Fiddling while the planet burns

by frog

The Government’s decision today to scrap the Carbon Tax is unfortunate in itself, but the really worrying thing is the change of thinking that it points to.

What is clear from the policy review (offline) that prompted the decision is that the Government views the rise in New Zealand’s carbon emissions as inevitable and that they are only going to try and slow the trend, rather than actually reversing it.

As Jeanette has said today:

“A small country like ours can only contribute in a meaningful way on issues like climate change by showing moral leadership. The Government’s stance assumes other countries will take action and produce enough carbon credits that we can buy them at a cheap price. But if every nation took New Zealand’s ‘someone-else-will-fix-it’ attitude, carbon credits will be outrageously expensive and the human race and the planet will be in serious trouble.

Some are overestimating the relevance of the new Government’s structure and /or Dr Brash’s tax prescription. For instance, Greenpeace have said:

Basically, Dunne and Peters said, ‘jump’ and Labour said ‘how high?’ “

I’m not so sure. The policy review was called in June and printed at the beginning of November, a week or two after the Government formed and weeks before Brash’s anti-carbon tax campaign started.

No, this is Labour caving in to the vested interests themselves. The pre-empting of National to try and compete for one group of voters and the blaming of Peters and Dunne so they can hold on to another is just, for them, a fortunate side effect.

As Jeanette also said today:

The Greens are now the only party prepared to stand up to the vested interests who want to continue to fiddle while the planet burns.

frog says

Published in Economy, Work, & Welfare | Environment & Resource Management by frog on Wed, December 21st, 2005   

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