International commitments UNFCC and Kyoto Protocol New Zealand ratified the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (the UNFCCC) in September 1993. The purpose of this convention was to collectively bring countries together to discuss how to best address climate change and handle the impacts of it. In July 1994, four months after the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) came into force, the
Fourth National Government announced a number of priorities related to New Zealand's emissions. Environment Minister,
Simon Upton published the Environment 2010 Strategy which included a goal to reduce net carbon dioxide emissions to 20 percent less than 1990 levels by the year 2000 if cost-effective and to reduce other emissions, particularly methane, by the year 2000.
Kyoto Protocol First commitment period 2008–2012 New Zealand signed the Kyoto Protocol on 24 May 1998. New Zealand ratified the
Kyoto Protocol to the UNFCCC in December 2002. Due to its status as a developed nation, New Zealand had a target to ensure that emissions of net greenhouse gases between 2008 and 2012 do not exceed 1990 gross emissions (the baseline). The
Ministry for Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) believed New Zealand would actually be able to increase emissions and still comply with the Kyoto Protocol as long as more
Removal Units were obtained from forest carbon sinks between 2008 and 2012. In June 2005, a financial liability under the Kyoto Protocol for a shortfall of emission units of 36.2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent was first recognised in the Financial Statements of the Government of New Zealand. It was estimated as a liability of $NZ310 million. New Zealand's net balance under the Kyoto Protocol remained in deficit from 2005 (a deficit of 36 million units) until May 2008 (a deficit of 21.7 million units). On 18 December 2015 Minister for Climate Change Paula Bennett announced that New Zealand met the "target for the period from 2008-2012 through a combination of emissions reductions, carbon removal by forests, and international trading".
Doha Amendment 2013–2020 The second commitment period (2013–20) was established in Doha in 2012, although New Zealand refused to take on any new targets during this period. Instead, in November 2012, the New Zealand Government announced it would make climate pledges for the period from 2013 to 2020 under the UNFCCC process rather than agree to a second commitment under the Kyoto Protocol. This announcement angered environmentalists and was reported internationally as New Zealand avoiding legally binding obligations. Green Party climate change spokesman Kennedy Graham said the Government's announcement was about hot air at talks instead of legally binding measures to reduce emissions. The decision was also heavily criticised by the
World Wildlife Fund. Prime Minister John Key said New Zealand should not lead the way on climate change, but instead be a "fast follower". The Alliance of Small Island States voiced disappointment at New Zealand's decision. In August 2013, the National Government announced a target to reduce New Zealand's emissions to 5% less than total emissions in 1990 by the year 2020. Tim Groser, the Minister for Climate Change issues noted that New Zealand would still honour its conditional offer made in 2009 to reduce emissions to 10 – 20% below 1990 levels – but only if other countries come on board. Labelling the National Government's commitment, to an emissions reduction of 5% below 1990 levels by 2020, as a 'failure', Global conservation organisation,
WWF, pointed out that a 5% reduction is well below the level recommended by scientists in order reduce the damage of anthropogenic climate change. The changes to the scheme also allowed an influx of cheap, imported international emission units that collapsed the price of the New Zealand unit. This effectively undermined the whole scheme.
Paris Climate Agreement targets or National Determined Contributions The 2015
Paris Agreement is the successor to the 1998
Kyoto Protocol and has set a target to keep temperature rises within two degrees Celsius this century, with the hope of limiting it to 1.5 degrees. The
Paris Agreement negotiations concluded on 12 December 2015 and the Agreement took effect in 2020. The key difference between the
Paris Agreement and the
Kyoto Protocol is that the latter prescribed goals that were to be achieved by each signatory country and offered monetary support for developing countries. The
Paris Agreement allows each country to determine its own goals, defined as
Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). The treaty uses the term 'expectations' in regard to reducing emissions and there are obligations on each signatory country to communicate and review their progress (NDCs) every 5 years. Countries are expected to meet their expectations, but there is no obligation to do so – and no mechanism describing how any country should go about achieving this. The
Paris Agreement also has financial incentives available to support countries achieve their goals towards keeping the global temperature rises to below 2 degrees Celsius and down towards 1.5 degrees Celsius. to reduce 2030 net greenhouse gas emissions to 30% less than gross 2005 emissions. In October 2021 the Government announced a more ambitious target; to reduce 2030 net greenhouse gas emissions to 50% less than gross 2005 emissions. The updated target represents a 41% reduction in 2030 net emissions compared to gross 2005 emissions when using the same (budget) accounting methodology used for the 2015 NDC submission. On 30 January 2025 the Government announced the second NDC target out to 2035; to reduce emissions by 51 to 55 per cent compared to 2005 gross emission by 2035. The Government asked the
Royal Society of New Zealand to report on the scientific basis of climate change. A short report, 'Climate Change in New Zealand', was published in 1988 and the full report 'New Zealand Climate Report 1990' was published in 1989.
