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Government goes for gas stake
Government goes for gas stake

RNZ News

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • RNZ News

Government goes for gas stake

Photo: 123rf What will the Government achieve by setting aside $200 million to try and get a small stake in a new offshore gas field? Associate Energy Minister Shane Jones announced the move in the budget last week saying the Crown would take a 10 to 15 per cent stake in a new gas field to help feed the domestic market. While electricity generators have purchased gas from the country's biggest user, Methanex, for domestic supply, other gas users such as schools and hospitals are unable to get supply contracts of more than a year, and prices are going up for everyone. But new gas fields are a huge investment, and the sector has struggled to meet demand. Mac Beggs has worked on oil and gas exploration for decades in New Zealand - he says there are two, maybe three wells that have potential.

New Zealand abandons Jacinda Ardern's net zero push
New Zealand abandons Jacinda Ardern's net zero push

Telegraph

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

New Zealand abandons Jacinda Ardern's net zero push

New Zealand has abandoned its pursuit of net zero by revoking a ban on drilling for oil and gas. The country's government confirmed the shift in its latest budget this week, which unveiled plans to invest NZ$200m (£90m) in new offshore gas fields. The reversal marks an end to a policy announced by Jacinda Ardern, the former prime minister, in 2018. She claimed at the time that 'the world has moved on from fossil fuels'. Her attempted ban has since been replicated in Britain by Ed Miliband, the Climate Secretary, who halted all new North Sea drilling after Labour triumphed in last year's election. However, Nicola Willis, New Zealand's finance minister, has consigned Ms Ardern's policy to history by announcing plans to expand offshore gas fields. In particular, she is seeking to attract international oil and gas companies with a taxpayer-backed subsidy of NZ$200m (£88m). It comes after New Zealand's planned shift to renewables backfired, generating higher prices and raising the risk of blackouts. Shane Jones, the country's resources minister, said Ms Ardern's ban had been a disaster. He said: 'We are feeling the pain of constrained supply. The Government is not prepared to sit on the sidelines and watch our industrial and manufacturing dwindle because of energy security concerns. 'We are focused on growing the New Zealand economy, creating jobs and increasing prosperity and resilience. Natural gas will continue to be critical in delivering secure and affordable energy for New Zealanders for at least the next 20 years.' The decision to reverse the ban followed three years of rising energy prices that left 110,000 households unable to warm their homes, according to Consumer NZ, a non-profit advocate. Transpower, the equivalent of the UK's National Grid, also previously warned that the nation was at high risk of blackouts because renewables were not producing enough power during cold spells. New Zealand's natural gas Ms Ardern's move came despite geologists discovering billions of cubic metres of natural gas in the seabeds around New Zealand. Sean Rush, a UK barrister who now runs the Sean Rush Energy and Infrastructure Law consultancy in Wellington, New Zealand, said: 'Finally, the New Zealand government grew a spine and recognised that climate change is not an existential threat – but an economy without fossil fuels is. 'The UK Government should take notice of what happens when exploration is stifled. Investment flees, gas-dependent businesses close and electricity prices soar. It is an economy-killing climate policy that is the existential threat to modern economies.' Natural gas has been produced commercially in New Zealand's Taranaki region since 1959 and there are now six main areas, three offshore and three onshore. About 30pc is used for electricity generation, which is why declining output led to rising power prices. Much of the rest is used to make the petrochemicals and fertilisers used widely in domestic farming, meaning gas shortages also impact agriculture. John Carnegie, of Energy Resources Aotearoa, an industry trade body, said: 'This has wide implications for New Zealand's industrial sector and regional economy. 'Gas underpins everything from electricity generation to food processing, and declining reserves have already placed pressure on everyone from major exporters to small domestic manufacturers. We hope this move will help stem the decline.' Such warnings are echoed by energy experts in the UK, where more than 75pc of total energy consumed still comes from oil and gas.

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