"How the hell did a Vandal like Tim Grosser become our Minister of Climate Change?
This Quisling spends most of his time in Switzerland scheming with his corporate cronies to sell us out to Overseas Corporates via the T.P.P.A.
"Climate Change Minister Tim Groser, in a statement which welcomed the IPCC report, said: "New Zealand is committed to doing our fair share without imposing excess costs on households and businesses, while the Government focuses on jobs and strengthening our recovery."
"What a complete and utter liar. We have plenty of Nats to despise but this prick takes the toxic Cake."
---Kevin Hester
Brian
Fallow: Dire response to climate change
The
Government's refusal to do much of anything to curb New Zealand's
emissions is as economically myopic as it is morally contemptible
1
April, 2014
If
man's activities are what is warming the planet - and according to
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change there is very little
"if" about it - the good news is that we can do something
about it.
The
bad news is that so far what we are doing about it is five-eighths of
not very much at all.
Nothing
that politicians do, or fail to do, can change the laws of physics,
the laws of mathematics or the passage of time.
And
beneath all the forbidding jargon of the latest IPCC report the
message is clear - time is running out.
Governments,
including ours, have adopted a 2C increase in global mean temperature
as the boundary between what is just about tolerable and what is
downright dangerous climate change.
The
IPCC report concludes that to give us a decent (66 per cent) chance
of keeping below 2C we need to keep within a budget of 1 trillion
tonnes of carbon over the entire industrial era.
Put
another way, mankind can only dump a cumulative 3670 billion tonnes
of carbon dioxide into the climate system as a result of our
activities.
It
sounds like a lot but since the industrial revolution we have already
spent about half of that budget.
We
are spending the rest at a rate of 48 billion tonnes of CO2 a year
and rising.
On
a business-as-usual track we will have blown the carbon budget within
about 30 years.
And
that does not include an allowance for other greenhouses gases like
methane, whether from melting permafrost or the digestive tracts of
ruminants. Accounting for them or requiring a higher likelihood of
temperatures remaining below 2C would both imply lower cumulative CO2
emissions, the IPCC says.
For
its view on what can be done to haul the emissions curve down we will
have to wait for the third tranche of its assessment report in April
next year.
It
is essential to get policymakers to think of the challenge in terms
of a finite cumulative carbon budget rather than in terms of some
target for annual emissions at some future date.
It
is the area under the curve that matters, not the shape of the curve
or the end point.
It
is simple mathematics that the higher and later the peak in global
emissions is, the steeper the subsequent decline will have to be.
And
that is why the Government's refusal to do much of anything to curb
New Zealand's emissions is as economically myopic as it is morally
contemptible.
It
means a greater risk of stranded assets and a larger bite out of
future incomes.
Climate
Change Minister Tim Groser, in a statement which welcomed the IPCC
report, said: "New Zealand is committed to doing our fair share
without imposing excess costs on households and businesses, while the
Government focuses on jobs and strengthening our recovery."
This
is his way of saying that if the global response to climate change is
woefully inadequate it is only fair that ours is woefully inadequate,
too.
The
Government recently made an unconditional commitment to reducing
greenhouse gas emissions to 5 per cent below 1990 levels by 2020,
Groser reminded us.
"We
have implemented the Emissions Trading Scheme [ETS], we are making
progress towards our 90 per cent renewable electricity target, and
have launched the Global Research Alliance, committing $45 million to
research ways to grow more food without growing greenhouse gas
emissions."
Let's
examine these claims.
If
the target of 5 per cent below 1990 were a commitment to reduce New
Zealand's gross emissions to that level it would be a substantial
cut, given that they are running at more than 20 per cent above 1990
levels.
But
it is a target for net emissions, which includes the offset for
carbon dioxide removed from the atmosphere by "Kyoto"
forests (those planted since 1989 on land not previously forested).
Net
emissions are roughly where they were in 1990 and it will be the
2020s before most of those trees get harvested and the forests flip
from being a carbon sink to a carbon source.
Then
our national carbon accounts will get dramatically worse, but that is
clearly beyond the timeframe of interest to this Government.
When
he announced the 5 per cent target Groser admitted that it would not
require any changes to the settings of the ETS.
But
the ETS, supposedly the flagship climate change policy, has been so
weakened that it is a sham, a facade that fools no one.
The
carbon prices it delivers are so low as to provide no incentive to
reduce emissions and no disincentive against deforestation - even
though an expanding plantation forest estate is one of the best
things New Zealand can do to reduce its contribution to atmospheric
CO2 levels over the crucial next few decades.
The
president of the New Zealand Institute of Forestry, Andrew McEwen,
points to data from the Ministry for Primary Industries' longstanding
annual National Exotic Forest Description which record a pattern of
net deforestation over the past 10 years.
The
maximum stocked area - the land which actually has trees on it - of
1.8 million hectares was achieved in 2003.
For
the 83 years up to 2003 the area increased every year apart from
three when there was no change.
But
since 2003 the stocked area has decreased each year until the March
2012 year when the area increased by just 100ha.
That
period includes the years of the so-called chainsaw massacre, when
the owners of pre-Kyoto forests had an incentive to fell their trees
before deforestation liabilities under the ETS came into force.
But
of the total 107,000ha reduction in the size of the plantation forest
estate between 2003 and 2012, 41,000ha has occurred since 2008, that
is, while forestry has been in the ETS.
It
is worth pointing out that while the National-led Government has
weakened the scheme, Labour, which designed it, only managed to get
it into the statute books in the dying days of its ninth year in
power. Its claim to the high ground is shaky.
As
for the objective of a power system which is 90 per cent renewable,
that is not a stretch target for a country as well endowed with
renewable energy resources, including geothermal steam, as New
Zealand is. The electricity sector in any case accounts for a
relatively small share of national emissions.
Where
the Government can claim some credit is its role in setting up the
Global Research Alliance and putting resources into the search for
ways of reducing emissions form the agriculture sector. But that is
about it.
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