saturation in the soil, in fact the sellers are hiding that information of max. carbon sequestration from you. Selling carbon credits are like putting a lean on the land. They will not be able to till the soil ever again or they may have to buy them back at the much higher price , for that reason the owner should be the to determine to sell them. For what they are paying it is not worth it.
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Just a couple points to make. Firstly, carbon aggregation contracts are typically only for the current year and past years that are eligible. Secondly, rented land is a unique situation. The carbon credit is created as the result of management decisions (no-till or min-till), but it also includes carbon sequestered in the soil. To give clarity to ownership over the carbon credits, an assisgnment agreement is often used. The assignment agreement "assigns" the carbon credits to the land operator or renter. The land renter can then contract and sell the carbon credits. How the renter and owner share the sales proceeds is thier business. Lastly, the carbon market is just getting started and it really pays to do your homework before signing up to sell your carbon credits. In any case, its not something to rush into at this time.
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