Incentivising climate action in Irish agriculture and land use

Two weeks ago, I had the pleasure of giving an invited talk at the Irish Environmental Protection Agency’s annual Climate Change Conference 2026 in Dublin. My topic was “Incentivising climate action in the agriculture and land use sectors”. Irish agriculture has shown a steady improvement in emissions intensity, but almost no reduction in absolute emissions since 1990. As it accounts for 36% of emissions in the national inventory (excluding energy use and soil emissions), there is an urgent need to adopt lower-emission technologies and to shift to lower-emission land uses at scale.

The key issue I raise is, if we want lower-emissions agriculture and land use in Ireland, then how do we make lower-emissions land use economically viable at farm level? And how do we incentivise that change? Land use systems do not change simply because alternative systems appear environmentally desirable. They change when there are viable markets, reliable income streams, manageable risks, functioning supply chains, and credible long-term incentives.… Read the rest

Introducing a tax on agricultural GHG emissions? The Danish case

In its first progress report on EU climate policy published in January 2024, the newly-established European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change noted that there is no EU-level price on emissions in agriculture/food, forestry and land use, which suffer from an overall lack of incentives to reduce emissions and increase removals. It recommended that the EU should start preparations now with a view to expanding the pricing regime of EU GHG emissions to all major emitting sectors, including agricultural/food and LULUCF, through a legislative proposal for after 2030.

In November 2023 the Commission published an exploratory study investigating ways to price GHG emissions from agricultural activities along the agri-food value chain and how this could be accompanied by providing farmers and other landowners with financial incentives for climate action. The study responded to a 2021 report by the European Court of Auditors, which recommended that the Commission should “assess the potential of applying the polluter-pays principle to agricultural emissions, and reward farmers for long-term carbon removals”.… Read the rest