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'I love the connection to nature': How Sean O'Farrell is using his family farm to help the planet

Organic farmer Sean is taking powerful steps to lower emissions and keep his land healthy.

Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications / YouTube

 

“I LOVE WHAT I do, and my love for what I do continues to grow.”

Farming is in Sean O’Farrell’s blood. Born and raised in Cloncannon, Co Tipperary on the western slopes of the Devil’s Bit mountains, he took over the family farm from his father 15 years ago.

Taking over was a chance for O’Farrell to build his passion for biodiversity and heritage into the work he does every day. These days, the 60-acre site is known as Cloncannon Biofarm, and is a fully organic farm producing organic meat, chicken, vegetables and fruit.

By cutting out chemical fertilisers and pesticides, planting large patches of native trees and allowing hedgerows to mature without cutting them back frequently, O’Farrell is ensuring that insects, birds and other creatures have a safe, diverse habitat to live in.

He’s also ensuring the soil on his farm is healthier, more nutrient-rich and better protected from erosion. The benefits might not be immediately visible to us humans, but it’s all part of making the planet a more sustainable, safer and greener place to live, he says:

You might say, ‘What do hedgerows have to do with climate change?’. The stronger the web of life is, the more resilient the whole system is.

Educating the local community is another key focus for Cloncannon Biofarm, with regular workshops for adults and schoolchildren held online and on the farm, covering everything from growing organic vegetables to identifying different native trees.

For O’Farrell, the benefits don’t just come in the form of profits for his business, but in knowing he’s creating a safer, greener future for the country:

If you’re trying to bring in money… but at the same time… reducing your resilience to climate change, it’s not sustainable.

O’Farrell’s belief is echoed in the government’s Climate Action Plan, published last month. As part of an ambitious target to cut the country’s greenhouse gas emissions by half by 2030, the government is introducing a number of measures to promote more sustainable farming and land use. 

Thousands of hectares of additional trees will be planted under the Forestry Programme launching in 2023, and there’ll be a focus on managing land more sustainably and less intensively. All of this will form part of a pathway for Ireland’s land and forestry sector to become a ‘carbon sink’, absorbing more carbon from the atmosphere than it releases.

The plan also sets out measures to reduce emissions in the agriculture sector by between 22% and 30% by 2030. Farmers will be supported to reduce the use of chemical nitrogen fertiliser, to increase the amount of organically farmed land under their care, and to explore opportunities for diversification, among other things.

O’Farrell feels that this government support and incentivisation will be vital in ensuring nationwide commitment to reaching Ireland’s agriculture and land use goals.

“If a farmer puts in 70 trees, that’s a value to society, a value to the planet. The same applies for proper hedgerow management and rotational cutting. Farmers must get recognition for that.”

Speaking at the launch of the Climate Action Plan earlier this month, Minister for the Environment, Climate, Communications and Transport Eamon Ryan said that the next ten years presented an opportunity to create real, lasting change that would benefit the country for generations to come:

It’s our chance to make the right choice and create a new Ireland where we cut our dependence on fossil fuels… Where our food is produced in a greener, cleaner way that also protects nature and supports farmers’ incomes.

To learn more about how one Irish farmer is working toward a greener future for Ireland, watch the video here. And to find out more about the key actions for agriculture and land use set out in the Climate Action Plan, click here.

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    Mute FiannaFáilness FineGaelness
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    Apr 1st 2022, 4:35 PM

    Good start, now have the religious orders pay compensation.

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    Mute John Flood
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    Apr 1st 2022, 6:44 PM

    @FiannaFáilness FineGaelness: by liquidating all their assets. All of them!

    65
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    Mute Gerry McCaughey
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    Apr 1st 2022, 4:44 PM

    If the Pope is genuinely sorry he would order dioceses across the world to stop dragging their feet and stonewalling and fighting compensation cases. Very little has changed in the Catholic hierarchy in the last few decades except that they’ve gotten better at P. R.

