New Zealand Climate Action Network members react to the 2022 Budget.
New Zealand Climate Action Network members react to climate dishonour at COP26.
New Zealand finally won a well-deserved Fossil award and comes in second place.
New Zealand Climate Action Network members react to the announcement of a new New Zealand NDC.
Members of the NZ Climate Action Network will be at the lockup tomorrow for the release of the Climate Change Commission's final report.
Through February-March, NZCAN members actively engaged in the consultation on the draft advice from He Pou a Rangi / the Climate Change Commission.
New Zealand CAN is pleased to announce that Ngā Tirairaka o Ngāti Hine has today joined the Network.
Nga Tirairaka o Ngati Hine is the mandated environmental organisation for Ngati Hine and carries out work on catchment management, policy planning and lobbying government. The organisation also assists other indigenous peoples in this kind of capacity building.
"The latest draft of the Paris Agreement is an important step forward. Countries worldwide are acting on climate change. This agreement will mark the end of the fossil fuel era and the dawn of the renewable energy era. The momentum towards a 100% renewable energy future is unstoppable."
Today’s first place Fossil of the Day Award goes to...the EU and Umbrella Group countries (Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Kazakhstan, Norway, the Russian Federation, Ukraine and the USA). They take the prize for standing in the way of increasing ambition before 2020. If they shifted on their position, LMDCs would have to deliver on their promise to allow an opportunity to revisit all INDCs (with support) before 2020. Together these actions could help get us on track to keep warming below 2C degrees, and ideally 1.5C.
This morning the New Zealand Government announced NZ$20m in finance specifically for climate change-induced loss and damage. This is a significant win for frontlines communities, small island states, and civil society organisations, who have been calling for loss and damage specific finance for too long.
Critically, however, the funds New Zealand has announced are merely a re-allocation of a portion of the $1.3b in climate finance the Government already announced late last year. Reallocating funding isn’t good enough - it must be new and additional.
This announcement comes as loss and damage finance makes it onto the UN climate change conference agenda for the first time, following significant efforts from Global South countries and civil society over many years.
The Pacific Islands Climate Action Network and New Zealand Climate Action Network reaffirm the call by Climate Action Network International for New Zealand to support the creation of a dedicated loss and damage finance facility at COP27, so that countries suffering unavoidable impacts of climate change will have access to the financial support they need.