“As
the IPPC report predicts dire consequences for New Zealand, our
politicians talk only about ‘adaptation’ to Climate Change while
carving up NZ for more fossil fuel exploration and maintaining an
'all of the above' approach to energy that even Simon Bridges thinks
is just good rhetoric.”
NZ
Govt energy policy: fiscal idiocy and atmospheric self-harm
Blogpost
by Rosalind Atkinson - April 2, 2014 at 12:12
2
April, 2014
As
the IPPC report predicts dire consequences for New Zealand, our
politicians talk only about ‘adaptation’ to Climate Change while
carving up NZ for more fossil fuel exploration and maintaining an
'all of the above' approach to energy that even Simon Bridges thinks
is just good rhetoric.
On
Monday the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) - a whole
bunch of extremely smart scientists - released their highly
anticipated report on
climate change impacts. The increased focus on issues for humans, not
just the environment, and the havoc a changing climate looks set to
wreak, is rightly setting off alarm bells across the globe.
"Nobody
on this planet is going to be untouched by the impacts of climate
change," IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri said,
and Professor Neil Adger of Exeter University similarly doesn’t
mince words: "Climate change is happening, there are big risks
for everyone and no place in the world is immune from them."
Here in NZ that means increased flooding, fires, sea level rise,
storms, and biodiversity loss, as well as the effects of increased
conflict and increases
in food prices.
This
is not an ‘oh well, never mind’ situation, yet the best our
Climate Change Minister Tim Groser can offer is to talk
about ‘Adaptation’.
When he says this, what does he actually mean? What does he envisage?
That we will move cities? Redirect roads? Abandon regions? As George
Monbiotpoints
out, it’s a wonder whether Groser knows what he’s talking about
at all.
But
perhaps most unbelieveably of all, in the very same week as this
unprecedented warning about the risks of failing to take action, our
associate Minister for Climate Change, Simon Bridges, is preparing to
offer up vast swathes of land and ocean for Oil and Gas exploitation.
Today,
Bridges will be announcing the 2014 ‘Block Offer’ of land and sea
areas for further fossil fuel exploitation, at the Advantage NZ
Geotechnical Petroleum Forum. He’s
already told us that
his ‘all of the above’ approach to energy is nothing but hollow
rhetoric, but in the face of the new IPCC report, the government’s
project of aggressive fossil fuel expansion is not just economically
misguided but criminally irresponsible.
This
is not a case of environment versus economics. The necessary shift
away from fossil fuels represents a massive opportunity for renewable
energy and a thriving clean economy, as shown byGreenpeace, Pure
Advantage, The
NZ Royal Society,
and others. Investing New Zealanders’ money in a wild goose chase
after dwindling fossil fuel reserves is fiscally idiotic as well as
atmospheric self-harm. Failing to take the opportunities mitigation
offers us now will mean immense costs later, in terms of both money
and wellbeing.
Other
governments around the world are responding to the challenge with
renewed vigour and vision. UK Secretary of State Edward
Davey says: “This
evidence strengthens the case for early action in the UK and around
the world to lessen the significant risks posed by climate change. We
cannot afford to wait.” I find it deeply painful to read our own
climate change Minister’s statement that the report is a “useful
contribution” that affirms “adaption” as a response.
“Adaptation”
in this context means wilful inaction in the face of an era-defining
opportunity. We’re one of the highest emitters in
the world on a per capita basis and with current settings that’s
only going to increase. We need more than a few individual choices.
We need strong and visionary leadership. One of the report's lead
authors, Macquarie University Professor Lesley Hughes, is clear that
the ‘wait and see’ approach is not going to cut it, reminding us
that "it's
not all doom and gloom if
we get a wriggle on and do a lot about it." I can’t believe
that the best our Ministers can do is remind us of New Zealand’s
tiny size and inability to affect global emissions.
We
weren’t always treated to this kind of nihilistic fatalism. Back in
2007, we heard something different. “I have faith that New Zealand
can influence the world”, said
this politician,
“and I have faith that New Zealanders can rise to this global
economic shift…. I want to reward Kiwi good-mindedness by leading a
Government that acts in an economically sound, principled and
visionary way to tackle the greatest environmental challenge of our
time... We believe a strong New Zealand voice on climate change is
vital to the “brand” our exporters rely on, and can be a key
force for rallying the global troops.”
Who
was this crazy lefty? The same man who yesterday flatly told
the nation that
“we can only do so much and that’s a pretty small amount,” and
that our small size is an excuse to continue to do basically nothing.
Also known as John Key, our Prime Minister. For shame.
Once
upon a time, Key was “hugely hopeful about New Zealand’s ability
to maximise the opportunities presented by this global challenge”
(2007 again). Now his Ministers are dangling pieces of our country in
front of the increasingly desperate fossil fuel industry and ignoring
the opportunities that come with decisive climate action. They’re
stuck in a dinosaur model of business as usual and it’s not going
to cut it.
There’s
a chance to change course here for a prosperous and less risky
future. But those at the helm are sailing us straight into the storm.
“This is the critical decade,” says the IPCC’s Professor
Hughes. Are we willing to believe our leaders when they tell us we’re
powerless, and obediently just ‘wait and see’ what
happens?
That way you'll be helping
spread the word about the 'action' our government is taking in face
of the havoc a changing climate looks set to wreak.
Ros
sailed with the Oil Free Seas Flotilla in 2013 and continues to
campaign on clean energy, working with Greenpeace to help people
imagine and create a future without fossil-fuels. She is currently
land-based in Wellington and pursuing post-grad study at Victoria
University.
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