Let’s get the ETS right before making it law
NZ FOREST OWNERS ASSOCIATION
MEDIA RELEASE
25 June
2008
Let’s get the ETS right before making it
law
A report highlighting the costs of delaying an
emissions trading scheme (ETS) greatly understates the
benefits of planting more trees, say forest
owners.
“The trouble is, there are still major
flaws in the proposed scheme which make large-scale new
plantings unlikely,” says NZ Forest Owners Association
climate change spokesperson Peter Clark.
“Rushing
the ETS legislation to meet an artificial deadline imposed
by the pending General Election seems foolhardy. On the
other hand, the decision of the National Party not to engage
in the process may result in poorly-framed legislation and
costly delays until it is put right.”
He says if
New Zealand gets its Kyoto policies right, forestry has a
huge potential role to play in helping the country adapt to
a low-carbon economy. Even with no new plantings, forestry
will be responsible for most of New Zealand’s emission
credits for the next decade.
A report from the NZ
Business Council for Sustainable Development issued (NZBCSD)
yesterday argued that there were compelling benefits from
making the ETS law sooner rather than later. Forestry was
one of the many industries it said would
benefit.
Mr Clark says the NZBCSD is correct to
identify forest biofuel & biochar as ETS opportunities, but
it grossly underestimates the benefits of lifting
afforestation to 20,000 ha/year.
“It attributes
only 400,000 tonnes of reduced emissions to new forests
because it bases its calculations on the first year of
planting only. The actual benefits in the second Kyoto
commitment period (CP2) are closer to 24 million tonnes of
CO2 from 2012-2019 .
“Forestry is a long-term
game for long-term gains. Those 20,000 hectares – and
indeed tens of thousands of additional hectares if the
policy mix is right – will keep storing carbon right
through CP2 and beyond.”
Mr Clark says forest
owners are reasonably happy with the government’s ETS
forest policy as it relates to post-1989 forests, apart from
the need to fix an anomaly relating to forests that were at
mid-rotation on 1 January 2008 when the scheme
started.
“Our major concerns relate to the
treatment of different classes of land owner. If you are a
farmer, the taxpayer will be looking after your emission
liabilities for several more years. If you are the owner of
a pre-1990 forest, your assets have been devalued by the new
tax on land-use change and you are part of a scheme you
cannot benefit from.
“The generous treatment of
farmers means forest owners are unable to compete with them
for land for large-scale tree planting. This is particularly
true for owners of pre-1990 forests who have just been
stripped of a large part of their equity.”
He
says if pre-1990 forest owners are to be made part of the
ETS, they must be fairly compensated, including the ability
to ‘offset’ – to replant harvested forests in another
location. Also the artificial division of pre-Kyoto
forests around a date in late 2002 must be
dropped.
Alternatively, the government could assume
full responsibility for land use change, as is proposed in
Australia. This has the key advantage that wood supply to
processors won’t be interrupted by vagaries in a future
carbon market.
Mr Clark says the ETS should be made
law as soon as “the bumps have been ironed out”. But to
do that will require the National Party to re-engage with
the legislation so that the development of the scheme is not
unduly disrupted by the election.
“At the moment
the government is haggling with the minor parties to cobble
together a majority in parliament before the election.
It’s hardly the way to develop a durable policy which has
such major ramifications for New Zealand’s long-term
future.”
[ends]