Carbon News: Forester Says NZ Now Has "Clayton's" ETS
Media release
20 July 2012
Carbon News: Forester Says New Zealand Now Has "Clayton's" Emission Trading Scheme
New
Zealand’s Emissions Trading Scheme is now a Clayton’s
scheme, says the man who spent five years fighting for
carbon credits for forest owners.
Roger Dickie, of the
forestry investment company Roger Dickie New Zealand, is
reported in New Zealand's specialist carbon market
information service, Carbon News, today as saying the
Government’s decision not to restrict the free flow of
international credits into the New Zealand market was "the
final blow".
Carbon prices are at an all-time low in the
wake of new uncertainty over the legality of the European
Union’s plans to restrict carbon supply.
Spot New
Zealand emission trading units (NZUs) – the units held by
most New Zealand forest owners – closed between $5.15 and
$5.20 last night.
The New Zealand Government had
proposed imposing restrictions on the number of
international units such as CERs and ERUs that New Zealand
emitters could use to meet their carbon obligations, but
backed off at the last minute because of fears it would push carbon
prices up in this country.
Dickie, who led the forest
owners’ fight for ownership of the credits generated by
the carbon stored in their trees, has told Carbon News that
he remains optimistic that in the long-term carbon prices
will rise.
But in the meantime, carbon forestry is a
non-starter, he says.
“Everybody is sitting on their hands and doing nothing,” he said. “The Government isn’t committed to it. It’s a Clayton’s ETS and there’s not much we can do about it.”
Earlier this month, Carbon News reported Ernslaw One chief executive Thomas Song - a pioneer of international sales - as saying that it was not worth planting trees for carbon if it was worth less than $8 a tonne.
Carbinet papers released last week showed that the majority of people making submissions on amendments to the ETS supported a restriction on foreign credits.
ENDS