The Australian Red Meat Authority Council (RMAC) has dropped its target of becoming carbon neutral by 2030 because it is "not achievable", although it will still contribute to Australia's 2050 net zero goal.
"We now recognise that the previous Carbon Neutral 2030 goal is not achievable," RMAC independent chair John Mckillop said in a statement on 26 June.
RMAC's 2030 carbon neutral target was set in 2017. The Red Meat 2030 report originally published in 2019 has now been updated to remove the 2030 target after six months of industry discussions. The report maintains that RMAC will contribute to Australia's 2050 net zero goal.
The industry will continue to focus on reducing emissions intensity, according to Mckillop. The industry is looking to build strong foundations to accelerate investment to help reduce emissions intensity per kilogram of red meat, increase carbon storage in the landscape, and improve productivity, he said.
Methane emissions from feedlot cattle are significantly lower than previously estimated, according to research by Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA) and the University of New England published in the Journal of Animal Production Science in March. The study offers a revised equation for calculating emissions for cattle with barley- and wheat-based diets and found that emissions from grain-fed cattle were 56pc lower than previously estimated.
The calculated volumes of methane emissions from feedlot cattle were adjusted by Australia's Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) earlier in June as a result. Previously calculated emissions figures for the last five financial years were cut by 56pc, and figures for the 2021-22 financial year were cut by 57pc, according to MLA.
Meanwhile, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from feedlot cattle increased in the 12 months to December 2024, according to the DCCEEW's fourth quarter 2024 national GHG inventory report. GHG emissions from crop production and most livestock categories decreased on the year.
Achieving carbon neutrality by 2030 would require industry commitment, policy settings and new investment, former MLA managing director Richard Norton said in 2017.
The industry has reduced net GHG emissions by almost 78pc from 2005 levels as of 2021, according to McKillop.
Australia in 2022 updated its nationally determined contribution (NDC) to reduce GHG emissions in 2030 by 43pc compared with 2005 levels.

