Published: 14:37, December 15, 2020 | Updated: 08:09, June 5, 2023
NZ PM defends climate change goals after Thunberg scoffs
By Reuters

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks during a press conference in Wellington on Dec 8, 2020 as she apologises after a judicial review exposed failures by police and intelligence services ahead of last year's Christchurch mosques terror attack. ( NEIL SANDS / AFP)

SYDNEY - New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern defended her country’s climate change policies, saying that comments by activist Greta Thunberg suggesting the country lacked ambition referred only to part of New Zealand’s goals on climate change.

Ardern on Monday told reporters the emergency declaration covered only a portion of New Zealand’s climate change goals

Thunberg took to Twitter on Dec 13 to say that New Zealand’s “so-called climate emergency declaration” earlier in the month, committing the country to become carbon neutral by 2025, was “of course nothing unique to any nation”.

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Ardern on Monday told reporters she welcomed Thunberg’s contribution to the debate on climate, but said the emergency declaration covered only a portion of New Zealand’s climate change goals.

“If it was the sum total of what we were doing, it would be worthy of criticism, it’s clearly not,” Ardern said, adding it’s “only a good thing that there are people out there continuing to urge ambition and action.”

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New Zealand declared a climate emergency on Dec 2, promising its public sector would achieve carbon neutrality by 2025. Its programme will be backed by a NZ$200 million (US$142 million) fund to finance replacing coal boilers and help purchase electric or hybrid vehicles.