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New Zealand proposes taxing cow burps, pee to tackle climate change

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand - New Zealand's government on Tuesday proposed taxing the greenhouse gasses that farm animals make from burping and peeing as part of a plan to tackle climate change.The government said the farm levy would be a world first, and that farmers should be able to recoup the cost by charging more for climate-friendly products.But farmers quickly condemned the plan.

Federated Farmers, the industry's main lobby group, said the plan would "rip the guts out of small-town New Zealand" and see farms replaced with trees.Federated Farmers President Andrew Hoggard said farmers had been trying to work with the government for more than two years on an emissions reduction plan that wouldn't decrease food production.FILE - A photo taken on August 10, 2022, shows cows being milked on a dairy farm near Cambridge in New Zealand's Waikato region. (WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)"Our plan was to keep farmers farming," Hoggard said.

Instead, he said farmers would be selling their farms "so fast you won’t even hear the dogs barking on the back of the ute (pickup truck) as they drive off."Opposition lawmakers from the conservative ACT Party said the plan would actually increase worldwide emissions by moving farming to other countries that were less efficient at making food.New Zealand’s farming industry is vital to its economy.

Dairy products, including those used to make infant formula in China, are the nation’s largest export earner.There are just 5 million people in New Zealand but some 10 million beef and dairy cattle and 26 million sheep.The outsized industry has made New Zealand unusual in that about half of its greenhouse gas emissions come from farms.

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