Farmers should be paid to protect 'carbon banks', says National Trust

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Hill farmers to be given financial incentive to conserve peatlands, Britain's biggest carbon store Hill farmers should be rewarded for protecting wildlife, landscapes, water and carbon stores as well as livestock, the National Trust said today.

Hill farmers to be given financial incentive to conserve peatlands, Britain's biggest carbon store

Hill farmers should be rewarded for protecting wildlife, landscapes, water and carbon stores as well as livestock, the National Trust said today.

It warned that rising costs of food production and the global recession would make it even more difficult for livestock owners to make a living at a time when English and Welsh governments are seeking to replace existing subsidies paid to hill farmers.

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The trust, which has 2,000 tenant farmers, most of them in upland areas, is already involved in pilot schemes to improve water quality at source, so water companies do not face such high costs at treatment plants, and in providing wetland areas to reduce the risk of flash floods.

Article Continues: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/nov/12/carbonemissions-wildlife