In principle, the intention is to contain or reduce the amount of CO2 and equivalents (Carbon dioxide (CO2), Methane (CH4), Nitrous oxide (N2O), Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), Perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6)) emitted by an economy, by establishing a tradable emissions permit scheme - but the devil is in the details, certainly in the case of this ETS.
Of course the question is in the measurement, and who gets measured, etc. Labour's ETS was flawed in a number of ways, and delayed entry into the scheme for certain sectors - details
here. But they were heading in the right direction, at least.
National's revised ETS is completely screwed (actually it's us being completely screwed): It further delays entry of key sectors like agriculture, mutes the pricing signal with a $NZ25 per tonne of carbon cap.....
Basically the National Party scheme heavily subsidises the (big business) polluters, with us taxpayers picking up the tab - $92,000 per family per year until 2050, by some estimates.....
Bookmarks