Dairy Exporter December 2021

Page 64

ENVIRONMENT FRESHWATER

And now, Freshwater Farm Plans Words by: Charlotte Glass

F

rom Farm Environment Plans to Freshwater Farm Plans – why the change and what’s the difference? Many farmers across New Zealand have been using Farm Environment Plans as their first step to recognising and managing the impact of farming on the wider receiving environment. The Essential Freshwater Package released in August 2020, notes the requirement for farmers to have Freshwater Farm Plans in place in order to plan and manage the impact of farming operations on freshwater quality. These new plans will make up one of the modules within a broader Farm Planning Framework. The details of these plans are still emerging, and the Government is now in a consultation phase seeking feedback on the content, outcomes and certification/audit aspects associated with these plans. The Farm Environment Plans many farmers are already using have provided a useful structure to consider and manage how our farming operations impact the environment. The Freshwater Farm Plan introduces more catchment context to our plans and requires a better understanding of how water moves through a whole catchment, not just one farm in isolation. It will also introduce more awareness of the concept of Te Mana O Te Wai, or “the life-force of water”. This concept is easy for farming people to relate to, simply put, it means, when the water is healthy, then the life it supports is healthy too. Achieving “healthy water” now has a higher priority when seeking permission from councils to undertake farming activities that require their consent. 64

The Freshwater Farm Plan introduces more catchment context to our plans and requires a better understanding of how water moves through a whole catchment, not just one farm in isolation.

Freshwater Farm Plans will be central to farmers being able to understand and communicate how their farming supports maintenance or improvement of freshwater quality. The intention is that these are living documents and capture continuous improvement and learning. As our understanding of the connection of water and lag phases between farming activities and impact in the catchment improves over time, then farmers’ Freshwater Farm Plans will become more specific too. They will continue to include an assessment of risk from farming activities on water quality from nutrient management, waterways, land and soil, effluent and water use (including irrigation), and will be useful in communicating winter grazing strategies too. Farmers are familiar with the balance that is important in grassland ecosystems. Sheep, cattle and deer eat pasture, and in doing so feed the soil by cycling nutrients back in dung and urine which in turn allows more grass to grow. The same sort of balance is important for freshwater ecosystems to thrive too. Tools that help farmers consider the habitat and health of freshwater ecosystems on farms are now more accessible and will become increasingly important as a means of communicating the health and quality of freshwater. By being aware of the non-farmed species that are, or were once present in our catchments, farmers can seek to support the appropriate balance and habitat for

them to thrive in conjunction with our productive farmed species. Freshwater Farm Plans should provide a framework to prompt farmers to weave these aspects together. We don’t yet have perfect knowledge or measurement of these indicators at farm scale and gaps in science and current knowledge will be exposed. Farmers will play an important role in developing a deeper understanding of the interaction of farming with broader freshwater systems. For those that have already prepared a Farm Environment Plan, and particularly those that have already had those plans audited, then the Freshwater Farm Plan is expected to be a subtle change. It will need to be certified by someone who is accredited to ensure it is “fit for purpose” and then audited 18 months after certification and then every three years. For those farmers that have never completed a Farm Environment Plan, your industry bodies can help get you started. They have templates you can use and provide workshops to get you started or you can connect with professionals who specialise in working with farmers. It might sound like something new or different, but for people who understand dynamic systems as farmers do, it really isn’t that new! • Charlotte Glass is a consultant and director of Agri Magic, a farm systems consultancy company that specialises in environmental aspects. • First published in Country-Wide Sheep October 2021.

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | December 2021


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Articles inside

The Dairy Exporter in December 1971

3min
pages 90-92

Gen Z to make their mark

4min
page 89

Tracmap unit eases compliance pain

3min
page 88

Never too late to learn

5min
pages 86-87

A beetle to beat the thistle

2min
page 85

Plants waiting to be weeds

2min
page 84

The art of saying no

5min
pages 82-83

Variety from consulting to composting

7min
pages 78-81

Vet Voice: More to it than

4min
pages 74-75

Fast track to management

5min
pages 76-77

Reducing heat stress over summer

2min
page 73

M. Bovis: It had a head start

6min
pages 71-72

Restoring Horowhenua’s waters

6min
pages 65-67

And now, freshwater plans

3min
page 64

Sustainability: Gaining the knowledge

8min
pages 58-61

Open Country: Online tool for FEP

3min
pages 62-63

When will all this end?

5min
pages 54-55

Social media and anti-vax The dirty dozen

6min
pages 56-57

How to handle Covid-19 coming onfarm

3min
pages 50-51

No Jab, No Job in the milking shed

4min
page 48

It’s a health and safety issue

4min
pages 46-47

Dealing with vaccine reluctance

3min
page 49

Taranaki soft core

12min
pages 34-38

When the lights go red

5min
pages 44-45

Prepare for a virus attack

6min
pages 42-43

Ryegrass: Twelve years of torture

6min
pages 39-41

Benchmarking: Measure it to be sure

5min
pages 32-33

Ahuwhenua Trophy: Taking the leap to manager

5min
pages 26-27

Spending the payout: new kit or cutting debt?

8min
pages 14-17

Ahuwhenua Trophy: Quality on the coast

9min
pages 22-25

Frances Coles loves being an ambassador for Kiwi farming

3min
page 10

Future farming will need to give more than profit, writes George Moss

3min
page 12

What a payout, writes John Milne, but what prices

2min
page 13

Market View: Hedging bets on Singapore

3min
pages 20-21

Global Dairy: All change at FrieslandCampina

5min
pages 18-19
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