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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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8
December 2007
The
Cost of Power
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Our
home used to be our castle, but eight years of intrusive new
laws and regulations have put paid to that.
Under the new Building Act, DIY renovations have been all but
banned and registered builders will be needed for almost any
building job, big or small. The Government has signalled that
a mandatory Home Energy Rating Scheme - requiring home owners
to get an assessment by an accredited agency of the home’s
energy efficiency at the time of sale – is on the way, and a
Warrant of Fitness rating for houses is being trialed.
Old
fridges, ordinary light bulbs and conventional water heaters
look likely to soon be restricted because the Government has
decided that they make an excessive contribution to global
warming. In many parts of the country indoor fireplaces have
already been banned, with outdoor fires now being targeted -
this time because the Government claims that the smoke from
fires is killing people.
If
you are planning a housing development, the Government has
just released details of new legislation that will effectively
confiscate your property rights under the guise of
‘affordable housing’. Instead
of addressing the causes of the increasing cost of building
new houses - namely the burdens, costs and delays associated
with the 2004 Building Act, the 2002 Local Government Act and
the Resource Management Act - Labour has opted to create new
market distortions by enabling local authorities to commandeer
a proportion of a new subdivision for cheap council housing. (For more detail see
>>>)
Another dubious scheme being foreshadowed by the Prime
Minister is legislation to regulate “the operation of
buildings over their entire life, covering the overall carbon
cost of producing, maintaining and using new buildings – the
so-called ‘embodied’ energy of a building. This would be a
new measure for building codes internationally. Further work
is being done on how embodied energy could be calculated and
how the concept could work in practice”. (PM
Housing for the Future, see
>>>)
This climate change ‘religion’ is now influencing policy
throughout the government sector. The Prime Minister set the
ball rolling in February when she announced: “My annual statement to Parliament this year is a call to action on
sustainability. Complacency will not do… I believe
New Zealand
can aim to be the first nation to be truly sustainable… I
believe we can aspire to be carbon neutral in our economy and
way of life. I believe that in the years to come, the pride we
take in our quest for sustainability and carbon neutrality
will define our nation”. That
means that the traditional driving force of good government
– namely raising living standards – has been
sidelined.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the crucial energy sector
where serious concerns exist over the impact on households and
the economy of the Government’s new Energy Strategy. These
concerns escalated last week with the Government’s surprise
decision to place a 10-year moratorium on new thermal energy
generation in its new Climate Change Emissions Trading Bill.
This week’s NZCPR Guest Commentator, energy consultant Bryan
Leyland, puts it this way:
“I have
been involved in the electricity and energy business in New
Zealand for the last fifty years. In all that time, I have
never seen anything that is potentially so disastrous for
electricity supply and for the economy as the New Zealand
Energy Strategy and the Emissions Trading Scheme.
Its central focus is climate change and political
expediency not strategy and energy”.
Bryan
explains: “A
rational strategy must first establish the objective. For the
energy sector it is, surely, the provision of a reliable and
economic supply of electricity and other forms of energy for
New Zealand. The next step is to establish what the demand
will be and, having done that, evaluate all the resources
available to us to meet that demand.
Then it needs to match the resources and the demand to
give the lowest possible cost of energy with reasonable
security. Having done that, we have a firmly established and
rational "base case". The next step is to consider
alternatives to the base case. These can include variations in
demand, and the cost and availability of, for instance
indigenous oil and gas. Other options such as a belief that
minimizing the emissions of greenhouse gases is important can
also be factored in".
“A
rational strategy would give us a comprehensive review of the
options and their uncertainties and their costs and benefits.
On the basis of this, a long-term strategy for pursuing what
is determined to be the most attractive option can be
developed. If
circumstances change, then it is easy to repeat the whole
exercise by changing the base case or the options as
necessary".
Bryan then
concludes: “But what we actually got is a political document
that reflects, more than anything else, the government's
obsession with the idea that man-made carbon dioxide causes
dangerous global warming.
