Greater Wellington is urging the regional team of half a million people to actively respond to the Government’s
just-released National Emissions Reduction Plan, which outlines a proposed framework to meet the emissions budgets
required to limit greenhouse gases.
“This proposed framework shows we can achieve our goal of staying in line with 1.5 degrees of warming. Its importance
can’t be overestimated, as it foreshadows the transformational change that will have a lasting impact on all areas of
our daily lives,” says Cr. Thomas Nash, chair of Greater Wellington’s Climate Committee.
“This is where things get real, we have to break through Greta Thunberg’s ‘blah blah’ critique and start making the
tough calls that will shape a safe future for all of us.
“This plan will lay the foundations of the lives we are going to live if we are to avert the climate crisis that
scientists have forecast. The proposals are out for consultation today and the more of us that submit on the plan, the
better.
“We really need emissions to peak within the next couple of years and then start rapidly declining. The emissions
reduction plan is our best chance to make that happen.”
The regional council will highlight a number of crucial areas in its submission which, it believes, will continue to
contribute to meeting the Government’s climate change commitments.
Greater Wellington sees major emission reduction opportunities in the Wellington region in transport, urban design and
natural infrastructure. That means much more public transport and less dependence on cars; higher density living with
high quality apartments and terraced houses that enable people to live easily without cars; and a flourishing natural
environment that soaks up and stores carbon.
Work is well underway to convert Metlink’s bus fleet to electric and even bigger emissions reduction will come from more
government investment to expand public transport.
“Meeting future climate goals will require more than buying electric buses. We need a massive expansion in a bus and
rail fleet, low or perhaps in some cases no fares, and relevant and reliable services. This way we can provide the
carrot for mode shift, while restrictions on unnecessary use of private cars will provide the stick,” says Cr Nash.
“Walking and cycling will play a big part as transport norms of the future, encouraged by more compact cities served by
public transport that encourages mode shift. Initiatives like the Let’s Get Wellington Moving transport corridor for
urban development will be essential in fostering more compact suburbs with high quality new homes and green spaces.”
Greater Wellington’s focus on expanding natural infrastructure in its regional parks – such as native restoration and
wetlands – through its Low Carbon Acceleration Fund will also play a role in emissions reduction by storing carbon and
providing a buffer against the increased droughts and flooding we can expect in our changing climate.
The first planting and restoration projects under the fund are already in train at Queen Elizabeth Park and Battle Hill
Farm Park, and grazing is progressively being phased out.
Collective action from Greater Wellington, local authorities, central government agencies and Iwi will continue under
the Wellington Regional Growth Framework, which is a critical part of the region’s action on climate.
Work under this framework will include regional emissions reduction plans; planning for and managing climate change
impacts; providing for east-west access across the region; scaling up housing and resilient infrastructure. In all of
this the Regional Growth Framework will need to ensure that the projects and initiatives that flow from it do not lock
in emissions for the future.
“Collective action is vital. No single organisation can pull all the climate action levers on its own. We must work
together as a region to reduce emissions, build the right infrastructure that will stand the test of time, and adapt to
the impacts we know are coming.
“If we do all of these things well, we will go a long way to delivering the proposals in the government’s framework for
a national emissions reduction plan.
“We want to see the widest possible public feedback on the proposed emissions reduction framework so that the Government
hears from communities throughout the region that now is the time to act on climate,” says Cr Nash.