Carbon tax New Zealand Governments have unsuccessfully attempted to enact a carbon tax. In 2005, the
Fifth Labour Government had proposed a carbon tax of
NZ$15 per tonne of
CO2 equivalent (
US$14.47 after adjusting for inflation in 2021) to meet obligations under the
Kyoto Protocol. The tax was scheduled to take effect from April 2007 and apply across most economic sectors, with an exemption for
methane emissions from farming and provisions for special exemptions from carbon-intensive businesses if they adopted best-practice standards. After the
2005 election, two coalition parties supporting the
Fifth Labour Government,
NZ First and
United Future, opposed the proposed tax, and it was abandoned in December 2005. The Green Party described the carbon tax backdown as "giving up on climate change" and "capitulating" to the anti-Kyoto lobby. The
Environmental Defence Society described the withdrawal of the carbon tax as "pathetic" and a result of the NZ Government Climate Change Office being "captured" by vested interests such as energy intensive businesses and the Greenhouse Policy Coalition.
Methane policies In 2003, the Government proposed an
Agricultural emissions research levy to fund research into reducing ruminant emissions. The proposal, popularly called a "fart tax", was strongly opposed by Federated Farmers and was later abandoned. The
Livestock Emissions and Abatement Research Network (LEARN) was launched in 2007 to address livestock emissions. The
Pastoral Greenhouse Gas Research Consortium between the New Zealand government and industry groups seeks to reduce agricultural emissions through the funding of research. At the
2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, the New Zealand government announced the formation of the Global Research Alliance involving 20 other countries. New Zealand will contribute NZ$45 million over four years towards research on agricultural greenhouse gas emissions. In 2019, it was announced that the government had awarded funding to cultivate and research a red native seaweed known as
Asparagopsis armata to the
Cawthron Institute in Nelson. This particular seaweed has been found to reduce methane emissions from animals by as much as 80% when small amounts (2%) are added as a supplement to animal food. On 13 October 2025, the New Zealand government announced a significant revision to its biogenic methane emission reduction targets for 2050. The new target range of 14–24 percent below 2017 levels replaced the previous legislated goal of 24–47 percent reduction, representing a substantial lowering of climate commitments. The government stated the revision reflected findings from the independent Methane Science Review released in 2024, though the Climate Change Commission had previously recommended even greater reductions of 35–47 percent by 2050. Agriculture and Trade Minister Todd McClay defended the change as a "practical, fair pathway" that would protect jobs and production while maintaining climate commitments. The announcement drew criticism from environmental groups and the opposition Labour Party, with Labour climate spokesperson Deborah Russell arguing the government had "moved the goalposts" rather than developing policies to meet existing targets. The government also confirmed it would not pursue a tax on agricultural methane emissions and would instead rely on technology development and industry partnership to achieve reductions.
Emissions trading scheme The
Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment also criticised the Scheme for its generous free allocations of emission units and the lack of a carbon price signal.
