New Zealand has unveiled a plan to tax sheep and cattle burps in a bid to tackle one of the country's biggest sources of greenhouse gases.
It would make it the first nation to charge farmers for the methane emissions from the animals they keep.
New Zealand is home to just over five million people, along with around 10 million cattle and 26 million sheep.
Almost half the country's total greenhouse gas emissions come from agriculture, mainly methane.
However, agricultural emissions have previously not been included in New Zealand's emissions trading scheme, which has been criticised by those calling for the government to do more to stop global warming.
"There is no question that we need to cut the amount of methane we are putting into the atmosphere, and an effective emissions pricing system for agriculture will play a key part in how we achieve that," New Zealand's climate change minister James Shaw said.
How is methane emitted?
Around 40% of CH4 comes from natural sources such as wetlands but the bigger share now comes from a range of human activities, ranging from agriculture, such as cattle and rice production, to rubbish dumps.
One of the biggest sources is from the production, transport and use of natural gas and since 2008 there has been a big spike in methane emissions, which researchers believe is linked to the boom in fracking for gas in parts of the US.
In 2019, methane in the atmosphere reached record levels, around two-and-a-half times above what they were in the pre-industrial era.
What worries scientists is that methane has real muscle when it comes to heating the planet. Over a 100-year period it is 28-34 times as warming as CO2.
Over a 20-year period it is around 84 times as powerful per unit of mass as carbon dioxide.
However, there is much more CO2 than methane in the atmosphere and individual molecules of it can remain there for hundreds of years.
Latest Stories
-
NDC minority did not help the governance of the country – Afenyo-Markin
5 minutes -
NDC gov’t will struggle to fund social intervention programmes – Afenyo-Markin
11 minutes -
Man arrested for vandalising property at Parliament
13 minutes -
NDC’s internal struggle over who succeeds Mahama in 2028 has started – Afenyo-Markin claims
18 minutes -
NDC’s mischievous campaign and propaganda will soon expose them – Afenyo-Markin
39 minutes -
African banks to remain exposed to domestic, global operating environments risks – Fitch
41 minutes -
Premier League: Wolves agree deal for Pereira to become new boss
43 minutes -
Fitch expects outlook for sub-Saharan African sovereigns to be neutral in 2025
44 minutes -
NDC’s Joseph Yamin allegedly leads mob to seize bullion bars at PMMC Assay Centre
51 minutes -
Ghana’s external position moderately stronger -IMF
1 hour -
Many NDC MPs will become redundant in the new parliament – Afenyo-Markin
1 hour -
Maintain a tight monetary policy stance – IMF to BoG
1 hour -
Ghana needs to ‘review’ Olympic preparations of its athletes – Patrick Boamah
1 hour -
Charles Kumi wins 2024 Man Ghana Bodybuilding contest
1 hour -
David Ocloo resigns as assistant coach of Asante Kotoko
2 hours