A new Bill being rushed through Parliament is part of the Government's secretive moves to weaken the Clean Car Standard.
That would see New Zealand become a dumping ground for old gas guzzlers other countries don't want, and push up petrol
bills for Kiwi families, says Kathryn Trounson, Chair of the Better New Zealand Trust.
The Clean Car Standard sets targets for emissions from imported vehicles that tighten over time, with importers of high
emissions vehicles having to pay fines. It was introduced in 2023 to work alongside the Clean Car Discount, which the
Coalition Government scrapped at the end of 2023.
The Government is moving to pass the Land Transport (Clean Vehicle Standard) Bill through Parliament under Urgency. This
law would repeal the Clean Car targets currently in law and let the Minister of Transport set new ones without public
consultation.
"The Government has been talking behind closed doors with vehicle manufacturers who want to dump their inefficient
vehicles in New Zealand. We were shocked to learn Minister Simeon Brown directed the Ministry of Transport to conduct a
secret review of the Clean Car Standard and only talk to advocates for dirty vehicles.
"Now, the Government is pushing through a law designed to gut the Clean Car Standard. That would remove the penalty for
importers who bring in gas guzzlers and undercut importers of efficient vehicles.
"Since the Clean Car Discount was removed, the average emissions of new imports has shot up. EV sales have plummeted and
importers are focusing on inefficient models instead.
"The Clean Car Standard is the one tool remaining to force importers to focus on more fuel efficient vehicles. If the
Government weakens the standard for future years, it will mean higher petrol consumption and higher emissions.
"When inefficient gas guzzlers are brought into New Zealand, they stay in the fleet for decades. We estimate that just
four years of a frozen Clean Car Standard will result 3.5 billion more litres of petrol and diesel being consumed by
those new imports over their lives. That will cost Kiwi families and the country billions.
"The future of transport is electric, which will both save New Zealand billions each year in oil imports and reduce our
emissions. But this government seems determined to drag us back into the past," says Kathryn Trounson.