Beehive Bulletin
Beehive Bulletin
Low fixed power charges a
success
Energy Minister Trevor Mallard said this week
that low power users are now saving between $25 and $96 a
year on their electricity bills, following the introduction
in October of regulations that require companies to offer
low fixed charge tariffs. Trevor Mallard says the policy,
designed to help low power users and low income earners,
including pensioners, to save on their power bills, is
clearly working. Since the regulation over 30 per cent of
domestic consumers are enjoying lower electricity bills. The
minister is urging people who don't use much electricity to
check whether they can save money by switching to this
option. Retailers are required by law to offer it to all
domestic customers in their primary place of residence.
Customers can check their plan options at
www.powerswitch.co.nz
PM welcomes Pakistani leader
Prime Minister Helen Clark greeted Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf when he arrived in New Zealand on
Thursday. Helen Clark says the visit by the Pakistani leader
and a 55-strong delegation comes at a useful time, ahead of
the Commonwealth Heads of Government Summit in Malta in
November. Pakistan was suspended from the councils of the
Commonwealth after a military coup, meaning it cannot attend
key meetings like the summit and ministerial get-togethers.
Since the coup which brought Mr Musharraf to power, Pakistan
has gone back on a constitutional track, reformed its
constitution, elected a Parliament, and formed a government
with a Prime Minister. That led the Commonwealth Ministerial
Action Group to decide, late last year, to reinstate
Pakistan to the councils of the Commonwealth. The PM says
Pakistan is of great interest to NZ because of its proximity
to Afghanistan. Pakistan has also expressed interest in
seeing New Zealand's, up-to-date, advanced dairy technology.
It also ha
s an interest in the IT s
NZ plays key role in Antarctica treaty
Foreign Minister Phil Goff
says New Zealand has played a key role in negotiating an
international treaty protecting the Antarctic environment.
The treaty, adopted this week at a conference in Stockholm,
requires anyone who causes an environmental accident in
Antarctica to take action to clean up the pollution, and
prevent further environmental damage. If a polluter does not
take clean up action, then compensation can be claimed. New
Zealand chaired negotiations for the treaty. Phil Goff says
the agreement brings an end to 12 years of negotiation, and
is a vital step forward in protecting the pristine
environment of the Antarctic. He says it reflects the
importance we place on its environment. The treaty was
negotiated by the 45 member countries of the 1959 Antarctic
Treaty, made up by the majority of countries conducting
Antarctic activities.
Tax changes good for environment
Environment Minister Marian Hobbs this
week welcomed changes to tax legislation, passed in
Parliament on Wednesday, as they included tax deductions for
businesses cleaning up contaminated sites. The minister says
the new tax law will make it easier for businesses to do
their bit towards a clean, healthy and safe environment.
She says environmental costs, like any other business cost,
should be taken into account for tax purposes. The changes
update, clarify and expand tax deductions for business
environmental expenditure. A key benefit for business is
that work towards restoring contaminated sites is now
immediately tax deductible. Taxpayers with restoration
liabilities can also opt to take part in a site restoration
fund, setting aside money for future site restoration. More
information is available online at www.ird.govt.nz
Forecasts show NZ will miss Kyoto target
Climate
Change Minister Pete Hodgson revealed this week New Zealand
is projected to overshoot the targets it had been set under
the Kyoto Protocol for greenhouse gas emissions. Projections
this time last year were for NZ to have a "surplus" of about
30 million tonnes on the targets that had to be reached
under the protocol in the 2008 to 2012 target period. Now
they show NZ would miss its target by 36.2 million tonnes.
The minister says a number of deliberately more conservative
assumptions are partly behind the change. Two principal
factors explain the change in the projections on emissions;
emissions, particularly from transport, had grown as a
result of the high performing economy; and there was a
change in the way forest "carbon sinks" were assessed.
Forests that were planted in the early 1990s on land covered
in scrub, which officials had thought was an allowable sink
worth 19.8 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions,
cannot now be counted as a "Kyoto forest". Pete Hodgson
said NZ remained
strongl
ENDS