Red Alert

Archive for the ‘climate change’ Category

Business opportunities from climate change

Posted by Trevor Mallard on January 21st, 2010

There are massive opportunites for NZ in developing and commercialising our expertise in green technologies. There was a workstream on it in MED when I was Minister in 2006/7. Brian Fallow has a good piece in the Herald today. I’m pleased that Stephen Tindall has continued to lead the private sector input.

As a mainly unrecognised example, Mighty River Power are probably the worlds leading company at developing renewable geothermal energy. There are lots of countries especially on the Pacific rim that will utilise that resource and we can both make money and a contribution to saving the planet at the same time by working with them. I like the idea of MRP doing international joint ventures in a similar way to their approach with Maori on trust lands in the central north island.


Dr Seuss in Copenhagen

Posted by Clare Curran on December 20th, 2009

Just as a bit of light relief (with a serious undertone of course) here’s Marcus Brigstocke’s Dr Seuss summary of the Copenhagen summit on the Now Show on BBC4.

This link is to the whole show, but if you only want the Dr Seuss bit, it’s at 13m13s. It’s very good. A bit scatalogical.

Hat tip to simonw and Tom_Watson on Twitter


COP15 – Groser out of his element on climate change

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 19th, 2009

Having spent a week in Copenhagen observing the conduct of climate change negotiations, I have to say I have serious concerns about how on top of international thinking on climate change this Government in general – and Tim Groser in particular – really is.

Groser was a well-regarded public servant for many years. Having entered politics on the National Party list in 2005, he now holds four portfolios in the present Government – Trade, International Climate Change Negotiations, Associate Foreign Affairs and Conservation.

In the first three, it’s become traditional for the opposition to be careful about criticism of the conduct of the portfolio-holder because there’s developed a general policy consensus about national priorities in those areas. As well, apart from a few self-confessedly pro-business commentators like Fran O’Sullivan, not many journalists in the mainstream media take much notice of what happens in them, except in quite high level terms. And in the trade portfolio, Groser is usually said to have done a good job of bringing to final fruition a lot of the hard work done by Phil Goff after 1999 to open export markets to New Zealand.

(In Conservation, Groser has been missing in action – perhaps largely because he’s been overseas so much – but also because the big beasts of the current administration – Brownlee, Joyce et al – are determined to pursue their pro-mining agenda, including in the national parks that it’s Groser’s job to protect. He has clearly worked out that it is better to get out of the way than get flattened in that particular area of his responsibility. He’d be better to get out of it altogether before he ends up sharing the blame for the looming disaster there.)

Thinking about the Government’s climate change policies, I’m not so concerned about the bungled, and then cancelled, briefings here in Copenhagen; or the withheld cabinet papers on our negotiating position; or the increasing frustration evident on the part of anyone who tries to engage with Ministers over the substance of our position; or even the fact that the rhetoric in John Key’s leader’s speech today bears no resemblance to the reality of our negotiating position. There are at least five longer-range pieces of the jigsaw.

First, there was the gutting of the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS). Ministers clearly believed that the Australian Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS) was a legislative shoe-in, since they modelled many of the changes they made to Labour’s scheme on it. Even the week before the CPRS collapsed, Nick Smith had David Bennett asking patsy questions in Parliament attacking my warnings about the fragility of the numbers on the floor of the Australian Senate. This was a major misreading of the politics of our nearest neighbour, where we have our largest diplomatic presence. How did that happen?

Then there is the fact that the amended ETS is clearly predicated on no international agreement on climate change being reached for many years to come. There is no other way to explain the content of the amendments, given that they will actually increase NZ’s emissions, at a big cost to the taxpayer in subsidies to major polluters. This is another completely off-base assumption – while it is impossible to predict the exact outcome of the Copenhagen talks, the smart money has always been on significant progress being made here toward a deal in the next few years. All of the EU’s international diplomacy (and much of its domestic action) in this area is predicated on that assumption. So is the Obama administration’s courting of India and China, and its pursuit of cap and trade legislation at home. Again, to have made a legislative assumption that will all come to naught is little short breathtaking.

Thirdly, along with Nick Smith, Murray McCully and John Key, Groser massively misunderstood the mood of Commonwealth leaders at the recent Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM) in Trinidad and Tobago. Before departing, they were said to be determined that climate change would not ‘dominate’ proceedings, and even on the first day of the meeting, were publicly resisting the idea of NZ contributing to financing initiatives for transition in developing countries. I now have it on good authority that on the first evening of CHOGM, Gordon Brown and Kevin Rudd sat down with the other developed country leader who was out of step with the rest of the Commonwealth on climate change – Canada’s Stephen Harper – and put him right. Harper was then sent to deliver the message to Key. Again – how could we have so misread the mood of two of our closest friends and allies – the UK and Australia?

Then, over the past week, the national embarrassment of how we have treated Tuvalu. That small island neighbour of ours has been bullied – there’s no other word for it – by both Australia and New Zealand for daring to speak out on the urgency of climate change, and the urgency from its point of view of implementing precautionary measures. Groser did it in public statements; Bill English did it back home in Parliament. Yet Tuvalu was just saying what it – and other members of the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) – have been on record about for over a year now. The virulence of the response – and Groser’s dogged backing of developed nations’ positioning – makes it look like our Government just realised that the small island nations were worried about climate change. Or maybe they were just surprised that they decided to ignore bullying and speak up. Either way, Tuvalu came out of left field for them. The response has justly caused lasting resentment in the Pacific – the place in the world where, strategically, it is most important that NZ be well-regarded. Smooth words in John Key’s leader’s speech here today won’t paper over those cracks.

Finally, there’s been the hamfisted attempt by Groser and others to manipulate the NZ media from afar – compensating for the lack of any positive progress on the issues that matter. First, the announcement of Key’s appearance in the BBC debate (oops – that didn’t end well). Then Thursday’s bizarre trumpeting of the global agriculture alliance (GAF). Never mind that compared to the Fast Forward Fund, which National scrapped, we’re looking at much less money for research on agricultural emissions, and that we’ve given up control of the ownership of that research, probably to US-based corporations. Package it up as good news, co-opt a member of Obama’s cabinet to sit on the podium with you, and time the announcement so it becomes the lead item on morning report. Voila – you have the appearance of progress. I hope it won’t fool anybody.

Evidently, Groser has a talent for transactional negotiating when it comes to opening up markets. But climate change is much more multi-dimensional. Andrew Robb (Turnbull’s original choice for a climate change spokesperson) – whom I know from the time we spent together at Minter Ellison is a very bright guy – evidently couldn’t get his head around it. If Key didn’t take fright at the quality of ministerial advice he was getting in this field after CHOGM, he should have by now. Let’s hope the PM uses his time here to listen to what world leaders have to say, instead of trusting the assurances from Tim Groser and his colleague that they have it all in hand. They plainly don’t.


Key dumped from climate debate

Posted by Chris Hipkins on December 17th, 2009

Reports have emerged that John Key and his ministerial colleagues may have been a bit premature when they started boasting that he would be playing a star role in a BBC debate on climate change later today. It seems Key has been dumped in favour of Aussie PM Kevin Rudd. Perhaps the BBC wanted to avoid the spectacle of a lead panelist doing an “aw shucks, I’m pretty relaxed about it actually” routine…


COP15 – Dramas and Smokescreens in Copenhagen

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 17th, 2009

Helen Clark and Oliver Bruce

Late yesterday, I was having dinner with our former PM, Helen Clark, here as Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).  The UNDP is taking a close interest in a number of issues, principally the financing of developing economies as they move away from fossil fuels.  It was great to catch up with Helen.  Before dinner, I introduced her to Oliver Bruce, a kiwi studying in the US who is here with one of the youth delegations.  Oliver and Mahara Inglis, a member of the NZ Youth delegation, posted a great blog last week .

After the dinner break yesterday, a new draft treaty text emerged.
Almost as soon as it was released, reservations began to be added by the major players.  The US and Japan objected to any legally binding reduction targets for developed countries, and insisted that there be no reference to the Kyoto Protocol.  The EU expressed its disappointment at this approach, and said that reductions targets should be legally binding for developed, as well as emerging, countries.  China and India objected to the suggestion that all countries, not just developing ones, should have binding reduction targets.  Technology transfer, financing the developing world’s transition and the merits of market mechanisms like carbon trading also attracted reservations.

The Conference session was delayed, then suspended, only to resume late in the night with countries starting to express their concerns in detail and start redrafting.  The Chair – the Danish Enviroment Minister Connie Hedegaard – resigned her position – as the session was brought to an end for lack of time.  Today, countries have been expressing reservations and positions in greater detail as the Danes grappled with demonstrations from NGO representatives and others locked out of the conference venue because of capacity concerns, eventually providing them with a new meeting venue in the central city.  Danish PM Rassmussen has taken over chairing the sessions.

Meanwhile, Tim Groser was doing his best to try to make sure that some positive spin from the NZ delegation started Thursday’s NZ news cycle.
At a press conference scheduled for 3am Thursday NZ time, he sat at the press table with a slightly bewildered looking Tom Vilsack, the US Agriculture Secretary, to announce the first contributions to National’s “Global Agriculture Fund”.  This is designed to get international scientific cooperation going on the reduction of emissions from agriculture (and, everyone suspects – although it’s not often said out loud – build support for excluding food-related production from international agreements altogether).  Details are scant, but it looks like a bit of money from the Canadians, NZ$125M from the US, and NZ$45M from NZ.  In other words, about 25% of what the previous Government committed to the Fast Forward Fund – a PPP that would have had funding research into emissions reductions as one of its key roles.  National scrapped the Fast Forward Fund.  That’s a pity.  Not only would it have done a lot more to kick-start emissions reduction in agriculture, New Zealand would have owned all the intellectual property resulting from it.  We could have exploited that IP commercially, or given some of it away in aid to food producing developing countries.  Now that it will be funded multilaterally, it would be my guess that won’t be possible.  In other words, a lousy deal for NZ Inc.

Reports are now coming through that President Obama, on the eve of his departure for Copenhagen, has announced a US commitment to a 17% reduction in emissions by 2020 over 2005 levels.  This amounts to a 4% reduction over 1990 levels.  It’s not nearly enough.  But it’s the first time we’ve heard a commitment from the US to a target.  Now things start to get really interesting…


Question 11 – Parker

Posted by David Parker on December 16th, 2009

I invited Gerry Brownlee to accompany me on a tramp in the Mt Aspiring National Park, and followed it up with a question in the house.  He declined my gesture of Christmas goodwill, but with good humour. The clip of the question is attached. I’m off anyway and am taking a sattelite phone and my laptop. Technology permitting I hope to highlight why even considering opening National Parks to mining is a stupid idea.

Click here to read my letter of invitation to Gerry Brownlee.


COP15 – What will come of Copenhagen?

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 16th, 2009

Day 4 for me today.  Yesterday, the developing nations staged a walkout from the negotiations.  This was largely to dramatise their concern about the developed world’s unwillingness to taken on meaningful pollution reduction targets.  After negotiations were suspended, there was a lot of discussion over what would happen here over the four days of the Conference that remain. To simplify massively, there are four big sticking points in the way of reaching a comprehensive agreement -  the targets each country adopts; the level of compensation to be paid to developing countries; the best way to measure and police each nation’s emissions; and how the Copenhagen agreement takes over from the Kyoto Protocol.

Based on what veterans of the process have been saying, the consensus is that there are four alternative scenarios for how the week will end up:

1. A comprehensive agreement with detailed rules. Unfortunately, given the complexity of the issues that remain to be agreed, and the fact that the US is not a party to the Kyoto Protocol, but is the key player in terms of making commitments for its replacement, this seems virtually impossible.  The US has only really been engaging since President Obama’s coming into office in January, and although considerable progress has been made, including developing countries voluntarily agreeing to some fairly impressive emissions reduction targets, an enormous amount of detail still has to be resolved.

2. A political framework with minimal detail. This seems to be the best outcome that can be hoped for.  Under it, countries will agree to a set of principles and goals that lack final numbers, with those numbers being negotiated in the two years between now and the expiry of the Kyoto Protocol.  This is in fact how Kyoto itself came about – in 1995, countries agreed the “Berlin Mandate” which two years later became the detailed set of rules we now know as the Protocol.

3. A ‘greenwash’ agreement. Under this scenario, countries paper over their many disagreements but fail to make and real progress, or agree further steps.  A high level statement of concern, but no agreed timetable for concrete actions, would be the outcome.  In many ways, the worst possible outcome because it would take huge effort to get things back on track.

4. A dramatic failure. Developing nations,especially small island states at risk of devastation from climate change,  frustrated at a lack of commitment from wealthy countries, walk out of the negotiations permanently because they won’t agree to a greenwash.  Some new framwork would need to be found going forward, potentially via individual UN bodies like the Food and Agriculture Organisation on land use change and forestry, and International Martime Organisation and IATA on bunker fuels.

The NZ officials from MFAT, MFE and MAF are really well thought of here – as opposed to the political leaders from NZ.  The officials are seen as having worked hard for many years on the technical issues at stake, and have a reputation for diligence, honesty and integrity.  Thank goodness for them, even if they make our current Government look better than it deserves.  It would not surprise me if the officials end up playing an important role in brokering any forward deal.  Hopefully there will be one!


COP15 – I run into another Kiwi in Copenhagen

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 15th, 2009

Chauvel_Packard_Copenhagen

Here is a photo of me with Aaron Packard, one of the driving forces behind 350 Aotearoa, in the Radhudspladsen in Central Copenhagen, on Sunday afternoon.  Aaron has done a terrific job working with other young people, first in New Zealand and more lately internationally, to raise awareness about climate change.  350.org works in a non-partisan way, and invites representatives from all political parties to participate in its events.  One of its most recent rallies was a candlelight vigil held in Wellington on Saturday night.

I ran into Aaron as he and a colleague were putting up posters around the Radhudsplatsen – which has been set up as a people’s centre on climate change – to advertise a talk being given tomorrow by President Nasheed of Mauritius and Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org.  I met Bill today, and I’m looking forward to hearing the talk tomorrow. Mauritius is in the same position as many of our Pacific neighbours – it has contributed little or nothing to the problem of climate change, but being comprised of low-lying atolls, it will be amongst the first and most drastically to be affected by the problem.

Tomorrow also sees the arrival of ministerial delegations in Copenhagen.  Business groups are miffed that they have been omitted from New Zealand’s (large) delegation, which – apart from Nick Smith and Tim Groser, and representatives of the iwi leaders’ group who were added as part of the National/Maori Party deal to amend the ETS – is
entirely composed of officials.  Like NGO groups and media, business representatives are having to rely on briefings, conducted to date by Nick Smith’s politically-appointed climate change advisor, a former Business New Zealand staffer.  A broader-based delegation, including key business and NGO figures, with direct access to official advice
and support, would be more likely to work in New Zealand’s interests.

Meanwhile, the Government maintains its increasingly untenable positions on:

  • pollution reduction targets (”Unless we get every concession out of the Copenhagen Conference that we want, we won’t be announcing tougher targets, even if other countries do”)
  • its lack of a plan to get domestic pollution down (”We want to change the way in which emissions are counted, rather than actually reduce emissions.  Failing that, we’ll just buy emissions credits offshore rather than achieve reductions at home”)
  • support for the small island states (”We follow the USA and Australia in all things because Tim Groser sees climate change talks as an extension of our trade negotiation strategy rather than an environmental issue”)

And we all thought their “moderated” ETS was bad enough.  It was just a warm-up (no pun intended).


First, Twice, Again, Sort of…

Posted by Pete Hodgson on December 14th, 2009

This post is inspired by Charles Chauvel’s post earlier today especially his point 3.

When our PM arrives in Copenhagen he will declare two world firsts for NZ. The first first will be our ‘all gases all sectors’ ETS. He will not dwell on the fact that it was passed 15 months ago in David Parker’s name and that his Government has since gutted it. It still has form but struggles for substance.

The second first will be NZ science leadership on agricultural gases especially methane. He will announce, again, an international NZ-led effort. Splendid. Except it began about 5 year’s ago. Remember the Fart Tax? Well the farmers paid up anyway and so did the taxpayer and the research got started. (I was both Climate and Science minister at the time)

Not that we shouldn’t do more. Not that another conference of research workers mightn’t be a good idea. But it ain’t new.

So what would be new?

*research and business development of ligno-cellulose(ie forestry products or by-products) to ethanol in pilot refineries beginning in BoP where the science and the wood is most concentrated. Actually the science is done but the scaling out of the lab isn’t.
*research into deep geothermal energy. That research got underway two year’s ago but modestly. We need baseload thermal electricity to wind out Huntly and to give charging capacity to electric vehicles….
*an undertaking to purchase a few hundred electric vehicles, possibly limited for official use in Wellington in the first instance, not to save lots of petrol (there would be too few), but to test recharging options, planning law, and other infrastructure so that when they are available affordably we will be ready.

The Conference would erupt at your speech because they would see substance Mr Key. Substance Mr Key. Mr Key? Hello? Hello…….?


COP15 – What can New Zealand do?

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 14th, 2009

This is the second of my climate change blogposts on my journey to the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen (COP15).

I’ve been thinking about five things New Zealand could do to make a more responsible contribution to international climate change policy than we do at the moment with John Key, Gerry Brownlee, Nick Smith, Murray McCully and Tim Groser calling the shots.  We need:

1. Real greenhouse gas reduction targets.  Earlier this year, Nick Smith and Tim Groser announced targets of between 10% and 20% reductions over 1990 emissions levels.  These targets were conditional on a deal being reached at Copenhagen, and on New Zealand getting concessions in a number of areas deemed important to our national interest, like land use change rules.  So if neither of those things happen, we’ll have no target.  Worse, John Key has admitted that we’ll achieve any reductions on a ‘net’ basis, by buying emissions credits from other countries rather than getting our own emissions down.
National wants New Zealand to have a free ride, and not have to actually do anything about reducing our emissions.  The rest of the world sees through this and is starting to regard us as a freeloader.
This is shortsighted.  We are not living up to the clean green image that we are cultivating to sell ourselves as a great tourist destination and a desirable food producer.  No wonder we got a fossil award at Copenhagen today.

2. A better way to set reduction targets.  When Nick Smith pushed his amended ETS through Parliament a couple of weeks ago under urgency with Maori Party and Peter Dunne support, I proposed an amendment, originally suggested by the Business Council for Sustainable Development, that would have provided for a transparent, consultative target-setting process.  The amendment would have created a group of experts, to consult and advise on target setting.  It would have enshrined reductions targets in legislation, and it would have required the Government to report against progress in meeting those targets.  National, the Maori Party and Peter Dunne voted this amendment down.  Targets – like the big subsidies that will now go to polluters – will be formulated in secret by Nick Smith.  They will remain aspirational, rather than legislated-for, goals.

3. Domestic policies that actually reduce emissions.  As noted, plans to meet even our modest conditional targets rely on buying credits offshore rather than achieving domestic emissions reductions.  There’s no sector-by-sector plan to reduce emissions in agriculture, transport, energy generation or otherwise.  Gerry Brownlee has rolled back each of the previous Labour-led Government’s initiatives in these areas – the renewables generation preference and the biofuels obligation were two early casualties under urgency late last year.
And Nick Smith’s “moderated” ETS won’t help.  Because it adopts “intensity” rather than absolute reduction measures, lacks caps, and phases out assistance to polluters over a 90 year period rather than the 20 years Labour opted for, all reputable experts say that it will actually lead to an increase, rather than a decrease, in New Zealand’s emissions.

4. To keep focussed on issues that relate to our national interest, but not at the sake of losing sight of the big picture.  It would be great for New Zealand to get more favorable rules on offset planting – but not if this incentivises a whole lot of new deforestation in the Amazon.  It would be great for New Zealand to get amended land use change rules – but not if this actually increases the amount of greenhouse gas being released into the atmosphere.

5. To watch the messages we send by taking care over the company we keep internationally.  We are members of the “Umbrella Group” – the non-EU industrialised countries that discuss issues together, chaired by Australia.  It includes the US, Canada and Russia.  Although the Umbrella Group members negotiate independently, you have to wonder why we associate so closely with them – and why Tim Groser seems to want to get even closer.  We have a unique emissions profile for a developed nation (50% of emissions from agriculture; 66-75% of electricity generation from renewables).  We just don’t have a lot in common with the coal-burning giants, which also makes you wonder why we do things like join international alliances on carbon capture and sequestration (MED officials told me last week this was more to do with ‘Trans-Tasman diplomacy’ than New Zealand’s actual technological needs!).  And why on earth aren’t we more vocal in support of the AOSIS (Alliance of Small Island States), that includes many of our nearest Pacific neighbours?  Instead of bullying them at Pacific Islands Forum meetings to say and do what New Zealand and Australia want on climate change, we could live up to our (increasingly
self-imagined) image of being their friends and allies.

It seems to me that if the New Zealand Government doesn’t think carefully about these issues, we risk a double-whammy.  Sophisticated consumers in our developed country markets increasingly won’t want to come to us as tourists, or buy our lamb, butter and wine, and we’ll get poorer, not richer, despite our determined open-ness to international markets.  Developing countries, including the Pacific states, will increasingly see us as selfish and shirking of our responsibilities, and we’ll find ourselves – including in our own region, where our interests are strategic – increasingly resented.

New Zealand can do so much better.


COP15 – En route to Copenhagen

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 13th, 2009

I left Wellington on Friday afternoon en route for the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP15) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, being held in Copenhagen till 18 December.  I’ve been thinking about what might realistically come out of the Conference.

COP15’s principal purpose is to negotiate a replacement treaty for the Kyoto Protocol.  The major issue to be resolved is how to share the burden of cutting emissions of greenhouse gases.  Countries like New Zealand – amongst the 35 richest in the world by average per person wealth – burnt significant amounts of fossil fuels to attain our current level of economic development.  We need to commit to more ambitious future emissions reduction targets as we transition to a less carbon-intensive future.  Countries that are still developing their economies – at present largely by burning fossil fuels – need to agree to reductions in their burgeoning emissions.  In each case, a just transition is required.

An effective compromise between these two groups of nations is key to a successful outcome.  This will have to include transfers of financial and technological assistance from developed to developing countries so the latter grow more cleanly and can better adapt to the climatic shifts that are believed to be already underway and which are predicted to intensify.  Also on the COP15 agenda are other complex subsidiary issues, ranging from expanding international carbon trading to reducing emissions from deforestation.

Until as late as last week, New Zealand’s National-led Government assumed that the differences between developed and developing nations would be simply too great to be bridged at COP15.  There is no denying the difficulty of the issues, as the initial days of the Conference have demonstrated.  Nor, however, can the determination of some of the major players – notably the US, the EU, China and India – to see a deal done, even if in broad outline, with the detail to be worked out in subsidiary talks over the coming year.  That’s certainly an outcome I hope to see. 

Tomorrow, subject to any other developments from COP15, I plan to blog about what I think New Zealand’s particular aspirations for COP15 should be.


Next stop: Copenhagen

Posted by Charles Chauvel on December 10th, 2009

A couple of weeks back I said that I would be going to Copenhagen for the COP15 summit.

I have decided to go to observe first hand what the world’s leaders finally agree to as well as to get a sense of how the current Government’s watered down ETS and lack of coherent climate change policy have affected New Zealand’s reputation overseas.

I will be blogging while over in Denmark, so stay tuned for more over the next week. I will also post my photos on Red Alert and at my own site.

In the meantime, you can show your support for a strong goal towards lowering GHG emissions.

Last Saturday I spoke to the Wellington march for Planet A, the video of the speech is below:

A copy of the speech is at my website here.

Please show your support by joining the Sign On campaign and encourage others to do the same.


Does Key know why he is going to Copenhagen?

Posted by Trevor Mallard on December 8th, 2009

We all now know Key is off to Copenhagen. Grant Robertson predicted it.

But he doesn’t know why? Somehow he thinks he is going to make a difference to the result.

We all know that he is only going because he was under intense international and domestic pressure to go. He doesn’t even believe in climate change and is scared that his comments while in opposition will be part of the briefing documents that his foreign counterparts will see about him. Not to mention the pathetic ETS he promoted through Parliament.

The best reason for him going has been given by Mike Moore. It is an opportunity to meet leaders who after a few such meetings might make themselves more available to meet him or take his phone calls.


Key to Go to Copenhagen

Posted by Grant Robertson on December 3rd, 2009

Finally, confirmation of what was inevitable. Of course it is good that the PM will be there, but that he has been dragged there is an indictment of his and National’s real views on climate change and a terrible look for a country that prides itself on its green credentials. Not to mention going there with a deeply flawed ETS and an emissions reduction target that makes the phrase “ambitious for New Zealand” a sick joke.


Dog fight

Posted by Trevor Mallard on December 3rd, 2009

It is always interesting to watch the right brawling. Here we have a climate change denier questioning the Minister of do not very much.

18894 (2009). Hon Rodney Hide to the Minister for Climate Change Issues

Will he ask NIWA to release the full data on which NIWAs official time series of the mean annual temperature over New Zealand from 1853 to 2008 is based, together with full documentation of any adjustments that have been made to the data to produce the result; if not, why not?

18893 (2009). Hon Rodney Hide to the Minister for Climate Change Issues

Has he received my open letter dated 27 November 2009 and will he be replying; if so, when?

18892 (2009). Hon Rodney Hide to the Minister for Climate Change Issues

Has he read the New Zealand Climate Science Coalition paper of 25 November 2009 “Are we feeling warmer yet” tabled in Parliament on 26 November 2009; if so, what are his conclusions; if not, why not?

18891 (2009). Hon Rodney Hide to the Minister for Climate Change Issues

What is the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change estimate of the world’s temperature change over the past one hundred years, and how does this change compare to NIWA’s estimate of the change in temperature in New Zealand over the past one hundred years?

18890 (2009). Hon Rodney Hide to the Minister for Climate Change Issues

Has he read the New Zealand Climate Science Coalition paper of 25 November 2009 “Are we feeling warmer yet” tabled in Parliament on 26 November 2009; if so, what are his conclusions; if not, why not?

18889 (2009). Hon Rodney Hide to the Minister for Climate Change Issues

Does he accept as true the graph in Figure 7 on NIWA’s website that shows mean annual temperature over New Zealand from 1853 to 2008 inclusive with a plotted linear trend of 0.92°C/100 years; if so, why

Hat tip Whaleoil – who has a different take.


Key Government: All Map, No Compass

Posted by Grant Robertson on November 30th, 2009

If I was a betting man (which in fairness I am at the races from time to time) I would put my money on John Key going to Copenhagen.  As Audrey Young points out

Attendance of leaders has become a matter of symbolism, a symbol of commitment to a positive outcome. Key looks like that is not important to him.

But that will be the only reason he goes. Not because he believes that the world desperately needs to come together to address a major environmental issue, or that for the future of New Zealand and our region we desperately need to be part of a positive solution. Goodness, earlier in the week Murray McCully was complaining about climate change taking too much time at CHOGM. Earth to Murray, its kinda the biggest show in town right now.

My prediction is that Steven Joyce will tell Key the optics look bad, and he had better get over there. I am sorry to sound so cynical but this is a bit of a pattern.

Today John Key has dismissed the 2025 taskforce report, in part on the basis that National needs to keep its promises to the electorate on keeping Labour programmes such as Working for Families and Interest Free Student Loans. Great, but we all know what Key and National actually think of those programmes- “communism by stealth” anyone? Its not that Key actually believes this is socially responsible policy, he’s just stuck with it.

Returning to Copenhagen the risk for New Zealand is that all this naked pragmitism is going to be seen as just that. Again to quote Audrey Young

No one will give Key credit for parachuting in for a photo-op once others have done the hard work

Therein lies the problem for New Zealand. Beyond any straight environmental motives, from an economic point of view being dragged kicking and screaming to Copenhagen is a terrible look for an isolated trading nation that has prided (and marketed) itself on its clean green image. Its probably already too late on that score.

I accept that John Key’s pragmatism is playing well with New Zealanders at the moment. Its all very well having good political anntennae, but the long term future of New Zealand suffers if you don’t have a plan as to where you are going. All map, no compass is a very bad recipe for New Zealand.


Planet A – It is worth protecting

Posted by Charles Chauvel on November 30th, 2009

December 5 is a busy day, with marches, a free concert and a Family Fair all to raise awareness and show support for protecting our planet ahead of the COP15 conference in Copenhagen.

Simultaneous events are being held across the country including a free concert with top NZ acts in Auckland. Other events can be seen here.

I will be at the Wellington event; you can join me and many others by meeting at the Civic Square at 1pm and then march to Parliament.

However, if you cannot make it, you can go to the concert, which for those who aren’t in Auckland is being streamed live on the internet, or you can watch it at Bar Bodega, 101 Ghuznee St from 2:30-6:30pm

You can also watch it by clicking here.

If you don’t believe me, here’s Lucy Lawless in the shower!


Another good reason to live in Wellington

Posted by Grant Robertson on November 28th, 2009

The Wellington City Council is beginning work on how to encourage the uptake of electric cars.  Wellingtonians are already among the most sustainable transport users in NZ, with more people walking or taking public transport to work than any other city in New Zealand.  There is a long way to go here, but this is a positive step to a more sustainable future.


Gerry’s biofuels shambles

Posted by Chris Hipkins on November 28th, 2009

Continuing with the theme set this morning by Colin James (see Grant’s post) I’ve found another example of how governments get things wrong when they rush things through. Late last year the newly elected National government rushed through a repeal of Labour’s biofuels obligation under Urgency. The obligation would have meant that the fuel you purchased at the pump would have had to have a certain percentage of biofuels within it. It would have been a useful step in reducing our carbon emissions.

National decided to rush through a repeal, thus pulling the rug out from under the biofuel industry that had been scaling up to take advantage of the new obligation. Labour MPs presented examples during the debate of businesses that would suffer, we presented the cost to NZ in terms of higher carbon emissions, and we argued, as we have with the ETS, that ultimately it should be the polluter that pays.

Gerry Brownlee argued, as National have done with the ETS, that the taxpayer should pay. In this year’s Budget National introduced a Biodiesel Grants Scheme as a partial replacement for the sales obligation. It set aside $36 million in taxpayer subsidies to encourage the production of Biodiesel. So how has it panned out? Well so far they have spent less than $44,000 of that money. In other words, it’s been a total flop. Another example of a bad law rushed through. Another example of National not looking at the evidence of what actually works.


Phil Goff’s Speech

Posted by Grant Robertson on November 27th, 2009

A lot of media comment today on Phil’s speech to Grey Power in Palmerston North.    Some of it does not bear much relation to the actual content.  It is vital that we can have a mature debate about difficult and challenging issues, and the media have an important role to play in that. This does not mean agreeing with every word, just that it is reported fairly.  Please do follow the link above, have a read for yourself and make up your own mind.

For an example have a look at Gordon Campbell’s take on the speech.  He does not agree with all of it, but he debates the substance. A sample

The one area where Goff’s speech did hit home cleanly was over the failure of the ETS deal to meet the environmental challenge. The rewards for big polluters, Maori and pakeha, are indefensible. So however is the response that calls Goff’s speech an instance of ‘playing the race card.’ Unlike Don Brash at Orewa, this speech dealt with specific and substantive issues – and if its faults are also substantive, they should be attacked on those terms.

After all, if the Maori Party are going to become the kingmakers in future New Zealand elections, they – and we- are going to have to learn how to debate their shortcomings without being called racists for doing so. The fact racists will undoubtedly prey on such criticism is not a reason for remaining silent, or for giving the Maori Party a free pass.