Rising demand and limited supply have seen ACCU spot market prices rise to nearly $60 from $16.50 this time last year. "At a time when the Government has been seeking to expand supply of ACCUs and decrease unnecessary red tape, the proposal at best mixes the message but also raises significant sovereign risk concerns," according to their submission.
The amendments may also undermine the stability of Australia's carbon market, stifling critical investment into the supply of Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs), the institute warns. "Rather than being beneficial for regional Australia, the restrictions would have a disproportionate impact on landholders, particularly smaller farmers," Mr Connor said. Under the proposed changes the agriculture minister would be able to exclude projects larger than 15 hectares and covering more than one third of a farm. Some had raised concerns with government that carbon farming was reducing agricultural productivity and harming regional communities as well as limiting the management of fire, feral animals, weeds and pests. The proposed change to the carbon credit rules would affect two common carbon farming methods: human-induced regeneration (HIR) of native tree species in a local area and native forest from managed regrowth (NFMR). "If you say to farmers here's a passive income stream, we're going to empower you to get the money, not someone from Sydney, Melbourne or Brisbane to do it, they're more likely to do it." "I'm not going to knock anything back if we get the balance right."Īustralia can now produce food and fibre in a sustainable way and market it for a premium, he said. "There's nothing to fear in this," he told AAP. Meanwhile I went to the doctors and they told me I was 26 weeks pregnant, trolls slam me as I'd only been with her dad for four months.The proposals create an additional compliance burden in an already heavily regulated industry and risk delaying investment in regional areas, sustainable agriculture and drought resilience, he said.īut Agriculture Minister David Littleproud says it's about biodiversity and giving farmers - not advisers in the city - an extra income stream before they get up in the morning.
#Watch the message rise of the slam plus#
Plus I asked my boyfriend for lip balm during labour, his error had doctors in meltdown mode. Like, the hell I went through didn’t count? I’m sorry, what?”, wrote another.Įllie’s c-section actually went viral, as she recorded a clip of herself singing along to music while her baby was delivered.įor more pregnancy stories, one mum reveals her pregnancy bump was so tiny even doctors questioned if she was actually pregnant. “I’ll never understand this ‘you didn’t give birth’. My sister healed from natural birth in 24 hours and I took four months with my daughter after my section.” Hence birth”, wrote one outraged viewer.Īnother said: “Ooooh I HATE when people say sections aren’t delivering. “The c-section one is so weird like, ‘didn’t give birth?’ Was the baby not born? I mean the baby is here, so it must have been born. The mum has had enough of the shaming, and asked: “Can we all just support each other instead of constantly comparing situations?” She said: “When a complete stranger tells me that my c-section wasn’t necessary and I should’ve delivered my breech baby ‘naturally’” Others have even told Ellie that her c-section wasn’t medically necessary. She recounted someone saying: “‘Well, since you had a c-section, you didn’t go through labour, so you didn’t really give birth’.” “‘You hold your baby too much, you should put them down because you’re spoiling them’.” She listed examples of things people had said to her: “‘I don’t let my baby watch screens because blah blah blah’. In a recent video, she described all the conversations she’s had in which she’s realised that she’s being “subtly mom shamed”. Mum Ellie revealed all the ways she’s been shamed as a mother since giving birth, and she said she’s even been belittled for getting a c-section.
A MUM has revealed how she is shamed by other mothers for getting a c-section, as they claim she didn’t “really” give birth.