20 June 2018
Horizon Research Limited
Majority support all-party action on climate change
A majority of New Zealanders support all parties in Parliament agreeing on plans to act on climate change.
52% (around 1.66 million adults) supportall parties in Parliament agreeing to a net zero emissions target and five-year plans to achieve that target, a Horizon
Research poll finds.
11% oppose,22% are neutral and14% say they are really not sure.
Business organisations are reported as calling for multi-party agreement and climate Change Minister James Shaw this
month invited the National party to work with the government on the issue.
National’s leader, Simon Bridges, has since announced has written to the Prime Minister offering to work together on
climate change policy, subject to some conditions.
The Horizon survey finds there is support for all-party action by those who voted in 2017 for all main parties in
Parliament:
41% of National voters support an all-party approach (31% are neutral, 21% oppose)
67% of Labour voters support, 17% are neutral, 6% oppose
93% of Green voters support, 3% are neutral and none oppose
47% of NZ First voters support, 30% are neutral and 21% oppose
52.5% of business managers and executives and 68% of business proprietors and self-employed support all parties agreeing
to a net zero emissions target and five yearly plans to achieve it.
The Zero Carbon Bill was introduced to Parliament after the survey was conducted.
Survey respondents were told: The Government plans to introduce a Zero Carbon Bill later this year. It is proposed this
law will require the Government to:
Set legally binding long-term emission targets
Produce policy plans to meet carbon budgets
Development a ‘pathway’ to these targets by producing five-year carbon budgets
Appoint an independent Climate Commission to guide the transition.
The Government has already announced it will set a target to reduce the country’s greenhouse gas (carbon) emissions to
net zero by 2050.
This is also known as “carbon neutrality”. The Government says that to achieve net zero carbon emissions, we must reduce
our carbon emissions to a level that is balanced out by carbon stored in forests and other carbon sinks.
The Horizon surveyed 1,164 respondents aged 18+ nationwide between March 20 and 27, 2018. Quota sampling and weighting
were used to achieve a representative sample the adult population at the last census. At a 95% confidence level, the
maximum overall margin of error is +/- 2.9%.
Anearlier result found New Zealanders’ concerns over climate change at their highest level in 10 years.