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COP30: Climate law changes mean NZ could retreat from its international obligations

Today 12:00pm

Cop30
Image: Cop30

By Cathrine Dyer, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

As this year’s UN climate summit (COP30) gets underway in Belém, Brazil, the New Zealand delegation will be attending beneath a cloud of scepticism about the government’s seriousness in addressing carbon emissions.

As this year’s UN climate summit (COP30) gets underway in Belém, Brazil, the New Zealand delegation will be attending beneath a cloud of scepticism about the government’s seriousness in addressing carbon emissions.


In a late-night announcement last week, the government proposed changes to New Zealand’s landmark climate law, including a decoupling of domestic efforts to cut emissions from New Zealand’s pledge under the Paris Agreement.


Delinking the Emissions Trading Scheme – one of the few remaining policy tools for cutting domestic emissions – from the country’s Paris Agreement pledge constructs a pathway for the government to abandon its international obligations, while remaining compliant with domestic law.


The retort from the market was immediate. The price of New Zealand carbon units plummeted 10% once trading resumed on the morning after the announcement, and crashed 18% by the end of the day.


Having earlier promised to “let the market do its work”, the government’s move was described by Carbon News as “a brutal blow to confidence in an already moribund market”.


New Zealand’s current promise to the world


New Zealand’s 2030 pledge under the Paris Agreement (known as a Nationally Determined Contribution, or NDC) is to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 50% compared to 2005 levels.


According to the latest figures from the Climate Change Commission, roughly half of this target would have to be met through investing in emissions-cutting projects in other countries or by purchasing offsets on the international carbon market.


New Zealand’s high reliance on international offsets makes it more exposed to global carbon pricing than any other OECD country. Despite acknowledging the potentially significant cost involved, Treasury has never accounted for offshore mitigation in its financial statements, arguing the government might change its policy settings.


Ministers have previously expressed the Government’s unwillingness to purchase international offsets, claiming the idea was “not palatable” without providing any clear alternatives.


Attempting to avoid further reliance on international offsets, the government made the smallest possible progression on the 2030 target in its proposal for New Zealand’s 2035 target, promising to cut net emissions by 51-55%, on 2005 levels.


Even on the basis of domestic emissions reductions alone, the target has been widely criticised as unambitious.


Discussions at COP30 are expected to advance implementation of international carbon markets, providing the policy tools required for New Zealand to meet its 2030 Paris Agreement target. In this latest move, the government appears to be trying to shut the door on it.


In his policy advice to Cabinet ahead of the recent announcement, Climate Change Minister Simon Watts claimed New Zealand’s Emissions Trading Scheme is a domestic policy instrument that should be made to align solely with domestic targets – despite originally being designed explicitly to link with international markets.


Included in the announcement was a plan to weaken New Zealand’s target for methane emissions from livestock. This goes against the Climate Change Commission’s advice, which proposed stronger cuts. Instead, the government presented calculations from a separate expert panel it appointed with narrow terms of reference (including a pre-determined target formula).


This means that unless other sectors step up, New Zealand will struggle to meet domestic targets and the gap with the Paris Agreement target will widen.


The removal of the means to achieving climate goals amounts to a “soft renege” on the Paris Agreement that has potentially significant consequences.


Consequences of retreat


The government’s latest proposed changes to climate law dismantle much of New Zealand’s remaining climate policy architecture, which had been painstakingly enacted with bi-partisan support to ensure stability around crucial long-term goals.


The Climate Change Response (Zero Carbon) Amendment Act 2019 enshrined long-term targets and established the Climate Change Commission.


To secure bipartisan support for the act, implementation of the commission’s advice was made optional. The compromise imposed a requirement for governments to at least seek the commission’s advice when setting targets and to provide the public with an explanation if it chose to depart from that advice.


This created transparency about the government’s actions and encouraged accountability to the public.


Eliminating some of the commission’s advice has one guaranteed outcome. The public will be less informed on the robustness of the government’s mitigation plans or its progress toward meeting the country’s international obligations.


Failure to meet those obligations could do immeasurable harm to New Zealand’s international reputation, while undermining free trade agreements that include clauses requiring those targets be met.


Even if the coalition is no longer in government in 2030, getting the country back on track to meeting its Paris Agreement obligations will be difficult.


The loss of bipartisan agreement on climate policy will increase instability well into the future as governments take turns to flip flop on the settings.


That could prove costly in the long run. A recent joint report issued by the World Economic Forum and Boston Consulting Group highlights the costs of climate inaction.


It calculates the financial penalties of a late, chaotic transition to a zero-emissions world, estimating that investment today in climate adaptation and mitigation will be repaid five to six times over in avoided loss and damage in the future.


This is completely at odds with the government’s stated concerns about the transition costs for itself and businesses, and even more at odds with public wellbeing in the face of rapidly worsening risks from climate change.The Conversation


This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Related Topics:   COP Policy development Politics

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Oxfam urges NZ to renew climate funding as Pacific projects face closure

Today 12:00pm

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Oxfam Aotearoa is calling on the Government to urgently renew New Zealand’s climate finance commitments, warning that vital projects supporting Pacific communities’ resilience are running out of funding.

EDS chief operating officer Shay Schlaepfer

Cost gaps in Fast-Track law could silence environmental voices – EDS

Mon 10 Nov 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Environmental Defence Society is warning that flaws in the Fast-Track Approvals Act 2024 could shut out critical conservation input, after legal advice found key statutory bodies can’t recover costs for participating in the process and councils face uncertainty over which costs are covered.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon with US President Donald Trump in South Korea last week.

Why I’m not outraged at the Govt’s latest climate backsliding

Fri 7 Nov 2025

COMMENT: The Government’s latest climate rollbacks underline New Zealand’s long history of a lack of genuine desire to cut emissions, writes Geoff Bertram.

Govt weakens climate legislation, strips CCC’s powers

5 Nov 2025

By Liz Kivi | The Government has announced sweeping changes to key climate legislation, including stripping the independent Climate Change Commission of one of its core roles, and removing the requirement that Emissions Trading Scheme settings align with international climate targets.

Supermarket fast-track a ‘cynical ploy’, risks climate and environmental protections

5 Nov 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Government’s “express lane for supermarkets” announcement has been met with fierce backlash, with critics calling the Fast-track Approvals Amendment Bill a Trojan horse that strips environmental protections, sidelines communities, and hands sweeping powers to ministers at the expense of democracy.

NZ, Singapore, Chile to collaborate on Green Economy Partnership

3 Nov 2025

By Pattrick Smellie | The three countries that kicked off what eventually became the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) have agreed to start work on a Green Economic Partnership Agreement (GEPA).

Gene tech reforms face political split

23 Oct 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams |The Government’s Gene Technology Bill continues to divide Parliament, after the Health Select Committee released its long-awaited report last week outlining key recommendations and lingering concerns.

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NZ abstains from vote on global shipping carbon tax

22 Oct 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Government says it held back from endorsing the International Maritime Organization’s Net-Zero Framework over fears the plan could raise costs for exporters and importers.

Rod Carr

Govt ‘captured by industry’ on methane – Carr

21 Oct 2025

By Liz Kivi | Former Climate Change Commission chair Rod Carr says that recent moves to weaken methane targets and halt plans for agricultural emissions pricing show the Government has been captured by industry.

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