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Miase, Bea Clarisse A.

SHS Representative

Kaitiakitanga: Protecting our planet

Rt Hon Jacinda Ardern

Prime Minister

I’d like to begin with a word often used in New Zealand, that you may not – until
now – have ever had the opportunity to hear: kaitiakitanga.

It’s Te Reo Māori, a word in the language of indigenous New Zealanders, and in
my mind, it captures the sentiment of why we are here.

It means ‘guardianship’. But not just guardianship, but the responsibility of care for
the environment in which we live, and the idea that we have a duty of care that
eventually hands to the next generation, and the one after.

We all hold this responsibility in our own nations, but the challenge of climate
change requires us to look beyond the domestic. Our duty of care is as global as
the challenge of climate change.

In the Pacific, we feel that acutely as do countries like Bangladesh where land is
literally being lost, and fresh water is being inundated with salt water due to
climate change.

There is no doubt that climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our
generation.

Whether there will be enough food and freshwater. Whether our towns and cities
will be free from inundation from rising seas or extreme rainfalls and devastating
storms. Whether the biodiversity that lends our planet its richness and its resilience
will survive. Whether the growth and economic development that provided an
incredible path to lift people out of poverty will be stunted by the widespread,
systemic impacts of climate change.

There is no country, no region that does not already feel the impacts of climate
change. For New Zealand’s neighbours in the Pacific, who are already losing their
soil and freshwater resources to salt from the ocean, these are not hypothetical
questions. They are immediate questions of survival.

Although New Zealand accounts for a tiny percentage of global emissions – only
0.16 percent – we recognise the importance of doing our part.
But more importantly we recognise that global challenges require everyone’s
attention and action. And we all have responsibility to care for the earth in the
face of climate change.

This is not the time to apportion responsibility, this is the time to work across borders
and to do everything we can by working together.

We are working internationally and want to do more to share research and ideas,
build opportunities together with other nations.

New Zealand is fully committed to the Paris Agreement and we are taking urgent
action to transition to a low-carbon and climate resilient economy. Our focus is
on doing this in a way that creates new areas of growth and opportunity for our
communities.

At home, my Minister for Climate Change is this week preparing a Zero Carbon
Bill to legislate an ambitious goal that would be fully aligned with the Paris
Agreement’s objective for the world to become carbon neutral in the second
half of this century. We have already put in place some of the measures to get us
there.

We are reviewing New Zealand’s emission trading scheme, to ensure it helps us


deliver a net zero-emissions future.

We have a target of planting 1 billion trees over the next decade.

And we are no longer issuing permits for offshore oil and gas exploration.

It has been encouraging to see the groundswell of support for ambitious climate
action in New Zealand. 60 CEOs representing half of all New Zealand’s
greenhouse gas emissions have committed to action. Our largest dairy company
and major agricultural producers have declared themselves up for the challenge.

Local governments have long-term plans not only to adapt to climate change
but to drive deep emissions reductions. Communities and families are taking up
the cause. New Zealanders understand that it is both the right thing to do and
the smart thing to do.

The conversation has shifted dramatically. It was only 10 years ago that I was
asked about climate change in a town hall election meeting. When I spoke
passionately about our need to respond to this challenge, I was met with a boo
that moved across the entire audience.

Now, the debate is no longer whether climate change is a threat, but how we
can use our policies, actions and international linkages to drive the move to a
low-emissions and inclusive society. We know that the scale of this transformation
is huge, and we are determined to leave no-one behind. It will be a ‘just
transition’ that works with people who might be affected, and turns this challenge
into an opportunity.

In New Zealand’s home region of the Pacific we will work with others to support
stronger and more resilient infrastructure, strengthened disaster preparedness,
and low-carbon economic growth through both our funding commitments and
by bringing good ideas to the table.

To support developing countries respond to the impacts of climate change, New


Zealand will spend at least $300 million in climate-related development assistance
over the next 4 years, with the majority of this to be spent in the Pacific.

We recognise that climate change poses a security threat to vulnerable nations,


including our Pacific neighbours.

We understand that climate change brings new challenges to international legal


frameworks.

As climate change causes sea-levels to rise, coastal states face the risk of shrinking
maritime zones as their baselines move inward.

New Zealand firmly believes that coastal states’ baselines and maritime
boundaries should not have to change because of human-induced sea level rise.

We are beginning work on a strategy to achieve the objective of preserving the


current balance of rights and obligations under UNCLOS. Our goal is to find a way,
as quickly as possible, to provide certainty to vulnerable coastal states that they
will not lose access to their marine resources and current entitlements. We seek
your support as we work to ensure that these states maintain their rights over their
maritime zones in the face of sea-level rise.

You are all here today because you understand the need for global action to
solve this global problem. My government is committed to leadership both at
home and abroad.

On the international stage we are pushing for the reform of fossil fuel subsidies; the
$460 billion spent each year that works against climate ambition and could be
better spent on building resilient societies.

We are leading research and collaboration on climate change and agriculture,


including with many of you here today in the Global Research Alliance. At COP24
we hope to see many of you at a New Zealand-led event on sustainable
agriculture and climate change. We’re aiming to encourage action to capture
the ‘triple win’ – increasing agricultural productivity, reducing greenhouse gas
emissions, and strengthening resilience to climate change impacts.

We are undertaking research in Antarctica to better understand the crucial role


it plays in global systems, and the far reaching effects environmental change in
Antarctica will have.

We, with the Marshall Islands, Sweden and France are building a Towards Carbon
Neutrality Coalition. The 16 countries and 32 cities in the Coalition are developing
long-term strategies for deep cuts of emissions in line with the long-term
temperature limit goals we all agreed to in the Paris Agreement.

This week President Hilda Heine of the Marshall Islands and I are hosting the first
high-level meeting of the Coalition. We’re going to launch the Coalition’s new
Plan of Action and announce new members.

We are proud to join many of you in ambitious initiatives like the High Ambition
Coalition, Powering Past Coal and the One Planet Sovereign Wealth Fund
Working Group.

And in the UNFCCC we are strong supporters of the Global Climate Action
Agenda, with a special focus on agriculture.

Underpinning all of this action is the Paris Agreement and the critical decisions
that will be made in Katowice this December. The rules that are agreed must be
robust and credible, so that the Paris Agreement is effective and enduring. The
world can only reach the Paris goals if we have clarity and confidence about
each other’s commitments and action.

As I have said to my fellow New Zealanders, I refuse to accept that the challenge
of climate change is too hard to solve. So, I join you today necessarily
hopeful. Hopeful that, if we genuinely commit to finding solutions together, no
issue is truly unsolvable.

And hopeful that we, the 193 members states of the United Nations, can work
towards solutions that deliver for our people. Peace. Dignity. A good quality of
life. A resilient and sustainable future, and fulfilling the responsibility that is
kaitiakitanga.

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