What a Biden-led US might mean for climate action in New Zealand

Some academics say the new Biden administration could mean more pressure on New Zealand’s government and industries to clean up their carbon emissions faster.

The new President yesterday signed an executive order which means in 30 days, the US will rejoin the Paris Agreement.

At the same time, he also cancelled the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline, which environmentalists and Native American groups have fought against for more than a decade.

It’s an early indicator of an administration which is now looking to galvanise international efforts to combat the climate crisis.

Biden’s climate plan

Joe Biden’s climate action plan showed he wanted to make the US the global climate change police.

Part of it included a promise to “name and shame global climate outlaws”, which would be determined through a new Global Climate Change Report, which would “hold countries to account for meeting, or failing to meet their Paris commitments”.

But he also wanted countries to adopt a new, “sustained effort to dramatically increase global climate ambition”.

Professor of political science and international relations at the University of Canterbury, Bronwyn Hayward, said it would be important New Zealand did not fall behind.

“Now, when we really see the rubber hitting the road, and actual, real action taken from a really big superpower, New Zealand will have to step up.

“We are really quite at risk at the moment of not realising how far we have to go in order to actually become a modern, low-carbon trading economy.”

Over the past 30 years, out of all 45 “annex 1” countries, New Zealand had the second worst record of emissions increases.

Since 1990, carbon emissions have increased by nearly 60 percent. The only country worse was Turkey.

A recent report by the Ministry for the Environment found New Zealand exceeded its national share of consumption-based emissions by more than a factor of 6.5.

A new climate power

The action Biden took on just his first afternoon in office, demonstrated a radical shift in priority: from the previous president who took the country out of the Paris Agreement, to a new president who immediately took it back in.

But the new leader’s agenda showed they were keen to clean up their own house as well.

He promised to invest $1.7 trillion over the next 10 years, which would set the US on the path to being carbon neutral by 2050.

It was expected he would scale up the US’s own Paris Agreement targets when they first joined under President Barack Obama.

Back then the targets were to reduce emissions by between 26-28 percent below 2005 levels by 2025.

Now, environmentalists are hoping Biden will increase it to a 40 percent or even 50 percent reduction by 2030.

New Zealand’s government has an emissions-reduction target of 30 percent on 1990 levels.

Meanwhile, Hayward – who served on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change – said the status of John Kerry, who has been brought in as the special envoy for climate, would be consequential.

His role will be to oversee America’s domestic policies, as well as to encourage other world leaders to do more in their own countries.

“It’s an exciting time,” she said. “This will be a time in which I think that we will see quite a big shift in the number of countries following America quite quickly.”

Not expecting anything radical

Slightly less optimistic about the impact of Biden’s administration was adjunct professor at Victoria University of Wellington’s Climate Change Research Institute, Adrian Macey.

“I don’t see any massive change,” he said.

“What it does do is probably removes the excuse that some more reluctant countries might have, not to take action and say well if the world’s biggest economy is not there, why should we be?

“[But] even for the US itself, I don’t think we can expect anything particularly radical in terms of greater ambition.”

He was not as concerned about the short-term targets, where the US was now more ambitious than New Zealand.

“The question you need to ask each country is what is your transition plan for actually getting down to what we might call net zero, and getting your affect on warming of the climate down to zero.

“You’re looking at a 2050 target for that. Getting everything in place to achieve that I think is much more important than just naming a few targets.”

But other countries have also started to reassess their own Paris Agreement targets, with the UK promising to cut carbon emissions by 68 percent by 2030, and the EU by 55 percent.

More for NZ to keep eyes on

Biden has a whole wishlist of climate action policies beyond just joining the Paris Agreement, which if brought in, could signal big changes for New Zealand.

One move which Massey University distinguished professor Robert McLachlan believes could spell trouble is the possible imposition of quotas on carbon-intensive goods.

“That would mean if we were selling something to America, and it was a product that faces a higher carbon tax in America than it did here, it would face a tariff to enter the country,” he said.

“Now if they did that, New Zealand would almost be compelled to respond almost immediately, because otherwise we’d basically be throwing money away to the US for no reason.”

That would require immediate action for the agriculture and manufacturing industries in particular, he said.

Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta yesterday welcomed the US’s return to the Paris Agreement.

In a tweet, she said, “In these challenging times, we all need to work together for the wellbeing of our people, and planet.”

Meanwhile, a report into how New Zealand is faring combating the climate crisis – including the country’s Paris Agreement commitments – is due out on 1 February.

It is expected to analyse whether the country will meet its obligations to limit global warming to well below 2, and preferably to 1.5 degrees celsius.