Farmers for Climate Action (FFCA) has called on the Federal Government to investigate claims that coal mine methane is being underreported by up to 50% - and to ensure that polluters are held accountable.
FFCA Chief Executive Officer Natalie Collard said the farmers who grow our food need accurate reporting on coal pollution.
“Coal polluters must be held accountable for the pollution they produce if we are to keep farmers farming,” Ms Collard said.
"Huge parts of Australia are in drought and others are facing unpredictable weather patterns.
“Climate change is hurting our farming families right now through droughts, floods and fires which send farm insurance premiums through the roof.
“We can’t afford inaccurate figures on coal and coal methane, both of which drive climate change.
“Farmers need clean air and water, and a stable climate, to produce clean food for Australia.
“Farmers are working hard to measure and reduce carbon pollution and we need everyone to measure emissions accurately.
“Underreporting emissions hurts all Australians and polluters must be accountable for resolving these issues immediately.”
The reaction comes as economist Professor Rod Sims warned unverified data is vastly underestimating methane emissions and damaging the nation's credibility on climate change.
In fact, Australia may be emitting at least twice the level of methane emissions than reported under a national reporting framework, according to results released on Tuesday from a new monitoring tool.
"The aggregate is so large that you'd have to think that most coal mines are under-reporting their emissions," Prof Sims, who is the chair of the Superpower Institute, said.
"It's time to fix the rules. It's time for the government to get a good, proper measurement system in place so Australia is not continually accused of under-reporting."
Australia is part of a global pledge to cut methane emissions by 30% by 2030, with fossil fuel producers, livestock and landfill among the main culprits worldwide.
But rubbery progress based on self-reported data risks damaging Australia's international credibility, according to the institute's analysis of the first batch of data from the Open Methane tool.
"The results are simply astounding ... If we're not measuring our emissions properly, how can we deal with them?" Prof Sims said.
Australia should be measuring actual emissions from specific locations and not using averages based on decades-old industry data for mining each tonne of coal, he said.
He said a network of ground stations and satellites could also measure agriculture's methane emissions and whether carbon offsets were effective or not.
"We've estimated it's $100 million over 10 years - $6 million a year to monitor it and $40 million to set it up," Prof Sims said.
Exports of green iron, fertilisers, transport fuels and silicon will depend on credible measurements of emissions to meet environmental standards that will be required, particularly in Europe, he said.
Atmospheric physicist and pioneer in the global measurement of methane, Emeritus Professor Peter Rayner, said methane emissions were not being credibly measured, even though technology was available.
"Cutting methane is our single best strategy to combat global heating this decade while we make the changes needed to reduce Australia's emissions to zero," he said.
Prof Rayner said the first results from the Open Methane tool "unequivocally show" the federal government must mandate measurement by industry operators.
He urged the government to fund a minimum of 12 new monitoring sites around Australia, with results calibrated using satellites.
"If we continue to bury our heads in the sand while methane is being under-reported, there will be no integrity in our systems," he said.