Major milestones of the New Zealand Emissions Trading Scheme

Published: 2016

Author: Catherine Leining

When it was introduced in 2008, the NZ ETS was the first emissions trading system in the world designed to cover all sectors of the economy (with phased entry) and the six major greenhouse gases. Across two major stages of amendments in 2009 and 2012 and other adjustments, features have been adjusted to reduce the price – and emissions – impact of the system. However, the system has successfully established a functional domestic market and offers a foundation for more ambitious domestic mitigation effort. The New Zealand government is reviewing the system in 2016.

Below is a table of key milestones in the process. If you'd like to learn more, check out our whizz-bang timeline of the NZ ETS.

Year

Month

NZ ETS policy

NZ ETS implementation

International

2005

Dec

Government decided not to proceed with a carbon tax

 

 

2007

 

 

Apr

Government established an Emissions Trading Group to design an ETS

 

 

 Sep

Government established the Climate Change Leadership Forum and Maori Reference Group

   
 Dec Government established Technical Advisory Groups     

2008

Jan

 

Forestry sector retrospectively assumed unit obligations under the NZ ETS

First commitment period of Kyoto Protocol began

Sep

Parliament passed founding legislation for NZ ETS

 

 

Nov

NZ general election resulted in a National-led government and first NZ ETS review

 

 

2009

Jan

 

Transport sector began voluntary NZ ETS reporting

 

Jun

Parliament passed the Climate Change Response (Emissions Trading Forestry Sector) Amendment Bill

 

 

Aug

Government announced a conditional 2020 GHG target of 10-20% below 1990 level

 

 

Nov

Parliament passed the Climate Change Response (Moderated Emissions Trading) Amendment Bill

 

 

Dec

 

 

UNFCCC conference in Copenhagen

2010

Jan

 

Stationary energy, industrial process and transport sectors began mandatory NZ ETS reporting

 

Jul

 

Stationary energy, industrial process and transport sectors assumed NZ ETS unit obligations

 

Dec

Government appointed panel for second ETS review

 

 

2011

Jan

 

Waste, synthetic gas and agriculture sectors began voluntary NZ ETS reporting

 

Mar

Government set a 2050 GHG target of 50% below 1990 level

 

 

Dec

 

Ban on surrendering industrial-gas CERs took effect

 

2012

Jan

 

Waste, synthetic gas and agriculture sectors began mandatory NZ ETS reporting

 

Nov

Parliament passed the Climate Change Response (Emissions Trading and Other Matters) Amendment Bill

 

 

Nov

NZ took its 2020 GHG commitment under the UNFCCC, not Kyoto Protocol

 

 

Dec

 

Ban on surrendering industrial-gas ERUs and large-scale-hydro ERUs/CERs took effect

Kyoto Protocol's first commitment period ended; the second period began the next day

2013

Jan

 

Waste and synthetic gas sectors assumed unit obligations under the NZ ETS

 

Aug

Government announced an unconditional 2020 GHG target of 5% below 1990 level

 

 

Dec

Government announced future delinking of the NZ ETS from the Kyoto market

 

 

2014

May

Government legislated against arbitrage by post-1989 forest owners

 

 

2015

Jun

 

NZ ETS delinked from the Kyoto market

 

Jul

Government announced a 2030 GHG target of 30% below 2005 level (11% below 1990 level)

 

 

Nov

Government launched consultation on third NZ ETS review

 

UNFCCC conference in Paris

Dec

Government announced NZ Kyoto compliance for 2008-2012 with a unit surplus and projected a surplus for the period 2013-2020

 

 

Funders

Aotearoa Foundation