New Zealand's biggest choice in the emerging global deal to combat climate change is whether to side with Europe and Australia, which have emissions trading schemes, or with the rest of the world in whatever binding deal emerges, says Climate Change Minister Tim Groser.
In his first speech in the domestic climate change role since the resignation of the previous Minister, Nick Smith, on March 20, Groser told the Iwi Leaders Forum that Australia's decision would be crucial to New Zealand's choice.
It remained unclear "whether it will be just Europe or Europe plus New Zealand and Australia" that uses the framework of the existing global deal on climate change, the Kyoto Protocol, in the second period of international carbon emission reduction commitments, which will run from Jan. 1, 2013.
The Kyoto Protocol so-called "First Commitment" period runs out at the end of this year, with no new international order agreed, but a decision to spend from 2013 to 2020 on a transition to a "single and probably legally binding Agreement that will end the Kyoto distinction between developed and developing countries," Groser said.
The speech lays out more clearly than previously Groser's view that New Zealand did well at the Durban negotiations last year, in no small part thanks to New Zealand's deep involvement in key parts of the detail of the negotiations.