REUTERS

SYDNEY 鈥 New Zealand on Sunday pledged to cut biogenic methane emissions by up to 24%聽from 2017聽levels by 2050, which its conservative government said would protect the聽agriculture聽sector and meet the country鈥檚 climate commitments.

The announcement comes after the聽government聽in April聽ended a plan聽to put a price on agricultural emissions including methane produced by belching sheep and cattle, relenting to farmer pressure that the plan would make their business unprofitable.

Agriculture聽Minister Todd McClay聽said on Sunday that the biogenic methane target, yet to be signed off by聽the cabinet,聽would be set at a range of 14鈥24% below 2017 levels by 2050.

鈥淲e鈥檝e accepted a range of advice and worked closely with industry to agree a practical target that protects food production whilst substantially reducing New Zealand鈥檚 farm聽emissions,鈥 Mr. McClay聽said in a statement.

鈥淲e鈥檙e delivering a practical, fair pathway that recognizes New Zealand聽agriculture聽efficiency, protects jobs and production, and upholds our climate commitments.鈥

The target would be reviewed in 2040 to ensure it aligned with science and progress of key trading partners in the area, the government said.

The previous government had聽introduced a plan聽to charge farmers for their gas emissions from the end of 2025, in what was hailed as a world first.

New Zealand, home to five million people, has about 10 million cattle and 26 million sheep. Nearly half its total greenhouse gas emissions come from聽agriculture, mainly methane. 鈥 Reuters