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The government of New Zealand has been labelled a “disgrace” after it released a new climate plan which barely requires it to reduce emissions between 2030 and 2035.

Under the previous Labour government of Jacinda Ardern, the country committed to cut net emissions by 50% by 2030, compared to gross 2005 levels.

The new climate plan, which is known as a Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) towards global climate goals, was announced by the right-wing government of Christopher Luxon on Thursday. It says the country will reduce emissions by 51-55% by 2035 against the same 2005 baseline.

Climate campaigners in the Pacific nation immediately slammed the poor ambition. Alva Feldmeir, co-director of 350.org Aotearoa, said the government’s “relentless dismantling of climate policies, expansion of fossil fuel extraction, and now this pathetic NDC signal a catastrophic future”.

“How do we, as Pacific Islanders living in Aotearoa New Zealand, reconcile our government’s decisions with the survival of our island homes?” asked Pacific Climate Warriors Council Elder Inagaro Vakaafi.

Rosemary Harris, a campaigner at Oil Change International, said New Zealand was “retreating on ambition and shirking responsibility, raising their emission reductions by a pathetic 1%”.

Since coming to power in 2023, Luxon’s government has attempted to reverse its predecessor’s ban on offshore oil and gas exploration, despite advice from civil servants that doing so would breach the COP28 climate agreement reached in Dubai and could endanger trade deals. The plan doesn’t mention fossil fuels, nor the need to transition away from oil and gas.

In addition, the government has removed incentives for electric vehicles, promised to postpone putting a price on farming emissions and scrapped other climate programmes.

The new 51-55% target compares favourably with Canada’s 45-50% but is less than Brazil’s 59-67% and the 61-66% target set by Joe Biden’s administration before Donald Trump signed an executive order on his first day in office to again pull the United States out of the landmark Paris Agreement.

Other nations like the United Kingdom and United Arab Emirates have set 2035 targets using different baseline years, making comparisons with New Zealand difficult.

Signatories to the Paris Agreement are supposed to submit a plan for how they intend to reduce greenhouse gas emissions every five years, with each update supposed to be more ambitious than the last.

This year marks 10 years since the Paris Agreement was adopted and countries are expected to submit 2035 emission reduction targets by a UN deadline of February 10. But most countries are expected to miss the deadline. New Zealand is the seventh nation to have submitted its plan to the UN so far.

(Reporting Joe Loe; editing Chloé Farand) 

The post “Pathetic” – New Zealand plans to barely cut emissions between 2030 and 2035 appeared first on Climate Home News.

“Pathetic” – New Zealand plans to barely cut emissions between 2030 and 2035

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Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Just Lost Protection From Mining

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Democrat Tina Smith held the Senate floor for hours arguing against the removal of the ban, but GOP senators were unmoved and the Senate approved the resolution 50-49.

WASHINGTON—Despite hours of impassioned arguments from Sen. Tina Smith, the U.S. Senate ended a Biden-era moratorium on mining in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness watershed.

Minnesota’s Boundary Waters Just Lost Protection From Mining

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At ‘Sloth World’ in Florida, Wild Sloths Have Died by the Dozens

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The animals, highly susceptible to illness when removed from their habitat, have been kept in a warehouse. More than 31 have died.

On a busy tourist strip in Orlando, behind noisy bars and souvenir shops, 21 sloths in crates reached the end of a grueling international trip.

At ‘Sloth World’ in Florida, Wild Sloths Have Died by the Dozens

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Pollution Persists in the Florida Everglades Despite 40-Year Restoration Effort, Report Says

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The river of grass is not on track to meet a new water quality standard, according to the report. The state says recent data show the pollution is nearly within limits.

Florida’s fragile Everglades are not on track to meet a new water quality standard set to take effect next month, even after nearly 40 years of costly restoration work aimed at addressing pollution in the river of grass, according to a new report.

Pollution Persists in the Florida Everglades Despite 40-Year Restoration Effort, Report Says

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