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    Mute v39e84kK
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    Apr 1st 2022, 4:47 PM

    @Gerry McCaughey: 100% if they cared so much the vaults of gold would be emptied in restitution. Words have no meaning. Action is needed.

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    Mute David Nolan
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    Apr 1st 2022, 9:31 PM

    @Gerry McCaughey: he isn’t genuinely sorry

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    Mute Daniel Roche
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    Apr 1st 2022, 10:08 PM

    @Gerry McCaughey: I could be wrong but I think he has asked for that but is getting stop at ever turn,same here in Ireland with bishop Martin, could be wrong but think they genuinely want change.

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    Mute Tim Oconnell
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    Apr 1st 2022, 6:20 PM

    Unbelievably corrupt organisation.

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    Mute feargal de cantuin
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    Apr 1st 2022, 6:49 PM

    Where was the Canadian Government? It abandoned the indigenous people and their rights as a colonial power. The State has much to apologise for as well.

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    Mute Sara McS
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    Apr 1st 2022, 8:00 PM

    @feargal de cantuin: this article is about the catholic church’s role. The state have apologized and have started reparations. Will possibly never be enough but the Pope had to make an apology on behalf on the festering moral cesspit that was his church in the 20th century and before.

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    Mute Mr Jerry Curtin
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    Apr 1st 2022, 7:54 PM

    Unreal what happened to the indigenous people. Very like tuam.

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    Mute Eddie O'Neill
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    Apr 1st 2022, 9:48 PM

    What a terrible read. Centuries of abuse the article says and they still want to accept the popes self-invitation to visit and repeat his hollow apologies. They should should be refusing to host him, demanding more financial compensation and questioning in what other territories is the Catholic Church committing similar crimes today?

    “I ask for God’s forgiveness for the deplorable conduct of these members of the Catholic Church,” – Gods representative on earth asking God for forgiveness for the actions of hundreds of Gods followers!, ya couldn’t make it up.

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    Mute Daftbit Jelly
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    Apr 1st 2022, 10:27 PM

    No apologies are enough anymore. I know religion is a comfort to many people. The Catholic church is no longer part of that. They are inexcusable.

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    Mute Fachtna Roe
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    Apr 2nd 2022, 12:03 PM

    @Daftbit Jelly: If you go back to the first organised societies, especially to Sumeria 5000 years ago, it’s easy to see how what we think of as religion came about. It wasn’t until about 1700 years ago that the Romans weaponised mono-theism. Religion may be a comfort, the same way that a fix of heroin is to an addict, but look at the destruction both bring with them.

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    Mute Carrie Poettcker
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    Apr 3rd 2022, 1:56 AM

    I’m indigenous Canadian, an adoptee from the era of the Sixties Scoop, another method of taking chuldren from their families and stripping them of their language, culture and heritage. Also supported by this church. I also have family members directly impacted by the abuse that went on in the schools. I’m not sure what to make of this apology. It doesn’t give back the silenced languages. It doesn’t revive dead customs and traditions. It doesn’t restore the lost history and knowledge. The apology doesn’t heal the trauma and pain of surviving this abuse. Or the grief for those who didn’t. It does nothing to staunch the epidemic of suicide amongst indigenous youth. For an apology to be sincere, it must involve action. Otherwise its just words. Meaningless words at that.

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    Mute David Nolan
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    Apr 1st 2022, 9:29 PM

    An apology,makes everything all better

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    Mute Daniel Roche
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    Apr 1st 2022, 10:11 PM

    @David Nolan: Nobody said that but even in our country you see people want apology,let’s take responsibility first and then we can take punishment.

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    Mute Geraldine Fawcett
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    Apr 2nd 2022, 6:48 PM

    @David Nolan: what should he do?

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    Mute Phil Swan
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    Apr 3rd 2022, 9:32 AM

    He apologised to people in Ireland as well but the church here still refuses to pay the agreed monies to the state for the redress paid out so apologies like that are meaningless.

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