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

New approaches to rural land management and governance: restoration, regeneration and rewilding

We are pleased to welcome this guest post by Professor Ian Hodge, Professor Emeritus of Rural Economy in the Department of Land Economy, University of Cambridge, UK.

Agricultural policy reform will always be unfinished business.  Shifting political priorities and power bases, changing technologies and developing environmental pressures will all alter the balance of priorities and mechanisms.  But opportunities for radical policy reforms are rare.  The periodic reforms of the CAP have as yet failed to deliver the level of change that many readers of this CAP reform blog would like to see.  However, in the UK, Brexit offers a unique opportunity to rewrite policy from the ground up.  While the focus here is on the UK, the same principles and opportunities arise across the EU.

The environment has come to take pole position in discussions about rural land policy.  We have identified and designated our most precious habitats through a comprehensive system of protected areas.… Read the rest