Sharechat Logo

ETS defenders seek 50 percent limit on foreign carbon credits

Wednesday 12th September 2012

Text too small?

Politicians are in for an ear-bashing from both environmentalists and foresters at select committee hearings this morning on the need to limit New Zealand industrial carbon emitters' use of foreign-sourced carbon credits to 50 percent of total obligations.

The push, led by the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment, Dr Jan Wright, is opposed by the large emitter lobby, with Business New Zealand arguing any move to pump up rock-bottom prices for New Zealand Units will undermine the "least cost" principle that drives the emissions trading scheme.

Wright, an Officer of Parliament, broke with parliamentary convention yesterday when she released a statement drawing attention to her submission, to be presented orally at Parliament this morning, in which she described proposed amendments to the ETS as making "a farce of our response to climate change."

The cumulative impact of the reforms proposed in the Climate Change Response (Emissions Trading and Other Matters) Amendment Bill would be to lock in "big polluters", as Wright called carbon-intensive industries, "to pay for only 5 percent of their emissions indefinitely."

"In such circumstances, there is no way New Zealand would reach its legislated target of a 50 percent reduction in emissions by 2050," said Wright.

Both Wright and other submitters also called for a cap on the total number of foreign-sourced credits that could be surrendered under the New Zealand ETS. Unlike most other countries with an ETS-style carbon pricing system, New Zealand allows large emitters to buy as many foreign credits as it likes.

The glut of European Union emissions reduction units has dropped global carbon prices under $4 a tonne in recent weeks, far lower than ever envisaged when the government imposed a $25 per tonne upper limit that emitters would face in the transitional phase of the scheme, which Wright argues is now indefinitely locked in.

Also supporting the 50 percent cap on foreign credits are forestry farming submitters such as New Zealand Carbon Farming Group, which called for New Zealand "to introduce, without delay, a cap on international carbon units of 50 percent."

"A cap ... would not only deliver on the government's stated ETS objectives, but would also deliver a host of other long term sustainable environmental, reputational and economic benefits to New Zealand," the submission from the country's "largest supplier of post-1989 sourced carbon credits" says.

Wright's submission says "there is a balance to strike between allowing some international trade in carbon credits (so the least cost carbon reductions can occur worldwide) and making sure that investment also contributes to creating a domestic low carbon economy.

"New Zealand credits (NZU's) drive green growth, energy efficiency and forestry within New Zealand."

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

VHP - Half year results announcement date and webcast details
Devon Funds Morning Note - 30 January 2026
AIA - Auckland Airport new board appointment
General Capital (GEN:NZ) Subsidiary General Finance Update
January 30th Morning Report
January 29th Morning Report
VSL - Date for 1H FY26 results announcement
January 28th Morning Report
IKE - Webinar Notification IKE Q3 FY26 Performance Update
VHP - Preliminary unaudited portfolio valuations 31 December 2025