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Posts Tagged ‘Ethical business’

The low-carbon wine baa

Winemaker deploys miniature sheep to cut fuel costs and keep grass short

Duncan Graham-Rowe

A New Zealand winemaker believes he has struck upon the solution to reducing the carbon footprint of wine – and the answer, which may come as no great surprise, lies in sheep. Miniature sheep, that is.

There are only 300 of them in the world and they were originally bred as cute miniature pets, but Peter Yealands believes that babydoll sheep could help him to reduce the environmental footprint of his wine.

By allowing the rare breed to graze on the grass between his vines, Yealands says he can dramatically reduce the energy his wine takes to make and ultimately enable the process to be more sustainable.

Wine producers often use sheep to keep grass short, such as in these Californian vineyards, left, but flocks must be removed when the vines bud because the animals will eat them too. So, to prevent the grass using up precious nutrients and water, and to prevent the spread of disease and fungus, growers normally use tractors to do the job.

With 1,000 hectares in his vineyard that means driving 3,500km for each of the 12 times a year the grass has to be mowed. As a result, for Yealands, diesel makes up about 60% of his energy costs.

To avoid using a tractor, last year Yealands experimented by letting loose giant guinea pigs. That worked initially, he said. “But once the hawks had a taste for them they were sitting prey. We were losing them by the hour. Besides, we would have needed 11 million of them to make it work.”

Now Yealands has turned his attention to babydolls, a rare breed of sheep which only reach about 60cm tall when fully grown. Because the grapes tend only to start growing from about 110cm off the ground the sheep can’t reach them. Yealands has tested 10 of the sheep on a 125-hectare patch of vines.

By selectively breeding them with another more common sheep, the Merino Saxon, which is favoured for its meat, Yealands now hopes to get his stock up to the 10,000 he needs within the next five years. If successful, the flock should save him NZ$1.5m (£600,000) a year in diesel alone, and he hopes to sell the sheep for meat too.

Marleen Stumpel, co-director of AdVintage Wines, a London-based supplier of carbon-neutral wines, said the babydolls are an unusual approach.

She said most wine makers reduce their carbon footprint by paying to offset their emissions. “There is a growing market for it, but the wine does tend to be a little bit more expensive,” she said.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


RBS: the sustainable bank?

Sustainable Development Commission launches 275 ‘breakthrough’ ideas to ‘inspire and motivate policy makers’

The Royal Bank of Scotland, which is 70% owned by the public, should be transformed into the Royal Bank of Sustainability with a brief to back renewable energy, improve public transport, and to raise money to resolve Britain’s housing crisis.

The suggestion is one of 275 potential “breakthrough” ideas submitted by members of the public to the Sustainable Development Commission (SDC) to improve the quality of people’s lives, increase community involvement and make Britain a fairer society.

Other suggestions include a radical switching of 20% of all health spending towards preventing illness rather than treatments by 2020, getting young people more connected to the natural world by holding more classes outdoors, and turning under-used city land into urban farms.

“Compared to the combined governments’ response to the implosion in the capital markets the response to civilisation-threatening crises [has been] stumbling and uninspired… We seem bogged down on so many fronts. We wanted to bring together a dynamic portfolio of ideas that could really inspire and motivate policy makers and others to set the UK much more decisively on the path to becoming a sustainable society,” says the report entitled Breakthroughs for the Twenty-First Century, which is published tomorrow.

Many of the ideas, like making cycling mainstream and setting up low carbon zones to reduce emissions and combat health problems, are not new but need invigorating, says the report. Others, like using algae to capture emissions, are controversial. But together, said outgoing SDC chief Jonathon Porritt, the 275 ideas could reinvigorate the political process.

One suggestion, known to be gaining ground in the Treasury, aims to raise billions of pounds to reduce carbon emissions by releasing “green bonds’ which would be issued and backed by government. Like standard government bonds (known as gilts) these would be super-safe investments that guaranteed a fixed interest rate, but the money would be ring-fenced for environmental spending by government.

Another suggestion, from the Yorkshire village of Todmorden, would set up a national competition to inspire towns and communities to grow more food grown in both public and private spaces. “Food is the trigger for greater involvement with the big issues such as climate change and health,” said Pam Warhurst of Todmorden.

In addition to inviting people from every walk of life to contribute ideas, the authors of the report surveyed groups of young people who told them that what mattered most was the quality of their environment, better transport, fairness, education, sustainable food and farming and the need for leadership.

But some ideas are very unlikely to go down well with the present or even the next government. “What I truly honestly believe would improve the lives of every single person in this country is an end to the capitalist free-market system. If the human race is ever going to progress then it will only be done by a socialist alternative to materialism,” said a youth, identified only as “Fred, from the SW”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds