The New Zealand Herald

Government’s climate budgets get National’s backing

- Michael Neilson

The National Party supports greenhouse gas emissions budgets set by the Government yesterday, continuing a run of cross-party collaborat­ion on climate change.

The budgets set limits on how much carbon dioxide-equivalent greenhouse gasses the country can emit over three periods up to 2035, as part of a long-term target of netzero emissions by 2050 and limiting global warming to under 1.5C.

Next Monday the Government will unveil the Emissions Reduction Plan, which will show how these budgets will be achieved.

Climate Change Minister James Shaw yesterday described the budgets as a “sinking lid” on the path to zero emissions by 2050.

National Party leader Christophe­r Luxon said his party supported the targets and budgets set yesterday, continuing the cross-party support that got the Zero Carbon Act over the line back in 2019.

National would support the budgets in the debate set for Thursday in Parliament, he said.

National had signed New Zealand up to the Paris Agreement and voted for the Zero Carbon Bill in 2019, which establishe­d emissions budgets and the Climate Change Commission.

“Having agreed the net emissions pathway, the question now is how to bring down emissions,” Luxon said.

“We need effective policies if we are to deliver our ambitious climate change targets.”

The initial emissions budgets are set over three time periods.

The first covers 2022-2025, allowing no more than 290 megatonnes to be released.

At about 72MT a year this would be roughly 2MT less than the amount emitted on average over the past five years (2017-2021) and just under 3MT more than projected predicted for the time period 2022-2025 but in line with Climate Change Commission recommenda­tions.

The following five years, 2026-2030, would see ambitions increase, with 305MT allowed or about 61 a year. This was about 20 per cent less than the five years to 2021.

The third period, 2031-2035, allows for 240MT at 48MT a year, or a 35 per cent reduction on the five years to 2021.

Shaw said these budgets would ensure New Zealand fully played its part in keeping global warming below 1.5C.

The plan about how to meet these budgets would come out on Monday, May 16.

Shaw said a permanent climate change board will be establishe­d to co-ordinate climate change policy across government.

It will report to the Climate Emergency Response Group of Ministers chaired by the prime minister.

The Government has said climate and health will likely be a major focus of Budget 2022.

The latest Greenhouse Gas Inventory, released from the Ministry for the Environmen­t, showed gross greenhouse gas emissions were down by 3 per cent between 2019 and 2020.

This reduction was mainly due to fewer travel emissions, and reduced fuel use for manufactur­ing resulting from Covid-19 lockdowns.

From 1990 to 2020, however, gross emissions increased by 21 per cent.

About 50 per cent of emissions came from agricultur­e, including 23.5 per cent from dairy cattle.

Between 1990 and 2020, emissions from the sector increased by 17 per cent mainly due to an 80 per cent increase in the dairy herd and increase in use of synthetic nitrogen by about 693 per cent.

The energy sector was the next largest at about 40 per cent of emissions, which had increased 32 per cent since 1990.

This increase was largely due to a 76 per cent increase in emissions in the transport sector, which now made up 16.7 per cent of emissions overall.

 ?? ?? James Shaw
James Shaw
 ?? ?? Christophe­r Luxon
Christophe­r Luxon

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