Green party cools its shock coal ban stance
24 April 2008
Media release
Green party cools its shock
coal ban stance, but stays hot on
emissions
The Green
Party has cooled down on its shock announcement
about
closing down the coal industry, the carbon market
daily news service,
Carbon News, reports this
morning.
And the National Party, which is likely to need
the Greens if it is
to form a Government later this year,
yesterday ducked for cover when
asked for its view on the
coal shutdown policy.
The Greens have told Carbon News
that closing down the coal industry
will not be a
bottom-line issue in post-election coalition talks -
but
genuine measures to cut greenhouse gas emissions will
be.
The party’s co-leader, Jeanette Fitzsimons, on
Tuesday delivered a
shock message to the industry, saying
that exports of thermal coal
would be halted and the
Huntly coal-fired power station phased out as
part of the
party’s six-point plan to cut climate-damaging
emissions
from the burning of coal.
With polls showing
the Greens are likely to hold the balance of power
after
the next election, the policy is problematic for both
National
and Labour, Carbon News reports.
National –
which is looking increasingly likely to need the
support
of the Greens to govern – would find such a
policy difficult to live
with, and was yesterday refusing
to comment on the issue.
“We won't be conducting
post-election negotiations through the
media,” a
spokesman said.
Labour would find such an out-right
banning of coal even more
uncomfortable because of its
historic links with the coal-miners.
About 1200 people
are directly employed in the coal industry, and
halting
coal exports would have an enormous impact on
traditional
Labour strongholds like Westport and
Greymouth, which are built
around the mines.
It could
even lead the Labour Party’s biggest affiliate union,
the
EPMU, which represents miners, to formally consider
disaffiliating
from the party.
Fitzsimons was last
night pouring oil on the waters, saying that what
really
mattered was that New Zealand made real reductions
in
greenhouse-gas emissions.
“What we are absolutely
serious about is a substantial reduction
in
greenhouse-gas emissions,” she told Carbon
News.
While phasing out the Huntly power station seemed an
obvious move,
she was prepared to look at other
methods.
Power companies to engage in second advertising war battle
Two of the country’s biggest power companies,
at war for the wallets
of the rapidly growing green
consumer market, are about to engage in
another battle
just hours after one was delivered a victory by
the
Advertising Standards authority.
Carbon News
reports that Genesis Energy last night revealed it
was
again taking rival TrustPower to the authority over
its claims that
it is “greener” than Genesis – just
hours after it had won another
battle with the
company.
Yesterday, the authority released a ruling
criticising TrustPower for
trying to mislead Genesis
customers into thinking that they would be
supplied with
renewable energy if they switched to TrustPower.
Genesis
complained that TrustPower couldn’t possibly guarantee
that
the energy it supplied to consumers was produced
from renewable
sources because most of the electricity
generated in New Zealand is
mixed together in the
national grid – irrespective of the way in
which it was
produced.
The authority agreed.
Genesis Energy’s
public affairs manager, Richard Gordon, told Carbon
News
that the company had lodged a new complaint about
TrustPower’s
behaviour, but he could not say what it
was
about.
ENDS