Exclusive: Ireland's Government Using Fake Data to Pretend Dairy Emissions Aren't Rising Fast

authordefault
on

Irelandโ€™s Agriculture Minister, Michael Creed and his officials are mounting a co-ordinated campaign to mislead the Irish parliament (Dรกil) about the true state of spiralling dairy emissions, DeSmog.uk hasย learned.

Emissions from Irelandโ€™s rapidly expanding dairy sector have shot up in recent years, in direct conflict with government policy. But the government continues to use bunk data to assert that this is not theย case.

On 26 April 2018, Minister Creed told the Dรกil: โ€œin the five-year period 2012-2016, dairy cow numbers have increased by 22 percent and corresponding milk production by 27 percent while emissions increased just 8 percent, demonstrating a level of decoupling isย occurring.โ€

This point was amplified by one of Creedโ€™s senior officials, Jack Nolan, at a parliamentary joint committee hearing, when he claimed: โ€œSโ€‹ince 2015 we have increased milk output by 13.5 percent, whereas emissions have only increased by 1.6 percent. Massive efficiency gains are happening at theย momentโ€.

Junior Agriculture Minister, Andrew Doyle in December 2017 made the same point about apparent dramatic decoupling of dairy output from carbonย emissions.

All these claims are refuted by data compiled by Irelandโ€™s Environment Protection Agency (EPA). This indicates that carbon dioxide equivalent emissions from dairy rose by a massive 24 percent from 2012 to 2016,โ€‹ โ€‹which closely tracks the 22 percent increase in national dairy cow numbers and a 27 percent milk production hike in the sameย period.

An Taisce, Irelandโ€™s national trust, became aware of the statements being made within the parliament and wrote to Creed on May 4th last, pointing out the erroneous data and requesting that he formally correct the Dรกilย record.

In response, Creed admitted to An Taisce that his claim of โ€˜onlyโ€™ eightย percent emissions increases arising from a 27 percent increase in dairy output โ€œis the growth in total agricultural emissions and reflects that while dairy numbers (and emissions) are increasing, other sub-sectors of agriculture are contractingโ€. It is, the minister added, โ€œvalid to consider the sector as a whole in presenting thisย dataโ€.

However, An Taisce told DeSmog UK that the ministerโ€™s response was โ€œsimply indefensibleโ€. โ€‹By not correcting his statement, โ€œit seems the minister is now willing to mislead the Dรกil and the public, even when called out. This is unacceptable. We now publicly call on the minister to correct the Dรกil record as a matter ofย urgencyโ€.


Source: Ireland Environmental Protectionย Agency

The reason officials like Creed are prepared to go to such lengths to present a rosy picture of agricultural emissions is that rapid expansion of the national dairy herd is de factoย  government policy, even though it flatly contradicts the Irish stateโ€™s EU and Paris Agreement obligations to slash carbonย emissions.

Recent EPA projections showed that, instead of meeting its EU obligations to cut carbon emissions by 20 percent by 2020, Ireland would โ€œat bestโ€ achieve a negligible one percent cut versus 2005 levels. Agricultural emissions, meanwhile, continue to spiral, hence the pressure on ministers to massage the figures to present a โ€˜good news storyโ€™ on dairyย emissions.

More pressure was ratcheted on Irish government inaction with the publication earlier this month by Climate Action Network Europe of its ranking of EU countries in terms of their ambition and progress in tackling climate change. Ireland was ranked 2nd worst in the EU, only ahead of coal-dependent Poland in theย rankings.

Irish prime minister, Leo Varadkar is clearly uneasy at the growing reputational damage arising from what he admits is its status as a climate โ€œlaggardโ€. He told the European Parliament earlier this year that he was โ€œnot proud of Irelandโ€™s performanceโ€ on climate, but domestically, the grip of the powerful agri-industrial lobby on government policy remainsย unshaken.

Having failed to manage emissions, it appears at least some in the Irish government have switched focus to concentrate on managing climate change messagingย instead.

Disclosure: John Gibbons isย a volunteer member of An Taisceโ€™s climate changeย committee.

Image: Lainey Dyer/Flickr CC BY 2.0. Updated 26/06/18: The word ‘fast’ was added to theย headline.

authordefault
John Gibbons is a Dublin-based specialist writer and commentator on climate and environmental issues. He blogs at ThinkOrSwim.ie. You can follow him on Twitterย @think_or_swim.

Related Posts

on

Canadian environmentalist Tzeporah Berman makes the case for a "bold idea" to end the era of coal, oil and gas.

Canadian environmentalist Tzeporah Berman makes the case for a "bold idea" to end the era of coal, oil and gas.
on

High demand for wild-caught species to feed farmed salmon and other fish is taking nutritious food away from low-income communities in the Global South.

High demand for wild-caught species to feed farmed salmon and other fish is taking nutritious food away from low-income communities in the Global South.
Analysis
on

Premier Danielle Smith can expect new tariffs, fewer revenue streams, and a provincial deficit brought on by lowered oil prices.

Premier Danielle Smith can expect new tariffs, fewer revenue streams, and a provincial deficit brought on by lowered oil prices.
on

Jeremy Clarkson spreads well-worn conspiracy theory that casts inheritance farm tax policy as plot to โ€œreplace farmers with migrantsโ€.

Jeremy Clarkson spreads well-worn conspiracy theory that casts inheritance farm tax policy as plot to โ€œreplace farmers with migrantsโ€.