Leading NZ aid agencies call for climate legislation
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Fourteen leading New Zealand aid agencies are today launching a campaign to demand political action which will see New
Zealand reduce its carbon emissions to zero by 2050.
Six weeks out from the General Election, Back the Plan: Back to Zero was launched with an open letter to political parties from coalition organisations Oxfam, World Vision New Zealand,
ChildFund, TearFund, UNICEF, FairTrade, CWS, cbmi, VSA, SURFAID, Amnesty International, UNANZ, Engineers without Borders
and Council for International Development.
The letter calls on all parties to follow the lead of countries like the UK and Denmark to put in place binding climate
legislation, not only to safeguard New Zealand’s future, but that of communities in the developing world who are already
on the frontline of climate change.
“There is widespread consensus that safeguarding our planet for future generations means significantly reducing our
greenhouse gas emissions,” said Coalition spokesperson and Oxfam New Zealand Executive Director Rachael Le Mesurier.
“In our work with vulnerable communities, particularly in the Pacific, we are already seeing the negative impacts of
more extreme weather events, temperature changes, rising sea levels and disease outbreaks associated with climate
change. If unaddressed, climate change will displace and push millions of people further into poverty. For the sake of
these vulnerable women, men and children, we, as an affluent developed nation, have a responsibility to act in a bold
and meaningful manner.”
A zero carbon act will require any future Government to produce policy plans on track to zero carbon, and establish an
independent Climate Commission to provide expert advice. Taking urgent action to combat climate change is a commitment
New Zealand has signed up to internationally, both under the Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals.
The agencies also today warned that climate change threatens to unwind decades of hard-won development progress that New
Zealand has contributed towards. While more than a billion dollars (60% of NZ government aid) will be directed to the
Pacific through to 2019 – climate change is already reversing the positive gains and placing additional pressure on food
security.
“The New Zealand government is rightly supporting development overseas, but it also makes sense for us to do our part in
lowering carbon emissions at home,” added Le Mesurier. “We know that we need to reduce emissions globally to curb the
effects of climate change. If we don’t play our part, we risk the great work we do in the developing world being undone
by the impact of climate change.”
The aid agencies are working hard to reduce risks communities around the world face due to climate change and natural
hazards. This includes disaster preparedness as storms become more intense, weather pattern changes threaten food
security, and people face long-term loss of their homes.
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