System plans and cross-sector policies Ngā mahere pūnaha me ngā kaupapahere whakawhiti rāngai

This section outlines system-wide setting and cross-sector policies that support emissions reductions across the economy.
Chapter at a glance
Strengthening the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme |
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Lead Minister |
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Why the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme (NZ ETS) is important |
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Pillars of New Zealand’s Climate Strategy |
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Key actions and policies |
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Contribution during the second emissions budget period |
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The New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme (NZ ETS) raises the cost of emissions and reduces the cost of removals. To deliver a credible NZ ETS, market participants must trust that governments will remain committed to targets and choose NZ ETS settings and other policy accordingly. This is important to give businesses the confidence to make long-term investment decisions that reduce emissions.
Providing regulatory predictability is a priority for the Government. That is why one of the Government’s first actions was to end the review of the NZ ETS. It is also why we are committed to:
Strengthening market governance to manage risks of misconduct in the NZ ETS market is another important step to improve NZ ETS market credibility. This work will help to build a robust, efficient and credible NZ ETS, ensuring there is enough transparency of trading activity and enhancing participants’ understanding of how the market works.
It is crucial that the role of the NZ ETS in achieving emissions budgets is clear, and that the scheme is managed in line with that role.
We have made decisions on the settings for 2025–293 that recognise the NZ ETS market is currently over-supplied. The number of units at auction between 2025 and 2029 has been reduced from 45 million to 21 million, to encourage emitters to use the surplus units currently held in private accounts. These decisions provide medium-term regulatory predictability for participants, and support the credibility of the scheme, by:
Future settings decisions may also need to consider net emissions reductions arising from any new complementary policies. This includes considering whether the NZ ETS cap (see below) should be tightened to lock in those emissions reductions and prevent those policies from disrupting market dynamics.
3 Ministry for the Environment. 2024. NZ ETS unit limits and price control settings for 2025–2029.
One aspect considered in the methodology for determining NZ ETS unit settings each year is apportioning the emissions budgets to sectors covered by the NZ ETS (the NZ ETS cap). Being clear on how the Government intends to distribute the emissions budget between NZ ETS sectors and non-NZ ETS sectors (mostly agriculture) will give the market greater regulatory certainty.
For the second emissions budget (EB2), we propose to align the cap with the projected emissions from NZ ETS sectors under the second emissions reduction plan (see the technical annex for details). We propose allocating 91 Mt CO2-e of EB2 to NZ ETS sectors. We will consult on this allocation as part of the NZ ETS settings process in 2025.
NZ ETS sectors are responsible for most of the net reductions required to meet EB2. The allocation to other sectors is in line with reaching the 2030 biogenic methane target.
Industrial allocation (IA) is the provision of NZUs to firms in emissions-intensive and trade-exposed industries. Its purpose is to manage the risk of emissions leakage4 by helping eligible firms meet some of their emissions costs. The Government has agreed to update some IA settings that were last set in 2010, including new baselines which are planned to affect allocations from 2024 onwards.
The Government is investigating the provision in the Climate Change Response Act 2002 that gives the Minister of Climate Change discretion to review IA baselines every 5 to 10 years. Several large firms have indicated this could create uncertainty and discourage investment in decarbonisation. It is important that we balance keeping the allocation up to date, managing leakage risk, providing investment certainty and managing the fiscal cost of IA.
4 Emissions leakage occurs when manufacturing is relocated to other countries with less stringent climate change policies, causing global emissions to rise.
Chapter at a glance
Funding and financing climate mitigation |
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Lead Minister |
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Why funding and finance are important |
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Pillars of New Zealand’s Climate Strategy |
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Key actions and policies |
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Contribution during the second emissions budget period |
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We need significant domestic investment in low-emissions activities and technologies to achieve our climate goals. Although we expect investment to come mainly from the private sector, the Government has a role in addressing barriers to investment and ensuring settings enable it.
Green investment is beginning to pivot from mitigation to broader activities (eg, adaptation and resilience as well as indigenous biodiversity).
Voluntary carbon and biodiversity credits markets are emerging to meet this demand. However, we have heard that market participants, including investors and land owners, need greater certainty to increase investment.
