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New Zealand announces climate fund

The plan puts money towards activities including making electric vehicles more accessible

- REUTERS

The New Zealand government said yesterday it would set up a NZ$4.5 billion (US$2.83 billion) climate response fund, spending at least NZ$2.9 billion on cutting pollution over the next four years as it targets net zero emissions by 2050.

The plan puts money towards a broad

range of activities including making electric vehicles more accessible, reducing food going into landfill, improving

public transport and truck emissions and helping industry to decarbonis­e.

The government is also introducin­g a ban on some coal boilers and said it will introduce an emissions pricing mechanism for its key agricultur­al sector from 2025.

The government said the new Climate Emergency Response Fund will initially receive NZ$4.5 billion from Emissions Trading Scheme revenue, with NZ$2.9 billion to be allocated in this week's budget.

The new Emissions Reduction Plan "delivers the greatest opportunit­y we've had in decades to address climate change but also move to a high wage, low emissions economy that provides greater economic security by creating jobs", New Zealand Prime Minster Jacinda Ardern said in a statement. Ardern missed the release of the plan after contractin­g COVID.

The most significan­t emissions reductions for the period ending December 31, 2025 will come in the energy, industrial and transport sectors, government documents said, adding every sector will have to play a role.

The budget will allocate NZ$1.3 billion to the transport sector for projects such as moving people into electric vehicles, decarbonis­ing the freight and public transport sectors and reducing the need for short car trips. A further NZ$380 million is earmarked for agricultur­e and NZ$692 million for the energy sector.

"We will directly recycle the costs of pollution back into projects that reduce emissions. This means the polluters are paying not the households," Finance Minister Grant Robertson said in a statement.

The government said NZ$865 million of the NZ$4.5 billion had previously been allocated to internatio­nal climate finance and a decarbonis­ing fund.

The fund will be topped up with future revenue from the Emissions Trading Scheme.

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