This
government is in complete denial about the impending catastrophe
baring down on NZ and the world.
Tonight
I am attending the NZ Government Climate change public meetings to
have our say on evolving policy.
Cop
21, Paris in December will determine what measures the world are
prepared to take to mitigate the coming catastrophe that will be the
result of anthropogenic climate change.
The
IPCC is still talking about attempting to limit the increase in
temperature to 2C when 6C is already baked in. Our government is as
close to a climate change denier as you can get after the U.S.,
Canada and Australia. This is a life and death situation, the stakes
could not be higher.
---Kevin
Hester
Multi-no-choice
– National’s Idea of Climate Consultation
Dave
Hanford
18
May, 2015
Earlier
this month, the Government invited New Zealanders to comment on the
position Climate Change Minister Tim Groser should take to COP 21
negotiations in Paris come December. To help them understand the
issues, it offered some context in a discussion document,
available here.
Except
that it didn’t. What it gave the public instead was the same tired
old litany of excuses as to why we should wait and see. The same old
thinly-veiled “this is going to cost ya” threats. The same old
“so much of our energy is renewable already, so we can’t really
do much more” platitudes. The same execrable “if we make our
farmers pay for their greenhouse gas pollution, the world could end
up starving” nonsense.
It
tries again to convince people that anything New Zealand does about
its emissions will make very little difference to the planet. Most
irksome, it seriously expects us to believe that: “… we are
committed to doing our fair share and taking responsibility for our
emissions,” when New Zealand’s greenhouse pollution is now 21 per
cent greater than in 1990.
As
for New Zealand being a bit-player, consider that each EU citizen now
emits 7.5 tonnes of greenhouse gases on average – down from nine
tonnes in 1990 and set to drop to six tonnes over the next commitment
round. In New Zealand, you and I – abetted by millions of Friesians
– pump out 17 tonnes.
Far
from being a team player, New Zealand is in fact polluta
non grata at
international climate rounds, because our neighbours plainly see that
a reduction target of five per cent below 1990 levels, when the EU
has committed to a 40 per cent reduction, the US to 28 per cent, and
climate supervillain China to 20 per cent by 2030, closely mimics the
sound of dragging feet.
UN
multilateral provisions let
nations each quiz other about their performance on climate change,
and New Zealand has been facing some searching questions of late from
those concerned that we might not actually be serious about this.
Brazil, which noticed that New Zealand had tabled a target of between
10 and 20 per cent at COP 15 in Copenhagen in 2009, wanted to know:
“Please, explain the reasons for reducing the target to 5%.” It
also wanted to know why we couldn’t make any progress on even that
paltry token: “Please, provide the reasons for the lack of
quantified reduction of emissions regarding many planned actions that
have been reported in Table 3 under the CTF.”
Others
see right through the National Government’s dumb show of “meeting”
its 2020 targets by buying up hot
air credits from
former Soviet states – emissions certificates widely considered to
be fraudulent. This from the United States: “How do you plan to
prevent double counting with the host countries of projects that
generated CERs that your country plans to use towards meeting its
pledge in the pre-2020 period? If a host country refuses to adjust
its reporting towards its progress to its targets to reflect CERs it
exported, do you still plan to count them?”
In reply, the New Zealand delegation pretended that we might not need to resort to CERs – something approaching a bald-faced lie – then offered this empty sop:
“The best means of dealing with this issue would be for countries intending to participate in international trading to have processes in place to prevent double counting.”
This
is the sort of context conspicuously absent from the Government’s
consultation document. Instead it tries to present New Zealand as a
hapless, but well-intentioned, victim of its own agrarian
circumstance.
By
the end of this consultation paper, anyone would be excused for
thinking that action on climate change is a net loss, a leg-iron
around the ankle of prosperity:
“More ambitious targets will have a higher cost. For example, if New Zealand took a target of 10 per cent below 1990, then the cost of New Zealand’s target could increase by an additional $200 million per annum. For a target of 20 per cent below 1990, then the increase in cost could be an additional $500 million or more.”
So?
North Canterbury is right now in the grip of yet another drought.
These are an annual event nowadays, but over the last decade, they’ve
begun to lengthen,
extending into autumn and even winter. In the Hurunui, farmers short
on feed will either have to sell
capital stock at
fire sale rates or buy in more supplementary feed. Dairy farmers will
somehow have to do this on record low returns, following the crash in
dairy prices.
