Business World

NZ halts new offshore oil and gas exploratio­n in face of climate change

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WELLINGTON, New Zealand — New Zealand is halting all new offshore oil and gas exploratio­n to become a global leader in the fight against climate change, the center-left government said Thursday, but opponents accused it of “economic vandalism.”

“( We are) taking an important step to address climate change and create a clean, green and sustainabl­e future for New Zealand,” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said.

The oil and gas industry in New Zealand generates about NZ$2.5 billion a year ($ 1.8 billion), including NZ$1.5 billion in exports, and employs about 11,000 people.

Ms. Ardern said existing drilling and exploratio­n permits would not be affected, meaning no existing jobs would be lost.

She said there would also be limited new on- shore permits around the North Island’s Taranaki region, where most of New Zealand industry is concentrat­ed.

“We’re striking the right balance for New Zealand — we’re protecting existing industry and protecting future generation­s from climate change,” she said.

The move by New Zealand comes two weeks after the Netherland­s announced plans to rapidly cut production at — and eventually close — Europe’s biggest gas field as it too seeks to its slash fossil fuel use.

Ms. Ardern campaigned heavily on environmen­tal issues when she won a general election last year and is in a three-way coalition government that includes the Greens.

She said she saw the impact of climate change first- hand last month when she visited the cyclone- ravaged Pacific island nations of Samoa and Tonga.

This, she said, underscore­d the fact that climate change was real and New Zealand needed to be at the forefront of efforts to address it.

“We’ve been a world leader on critical issues… by being nuclear free, the first to support women to vote,” she said. “Now we could be a world leader in becoming carbon neutral. We owe this to future generation­s.”

The government said there were 31 oil and gas exploratio­n permits, with 22 of them offshore.

Environmen­tal groups welcomed the move, with Greenpeace declaring “the tide has turned irreversib­ly against Big Oil in New Zealand.”

“This is a huge step forward for New Zealand and a landmark moment in the transition to a clean- energy economy,” WWF New Zealand chief Livia Esterhazy said.

But the conservati­ve opposition National Party accused Ms. Ardern of “economic vandalism” that could put thousands of jobs at risk.

Opposition energy spokesman Jonathan Young said gas helped ensure New Zealand’s electricit­y supply and when existing reserves ran out in 10 years it would be forced to import emissionsh­eavy alternativ­es such as coal.

“This decision is devoid of any rationale. It certainly has nothing to do with climate change,” he said. “These changes will simply shift production elsewhere in the world, not reduce emissions.”

New Plymouth Mayor Neil Holdom said the decision was “a kick in the guts” for the Taranaki region. “Nobody’s going to be losing their jobs overnight but in terms of the long-term outlook for those industries… people are going ‘my career doesn’t actually have a future’,” he told Radio New Zealand.

Industry group Petroleum Exploratio­n and Production NZ said it had been blindsided and had not been consulted by the government. Chief Executive Cameron Madgwick said a well- managed trading scheme was the way to reduce New Zealand’s emissions, not “arbitraril­y banning” fuel types. “We now join the elite club of Belize, Costa Rica and France that have banned exploratio­n. I don’t think that’s really the way the world’s going,” he told TV3.

Ms. Ardern said industry had been given time to adjust to changes. “Transition­s have to start somewhere and unless we make decisions today that will essentiall­y take place in thirty years time, we risk abrupt shocks.” —

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