Greenpeace Aotearoa New Zealand criticised it for its total ineffectiveness at reducing emissions. In May 2011, the climate scientist
James Hansen visited New Zealand for a speaking tour. Hansen drew huge crowds for his public talks. He said he did not agree with schemes like the NZETS which included forestry offsets. "In my opinion you have to have the simplest, transparent scheme so I just say it should be a flat fee proportional to the amount of carbon in the fuel." In 2014, the New Zealand Climate Party stated the emissions trading scheme "degenerated into a farce because the current emissions charges are far too low to address our steadily climbing emissions levels or to cover the damage these emissions are causing". In June 2019, Peter Whitmore, executive member of Engineers for Social Responsibility and founder of the Climate Party said: " We need to rapidly phase out the provision of free emissions units to trade exposed industries" as, in practice, they incentivise these industry to continue polluting.
Offshore oil & gas permits In 2018 when the
Sixth Labour Government of New Zealand came to power, it ceased issuing new offshore oil and gas exploration permits and only permitted onshore permits in the Taranaki region. Currently Taranaki is the only oil and gas producing region in New Zealand's with more than 20 fields, on and offshore. The Petroleum Exploration and Production Association of New Zealand (PEPANZ) which lobbies on behalf of the industry has been highly critical of the exploration ban. PEPANZ points out that the oil and gas sector contributes $1.5bn to Taranaki's GDP and makes up 40% of the regional economy. The Government's decision does not affect the reserves or potential finds from these active exploration permits. In 2018,
Simon Bridges said the National Party "would bring back oil and gas exploration immediately if National was returned to government". He said: "[It's] no good us doing everything and no-one else doing anything. That will still mean the world gets warmer..."
Tree planting The Labour led coalition has established a goal to plant one billion trees within ten years (by 2028) because trees absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere in a process known as
carbon sequestration potentially helping New Zealand to become carbon neutral. According to the Forest Owners Association, in 2015 New Zealand forests held 283 million tonnes of carbon. Under the new scheme, $120 million has allocated for landowners to plant new areas and $58 million to establish Te Uru Rākau forestry service in Rotorua. The plan is also designed to encourage farmers and Maori land holders to include trees on their property. As at 27 July 2018, nine million trees, 13% of them native species had been planted. Concerns
: New Zealand emits over 80 million tonnes of greenhouse gases (measured in CO2-equivalents) every year, approximately 45% of which (36 million tonnes) is CO2. Between 1990 and 2016, the net uptake of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by land use,
land-use change, and forestry (LULUCF) decreased by nearly 23% (down to 23 million tonnes a year) due to more intensive harvesting of planted forests. Climate scientist
Jim Salinger and anthropologist and environmentalist
Dame Anne Salmond have criticised the plan to plant one billion trees because only 13% of the trees that have been planted are natives. Salmond says two thirds of the trees being planted are supposed to be natives. Salinger points out that pine forests store far less carbon than natives as they are harvested after a few decades; the trees end up as pulp and paper and the carbon goes back into the atmosphere. Natural (native) forests store 40 times more carbon than and plantations like pine trees. A report released by the Productivity Commission in August 2018 also found that one billion tree plan is only a fraction of what is required to offset the amount carbon being released in New Zealand. The Commission says the planting rate needs to double, from 50,000 hectares to 100,000ha per year and the length of the programme needs to be extended from 10 to 30 years. Conservation charity, Trees That Count, monitors the number of native trees planted throughout New Zealand. In response to New Zealand's forestry-based
climate change mitigation strategies, significant critiques have emerged regarding the sustainability of these approaches. A report by the
Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment,
Simon Upton, particularly challenges the current practice of predominantly utilizing
Pinus radiata for
afforestation to offset fossil fuel emissions. According to Upton's analysis, while this strategy initially accelerates carbon sequestration, it may not sustain long-term
ecological stability. The report advocates for a more balanced afforestation approach, which incorporates both immediate
carbon capture and long-term environmental sustainability. This critique aligns with broader environmental concerns that suggest a reevaluation of forestry practices is necessary to ensure they contribute effectively to New Zealand's climate goals. It establishes an independent
Climate Change Commission to advise the Government of the day on emissions reduction pathways, progress towards targets and develop regular five-year emission budgets. The act sets a separate target for methane gas emissions which mostly come from the agricultural sector – requiring a 10% reduction in biological methane by 2030 and a provisional reduction between 24%–47% by 2050. The National Party said that they opposed the 24–47 per cent methane reduction target and that they would remove the methane target when they next form a government. Greenpeace New Zealand executive director,
Russel Norman criticised the bill because the targets are voluntary and have no enforcement mechanisms. He says: "What we've got here is a reasonably ambitious piece of legislation that's then had the teeth ripped out of it. There's bark, but there's no bite." In December 2020, independent scientific analysis by Climate Action Tracker stated that "The Bill does not introduce any policies to actually cut emissions". It also rated New Zealand's
emissions targets as "insufficient" meaning that the goals were not "consistent with holding warming below 2C, let alone with the Paris Agreement's stronger 1.5C limit". That was the sixth time in a row that New Zealand's responses had been ranked as "insufficient".