The
2007-08 drought cost the country $2.8 billion. In 2013, we took
another two
billion dollar hit.
That makes $500 million a year look like a bargain, but the public is
not presented with any of this.
But,
the paper warns, it’s worse than that: “Firstly, wages will grow
more slowly, in line with the overall economy. Secondly, the price of
some goods and services will be higher (e.g.; electricity and vehicle
fuel). These effects decrease the amount of ‘household consumption’
possible, i.e.; the average household will be less ‘well-off’
than what would be expected without a target.”
Between
1992 to 2014, New Zealanders’ household consumption
expenditure jumped by
nearly 57 per cent (in 2009 dollars). In 2012, it was the fourth
highest in
the OECD, eclipsing even the avaricious Americans. Capitalists love
such orgiastic consumption, because it makes GDP look good. This how
they frame the depletion of resources (and, incidentally, crippling
debt) as prosperity. If New Zealanders were to ease back on the
credit card, it would in fact be a good thing for the environment and
the economy.
The
document warns readers that even a target of 10 per cent below 1990
(which, incidentally, would certainly be regarded with contempt at
Paris) could, by the year 2027, cost families an extra $30 a year,
while a 20 per cent cut might cost them $130. These costs are based
on a $50-a-tonne carbon price – eight times higher than it is
presently.
If
it were being truly honest, the discussion document would point out
to readers that in fact, they’ve already shelled out more than this
to bail out Solid Energy. If you want to know something of the real
costs of old-school, fossil fuel thinking, here are some figures for
you: $320 million – the amount state coal miner Solid Energy
currently owes to banks. $153 million – taxpayers’ money shoved
into the haemorrhaging wound. $103m – the amount you will pay to
clean up the land despoiled by Solid Energy. $182 million – the
SOE’s latest loss for the year ending June. Add restructuring costs
and the social fallout from laying off nearly 900 people at Stockton,
Spring Creek and Huntly East since 2011.
At
least the Government has said it
will no longer be propping up this doomed enterprise. And doomed it
surely is: in the past few years, 26 US coal companies have gone
bankrupt and 264 mines have closed. The US coal industry lost 76 per
cent of its value in just five years. The share price of Peabody
Energy, the world’s biggest private coal miner, fell by 80 per
cent.
The
world is changing fast. An economy that has for three hundred years
been powered by fossil fuels is about to turn off the tap, and flick
the switch instead on a new age of decentralised renewable energy.
Eton Musk’s Powerwall has, practically overnight, made renewable
energy cheaper at
the meter box (and at the factory) than thermal, but its impact goes
far beyond affordability – it hurls a gauntlet at China, which has
for years been positioning itself as a renewable superpower. It will
respond with still greater capacity, more development, still cheaper
technology. Renewables, which have ever been a swell on the horizon,
are starting to curl into a monster wave approaching fast.
This
gives us an opportunity you won’t read about in the consultation
document: we could use this energy revolution to power a smart green
economy. This year, says global credit checker Standard & Poor’s,
companies will issue green
bonds for
a record US$30
billion to
bankroll low carbon industry. The market already tripled
its value between
2013 and 2014, and significantly, has not slowed as oil prices
slumped – it now has its own momentum.
A
critical threshold has been crossed. Now, says our own Simon Upton,
Chairman of the OECD Round Table on Sustainable Development “policies
rather than technologies are now holding back progress.”
Neither
does the consultation paper tell people about the cost of doing
nothing, despite Treasury figures which
show that business-as-usual – maintaining our present emissions
trajectory – could cost us $52 billion.
The
Government is trying to present our climate policy as the choice
between an arbitrary, meaningless percentage and what it might cost
you. This is a gross misrepresentation: instead of a few bullet
points about forest sinks and more hydro, it should be asking New
Zealanders instead whether they want to be a part of the new
industrial revolution. Whether they would prefer to keep bankrolling
Government enticements to oil companies and funding coal clean-ups,
or whether they would like to re-boot the economy on the back of
planet-saving innovation.
One thing is certain: if we keep doing what we’ve always done, the planet is going to cook. I’ll put my hand up right now – here’s my thirty bucks…
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