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2002 Report |
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Energy and Sustainable Development in New Zealand(PDF: 497 Ko / 30 p.) A report to HELIO International by Molly Melhuish, Sustainable Energy Forum. Wellington, NZ. 4 June 2002 |
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Introduction and Summary of Conclusions New Zealand could achieve sustainablity in its energy sector more easily than any other IEA country. It has a temperate climate, high sunshine, rainfall and wind regimes. Trees and crops grow very quickly. Its population is small and educated. It is far from energy exporting countries. Energy suppliers that were owned and run by the state are now companies, which are more accountable at least in theory. Sustainability is an overall objective of several laws and regulations. The factors above are favourable. But New Zealand's so-called "free-market" culture is working against sustainability. Privatisation and deregulation have been implemented passionately by both Government and business interests aligned with global markets. This allows energy companies to wield great market power. New Zealand has an unusually "lumpy" mix of supply facilities and demand centres, usually connected by long transmission facilities. This allows market power to be greatly increased. Many energy companies that were once publicly owned have been wholly or partly sold to foreign companies. When these companies abuse their market power, the excessive profits go overseas, adding to New Zealand's burden of debt. This report follows the brief of HELIO
International, by using eight indicators to monitor New Zealand's progress
in relation to sustainable development. We compare the values of these
in 2000 to the values in 1990. Because statistics are available for each
year, and there are great variations in each year, we draw a trendline
wherever possible (we use the third power "polynomial trendline" available
in Excel, the simplest fit available that allows significant variations
in either direction over the ten-year period of interest).
The unregulated energy market allowed large companies to gain wealth at the expense of small consumers, rural consumers and small-scale energy businesses. New Zealand's energy efficiency and economic efficiency have both lagged behind gains made by other OECD countries. For years, governments have responded by making "sustainable development" a broad goal of energy law and policy. But they still allow the big energy companies to abuse their market power. Increasing foreign ownership is allowing profits to flow overseas, adding to New Zealand's burden of debt. The restructuring of the 1980s and 1990s
amounted to a cultural revolution, and the energy sector led those reforms.
It would take a counter-revolution to bring social goals back into the
energy free-market. Energy companies are constrained only by threat of
regulation. Until real regulation is imposed on energy companies, we have
little hope for sustainable energy development in New Zealand.
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