Climate emergency declarations As at January 2020, 1,315 jurisdictions and local governments around the world covering 810 million citizens had declared climate emergencies. What this means varies for each community and country, but common themes include a commitment to be carbon neutral as quickly as possible, limiting global warming to below 1.5 degrees Celsius, and a willingness to share solutions and join global movements that encourage climate action.
New Zealand city councils The following local bodies have declared a climate emergency: Nelson (16 May 2019), Environment Canterbury (23 May 2019), Kapiti (23 May 2019), Auckland, (11 June 2019), Wellington (20 June 2019), Dunedin, (25 June 2019), Hutt Valley (26 June 2019), the Hawkes Bay Regional Council (26 June 2019) and Whangarei (26 July 2019). Making the declaration for Auckland, Mayor
Phil Goff said: ''"Our obligation is to avoid our children and grandchildren inheriting a world devastated by global heating. Scientists tell us that if we don't take action, the effects of heating will be catastrophic, both environmentally and economically. In declaring an emergency, we are signalling the urgency of action needed to mitigate and adapt to the impact of rising world temperatures and extreme weather events. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says we have only around 12 years to reduce global carbon emissions to limit temperature rises to 1.5 degrees. While international and national actions are critical, at a local and personal level we need to play our role in achieving that target."''
Financial justification Financial liability for the damage caused by rising sea levels and climate related disasters will largely fall on city councils. In July 2019, a review of local government funding by the Productivity Commission has found more funding and support is required from central government because of the significant challenges councils are having to face adapting to sea level rise and flooding. The review found that many local councils are frustrated by the lack of leadership from Government; in particular councils want advice, guidance and legal frameworks to support decisions they need to make about land use in areas that are, or will become, prone to flooding." An example of the difficulties that will likely arise is the decision by National MP,
Judith Collins and her husband David Wong-Tung to sue the Nelson City Council for $180,000 for remedial works and lost rental income after a slip damaged their property during heavy rain in Nelson in 2011. At the time the flooding which occurred that day was described as a one in 250 year event. Global warming increases the frequency of such events. Collins is claiming that omissions by the Council caused the landslide which damaged their property. The Council has accepted some of the claims and denied others. Media commentator, Greg Roughan, points out that as the frequency of such events increases, the cost to business, and councils will only get worse. He also points to the negative impact on property prices if, for example, a low stretch of motorway just north of the Auckland harbour bridge gets washed out multiple times each year, preventing thousands of people from getting to work; and to the legal and financial ramifications if a council grants consent for beachfront properties to be built in an area that a few years later insurers decide not to underwrite. Roughan argues that by declaring a climate emergency, forward-looking Councils are making the point – "this is going to get expensive". However, on 18 July 2019, youth MPs demonstrated the importance of this issue to young people and "beat their actual MPs to the punch by declaring a climate change emergency at (the triennial) Youth Parliament 2019." Building on previous campaigning for the decarbonisation of public transport in Auckland a coalition of 17 groups, called All Aboard Aotearoa, was formed in 2020. Using a combination of public education, lobbying and legal action it persuaded Auckland's council to adopt an evidence-based policy to achieve an emissions reductions target for transport of 64% by 2030. On 14 May 2019, Wellington inhabitant
Ollie Langridge began sitting on the lawn outside Parliament holding a sign calling on the Government to declare a climate change emergency. From 28 July, Langridge set a record as the longest running protest outside Parliament in New Zealand's history. Langridge's protest achieved international attention. After protesting outside Parliament every day for 100 days, Langridge cut back his presence to Fridays only, saying he wanted to spend more time with his wife and children. On 2 December 2020, Prime Minister
Jacinda Ardern declared a
climate change emergency in New Zealand and sponsored a parliamentary motion pledging that the New Zealand Government would aim to be "carbon neutral" by 2025 in line with the goals of the Climate Change Response (Zero Carbon) Amendment Act. As part of the Government's "carbon neutral" goals, the public sector will be required to buy only electric or hybrid vehicles, government buildings will have to meet new building standards, and all 200 coal-fired boilers in public service buildings will be phased out. This motion was supported by the governing centre-left
Labour and left-wing
Green parties and the opposition
Māori Party but was opposed by the centre-right opposition
National and libertarian
ACT parties. In response, Prime Minister Ardern defended her Government's climate change declaration, stating that New Zealand had bigger goals than one target. In addition, Climate Change Minister
James Shaw responded that the climate change declaration was only just the "starting point" in New Zealand's climate change response measures.
