Free Press 29th February 2016
Free Press
ACT’s regular bulletin
Outstanding Conference
ACT held
a well-attended and highly positive conference on the
weekend. The media described it with words such as
‘upbeat.’ You can read David Seymour’s keynote speech
here.
A Surprising
Finding
New figures were released for MPs’ expenditures
on flights at the end of last week. Amazingly, the Greens
are the biggest flyers in parliament, with their MPs
averaging $8,563 each over three months.
C’mon
James
Green Co-leader James Shaw likes to tell the story
of how, as a management consultant, he used to help
companies economise on flying to reduce their emissions.
The Green caucus must be his toughest client.
Indulgences for Sale
The Reformation kicked off in
large part because Martin Luther resented the Catholic
Church’s practice of selling indulgences. In those days
you could sin with impunity if you made a contribution to
the local priest. Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the door
at Wittenberg and the rest is history.
Carbon
Offsets, the New Indulgence
The Greens claim that their
flying is ok because they ‘offset’ their credits. Free
Press wonders about this, have they ever provided proof?
According to a 2006 press release when Jeanette Fitzsimmons
(an environmentalist) ran the Greens, they were paying $20
per tonne of CO2, or about $3 on an Auckland-Wellington
flight.
Is it Credible?
The Greens position seems
to be that climate change is the crisis of our time but when
they fly simply paying $3 on an Auckland-Wellington flight
makes it go away.
No Electorates
Electorate MPs
like David Seymour must be in their electorates every week
and in parliament nearly every week, especially if they are
an Under-Secretary or Minister with executive
responsibilities. The
Greens haven’t held an
electorate since 1999 so where on earth do they go?
Time for a Reformation
The Greens have become
professional politicians whose lifestyle has little to do
with the environment and smacks of hypocrisy. It is time
for a reformation that ends their monopoly on pious
Greenery.
Something More Positive
David Seymour
unveiled ACT’s new environmental policies on the weekend,
you can read them here.
The Four ‘P’s of Free
Market Environmentalism
ACT believes in the four
‘P’s. Private initiative, because so much voluntary
conservation goes unsung. Prosperity, because wealthy
societies can afford to be environmentalists. Prices,
because accurate pricing conserves resources. Finally,
property rights, because people conserve what they have an
interest in.
Sell Landcorp
The Headline policy is
selling the underperforming farming company, Landcorp, and
using the proceeds to set up a private trust: Sanctuary
Trust. The Trust would award conditional grants to
community groups operating wildlife sanctuaries such as
Zealandia, Brooks Sanctuary, and Maungatautari.
Sanctuaries
Sanctuaries have the aim of eradicating
pests and allowing native species to regenerate. They often
have a predator-proof fence that may be up to 50 km around.
They are expensive to set up, and ACT believes the
Government would be far better giving them a boost than
owning some farms.
Carbon Tax
The ETS has turned
out to be a rort. ACT has long said the government should
scrap it. It should be replaced by a revenue-neutral carbon
tax, initially set at $0. If in future people decide they
want to pay more carbon tax and less income tax that’s
fine. It would be more honest than the rorty Emissions
Trading Scheme.
Road User Charges
The petrol tax
is highly inefficient because it’s not time-sensitive.
It’s like saying that if you buy kerosene you can fly on
any plane, any time. There would be chaos at airports half
the time and empty planes the other half. Of course
airlines vary prices to manage demand, and ACT says the
government should dump the carbon tax and follow cities such
as Stockholm who charge different amounts at different times
for driving, smoothing out congestion.
Water
Markets
Currently local governments issue water rights
for up to 35 years on a first-come-first-served basis.
There is no incentive to conserve if your rights are
guaranteed and you can’t easily sell them. ACT supports
the Land and Water Forum’s moves to introduce tradeable
water
rights.
ENDS