There is an ongoing mismatch between some climate investment opportunities and the risk appetite of many mainstream investors. These constraints also increase the risk of misrepresented or misleading climate credentials – greenwashing – within the market.
As part of the second emissions reduction plan, our work includes:
Other opportunities identified during consultation include:
We will continue to work with the private sector on actions that will increase green investment and transition finance.
Chapter at a glance
Technology and innovation |
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Lead Minister |
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Why technology and innovation are important |
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Pillars of New Zealand’s Climate Strategy |
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Key actions and policies |
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Contribution during the second emissions budget period |
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Innovation can fundamentally shift how we do things. Some advances, such as biofuels, can replace emissions-intensive products and create a climate-friendly future. New technologies such as smart chargers or other smart appliances can bring efficiencies and lower operating costs through energy savings. There are emerging technologies that can significantly reduce emissions across the economy. Simpler pathways will allow these tools to reach end users faster. The Government is focused on streamlining regulations and approval processes to enable the private sector to move quickly from prototype to commercialisation.
Work underway for the agriculture sector (chapter 10) includes:
The Government will establish an independent regulator in the Environmental Protection Authority to oversee applications to use gene technology. The aims are to allow New Zealand to benefit from these technologies and to protect our health, environment and biodiversity.
Gene technology allows scientists to examine and alter the genetic material of plants, animals, viruses or bacteria. This has helped scientists understand how we might edit genes to promote health, productivity and conservation, and even address climate issues.
Ending the effective ban on gene technology outside the laboratory will allow researchers and companies to develop and commercialise innovative products and create commercial opportunities. These technologies can help farmers and growers mitigate their emissions and raise productivity. For example, gene technologies could lead to sterile conifers that meet forestry needs but prevent the spread of wildings.
Advances in energy storage (eg, batteries, grid management, demand flexibility, smart meters, fuel cells and new processes to develop industrial goods) can help balance electricity supply and demand. Such advances help manage intermittent wind- and solar-generated electricity and continue our energy decarbonisation. See chapter 7 for more detail.
Sometimes there are challenges to early investment in new technology, such as the cost of trialling it in the New Zealand context.
Initiatives such as the Low Emissions Heavy Vehicle Fund (LEHVF) can encourage early adoption of new technology. This fund aims to increase the number of zero- and low-emissions heavy vehicles, and therefore encourage manufacturers to supply more such vehicles to the market. The LEHVF offsets the capital costs of fleet conversion by funding either:
EcoPond is an advanced effluent treatment system that cuts over 90 per cent of methane emissions from effluent ponds. This innovative solution is the result of a four-year collaboration between Ravensdown and Lincoln University. It works by inhibiting methanogens and reducing conditions that foster methanogenesis, which is the process responsible for methane production. EcoPond also reduces Escherichia coli (E. coli) in treated effluent, reduces odour from ponds and minimises phosphate leaching where treated effluent is applied.
The research and trial results demonstrating EcoPond’s effectiveness have led to it being recommended for inclusion in New Zealand’s Greenhouse Gas Inventory. EcoPond is included in the latest Overseer™ model update (6.5.5). Strategic funding from the Ministry for Primary Industries’ Accelerating New Mitigations Fund and Ravensdown’s ongoing support have allowed the system to evolve, reducing the high initial costs of installation. Recent redesigns include a cost-effective shock-dosing method and economical yet effective consumables. These improvements have reduced EcoPond’s capital and operational expenses and enhanced its commercial viability.
Ravensdown’s commercialisation and venture arm, Agnition, is driving EcoPond’s market readiness with continued research support from Lincoln University. This joint effort has lowered the estimated operating cost of EcoPond to around $10,000 per year for a typical New Zealand dairy farm when deployed at scale, making it an effective solution.
EcoPond’s effectiveness will be further evaluated through ongoing real-world trials on multiple farms across New Zealand over the coming months. The goal is to deploy working pilots of the system in 2025.
Image: Measuring methane emissions on an effluent pond.
System plans and cross-sector policies Ngā mahere pūnaha me ngā kaupapahere whakawhiti rāngai
December 2024
© Ministry for the Environment