Opinion polls On 13 June 2019 a 1 NEWS Colmar Brunton poll found that a majority of New Zealanders (53%) believe the Government should declare a climate emergency. 39% said no, and 8% did not know. More than 50 of the country's top researchers have also called on New Zealand politicians to declare a climate emergency. Their appeal to government states: "The scientific consensus is that the world stands on the verge of unprecedented environmental and climate catastrophe for which we are little prepared, and which affords us only a few years for mitigating action. We, the undersigned, urge the New Zealand House of Representatives to declare a climate emergency, now."
Support for national declaration The Labour Party Climate Change manifesto lists one of its goals as "[Making] New Zealand a leader in the international fight against climate change, and in ensuring that the 2015
Paris Agreement is successfully implemented." As at June 2019, four countries have formally declared a climate emergency: the UK, France, Canada and Ireland. (Despite these declarations, these countries still provide subsidies of $27.5bn annually which support fossil fuel industries.) If the Labour Party wants New Zealand to be a world leader in this area, the Government will need to follow or do better than the example set by these four. Tom Powell of Climate Karanga Marlborough argues that it is only when we recognise we are facing an actual emergency that our local and national governments get away from "business as usual". Greg Roughan agrees arguing that it takes time for 'out there ideas' (such as a climate crisis) to become mainstream so that political action can be implemented. A declaration that there is a climate emergency from a reputable source such as a city council or national government brings "mainstream cred to the need for urgent action – even if it doesn't spell out how that looks." Introducing a "feebate" scheme for car imports in July 2019, associate transport minister,
Julie Anne Genter, spoke about fronting up to climate change by comparing it to fighting World War II. At the Just Transition Community Conference sponsored by the New Plymouth District Council on 15 June 2019, Victoria University professor and keynote speaker,
James Renwick, said the situation was dire. He continued: "Last year saw the highest emissions globally on record and emissions have been going up, up and up for the past 30 years. If the world continues to emit greenhouse gasses it will lock in a further 3C of global warming and 10m of sea level rise... There's been a lot of talk about a climate emergency lately and it really is an emergency situation."
Opposed to national declaration The decision by local councils to declare climate emergencies has led to debate in the media about what a declaration of an emergency really means and whether or not such declarations will be backed up by significant action to address the problem. National MP,
Paula Bennett, called the Prime Minister "ridiculous" because of her willingness to declare a "climate emergency". Bennett said declarations of emergency should only be used for "very serious events" such as the
earthquakes which occurred in Christchurch in 2011. National's climate change spokesman, Todd Muller, says "This is a 30, 40, 50-year, multi-generational transition for the economy away from fossil fuels. It's not an emergency in that context – to say it's an emergency is absolutely ridiculous. When you call something from a government – central or local – an emergency, you are saying you are pursuing this above all else."
International ranking of climate change policies In 2023 the
Climate Action Tracker project gave New Zealand's climate policies and actions an overall rating of "highly insufficient". Germanwatch rated New Zealand's overall climate change performance as 'low'. == Society and culture ==