It also seems that the government believes that if New
Zealand reduces its emissions, it will have an effect on the
climate. Yet there are scientific studies which show that even
if Kyoto were adopted 100%, the world would be 0.07 degrees
cooler in 2050 than it otherwise would be.” (To read
Bryan’s opinion piece, click here
>>>)
The Government’s energy strategy is a dangerously political
document that will seriously damage the New Zealand economy
and erode disposable household income.
In November business leaders and industry groups banded
together to expressly warn the Government that their plan to
make New Zealand the only country in the world to limit new
thermal generation, would result in higher electricity costs
and greater risks to security of supply. They also pointed out
that such a move would have a “chilling effect” on
petroleum exploration. In a letter to Ministers they stated:
“We should be aspiring to catch up to better performing
countries GDP growth rates and any policy that might be a
barrier to that goal, such as limiting new thermal generation,
should be discounted”.
Common sense tells us that countries need a broad base of
electricity generation capacity in order to avoid blackouts,
shortages and escalating prices during peak demand periods.
The moratorium, along with the unrealistic goal of having 90
percent New Zealand’s electricity produced from renewable
sources, shows just how far Labour is prepared to extend its
ideological reach. But when the effects of Labour’s new
Emissions Trading strategy are factored in, the situation gets
worse.
A
comprehensive new report by Strategic Advisors Castalia warns
of the danger of exposing New Zealand’s fragile economy to
the massive volatile cost burden caused by pricing carbon on
the unpredictable international market: “The current policy
ignores economic and market realities and provides no
mechanism for managing economic and social risks”. (To read
the report, click here
>>>)
So why would Labour knowingly introduce policies that will
dramatically increase the cost of power and drive down living
standards?
In
an opinion piece in the Herald “Rich has become a four
letter word” John Roughan casts some light on this
conundrum. He explains how, in Parliament, Michael Cullen
called John Key a "Rich prick": “Rich? What sort
of mind regards "rich" as a term of abuse? Next
month, when politics is on holiday and Cullen is lying in the
sun somewhere, he will remember that remark and wince. Not
because he has suddenly ceased to resent wealth but because he
realises, too late, how revealing the comment was and how
typical of his party these past few weeks. Somewhere high on a
mountain, Helen Clark may be seized by the same thought. It
may come to her with a sudden chill that Labour has let its
contemptible side suffer too much exposure for the sake of the
Electoral Finance Bill.” (To read the article click here
>>>)
Not
only is Labour’s scorn for anyone striving for financial
independence poisonous, but its loathing for the country’s
wealth creators is destructive. That means that Labour
doesn’t actually care if the Energy Strategy and Emissions
Trading Scheme imposes excessive costs on households – it
will find a way to give an election year power subsidy to its
potential voters. Nor does it care if the resulting costs are
such a burden on business that that it forces some to close
and others to relocate offshore.
The
Greenhouse Policy Coalition has published the results of a
survey of 41 businesses across a wide range of industry
sectors which shows that the government’s proposals will put
at risk 3,000 existing jobs, 700 planned jobs, and will impose
additional direct energy costs of over $250 million. Further,
an estimated $1.6 billion of planned new investment will not
go ahead, with much of it being redirected to countries like
Australia which doesn’t plan to introduce an emissions
trading scheme until 2012, compared to New Zealand’s which
is scheduled to start on the 1st of January next year. (For
detail click here>>>)
All
of this means that householders will face a double whammy from
Helen Clark’s desire to make New Zealand a world-leading
‘sustainable’ nation. Firstly, the cost of power - and
everything else - will escalate as the government forces us to
rely increasingly on expensive renewable energy. And secondly,
once the emissions trading scheme is underway, power prices
will rise even more as we are forced to pay through the nose
for the price of carbon set on an exceedingly volatile
international market.
The poll
this week asks: Do you believe that escalating power costs
is a reasonable price to pay for New Zealand becoming a
world-leading sustainable nation?
Go
to Poll >>>
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