Govt urged to extend emissions trading review
20 June 2009 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Govt urged to extend emissions trading review
The New Zealand Climate
Change Coalition has called for the Government
to extend
the time frame for the Select Committee reviewing emissions
trading, and to clarify its real intentions on this
issue.
Owen McShane, chair of the coalition’s policy
panel, says Climate Change
Minister Nick Smith is
creating confusion with his continual references
to the
Government’s commitment to an emissions trading scheme,
and this
is compounded by the allocation of over half a
billion dollars in Vote
Climate Change in the 2009/10
Estimates, even though Government is
waiting on the now
delayed report of a Select Committee established by
Parliament to review emissions trading.
“Statement
after statement by Minister Smith give all the indications
of
a fait accompli, with clear terms of reference for
the Select Committee
being over-ridden or ignored
completely. For instance, the allocation
for 2009/10 of
$474 million to cover emissions units is in clear
conflict with the term of reference that requires the
Select Committee
to examine the relative merits of an
emissions trading scheme or a tax
on carbon or energy as
a New Zealand response to climate change.
"Clearly,
regardless of whatever the Select Committee may recommend,
the
Government has already rejected the option of a tax
on carbon dioxide
emissions.
“Even more disturbing
is the failure to action the clear "term of
reference"
requiring a high quality, quantified regulatory impact
statement (RIS) to identify the net benefits or costs to
New Zealand of
any policy action, including
international relations and commercial
benefits and
costs. Not only has the absence of such an RIS been a
severe handicap to the many people and organisations who
have made
submissions to the Select Committee, but the
confusion caused by its
continuing absence has been
highlighted in the past week by:
• the computation by
the Major Electricity Users Group of the
significant
increases in the electricity bills payable by New Zealanders
under an emissions trading scheme;
• the
questions and caveats in a joint report by the New Zealand
Institute of Economic Research (NZIER) and Infometrics,
and
• the recommendation by those two agencies that
agriculture be excluded
as long as measurement of
emissions is too expensive.
“While some have claimed
that the joint NZIER/Infometrics report
supports an
emissions trading scheme, our careful reading of the full
report reveals that it poses more questions than it
answers.
m o r e
“Now that the Select Committee has
indicated a need for more time to
complete its
deliberations, while we await the required RIS, and while
science is re-evaluating previous projections in the
light of the global
cooling over the past six years, and
taking into account the major UN
conference on climate
change set for Copenhagen next December, the
Government
should act now to extend the time frame for the Select
Committee until at least March of next year, when the
whole picture will
be better clarified.
"The Rudd
Government in Australia has already announced postponement
until 2011 of the scheme for which it is trying to get
legislative approval.
If our government means what it says
about moving in concert with
Australia, we should
activate a similar postponement.
“If this means
problems will arise from the existence of the previous
Labour Government’s last-gasp and ill-conceived
Climate Change Response
(Emissions Trading) Amendment
Act 2008, there is a simple solution:
repeal it, and
start again in 2010 with a clean slate,” Mr McShane
concluded.
Ends