Our greenhouse gas emissions reductions targets

New Zealand has made commitments to the following international and domestic emission targets. 

Domestic targets are targets that New Zealand has set as part of its domestic policy decisions.

International targets are targets that New Zealand sets as part of its international climate change commitments.

Domestic targets 

Domestic target under the Climate Change Response Act (CCRA)

  • Net zero emissions of all greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions other than biogenic methane by 2050.
  • 24 to 47 per cent reduction below 2017 biogenic methane emissions by 2050, including 10 per cent reduction below 2017 biogenic methane emissions by 2030.

Government Target 9

On track to meet New Zealand’s 2050 net zero climate change targets, with total net emissions of no more than 290 megatonnes from 2022 to 2025 and 305 megatonnes from 2026 to 2030.

International targets

2030 Target (2021-2030)

  • Our first Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC1) under the Paris Agreement is to reduce net GHG emissions to 50 per cent below gross 2005 levels by 2030. 
  • We will apply the modalities, procedures and guidelines of the enhanced transparency framework under the Paris Agreement for meeting this target. 

2020 Target (2013-2020)

  • Our 2020 target was to reduce GHG emissions to 5 per cent below 1990 levels over the period 1 January 2013 to 31 December 2020.  
  • This target was under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) while applying the Kyoto Protocol framework of rules.

New Zealand met this target through a combination of forestry activities and surplus credits from the first Kyoto period. New Zealand has submitted its True-up Report to the United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC), and all remaining surplus Kyoto-era units have now been cancelled from the Crown account. 

See About New Zealand's net position.

2012 Target (2008-2012)

In 2015 New Zealand met a previous target under the first Kyoto Protocol commitment period of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels between 2008 and 2012.

See Report upon expiration of the additional period for fulfilling commitments by New Zealand.

Reporting on progress towards our domestic targets

Domestic targets under the Climate Change Response Act

A domestic long-term greenhouse gas emissions reduction target is an important part of ensuring that New Zealand can make a smooth transition to a low-emissions future.

In 2019, the Climate Change Response (Zero Carbon) Amendment Act set into law domestic targets to:

  • reduce net emissions of all GHG's other than biogenic methane to zero by 2050
  • reduce emissions of biogenic methane 24 to 47 per cent below 2017 by 2050, including 10 per cent below 2017 biogenic methane emissions by 2030.

It updates our former domestic 2050 target, which was to reduce GHG emissions to 50 per cent below 1990 gross GHG levels by 2050.

The domestic targets under the Climate Change Response Act are point year targets. This means they are goals that we must meet in a specific year.

We will use emissions budgets as ‘stepping stones’ to guide us towards the 2050 domestic targets. The Government published the first three emissions budgets (2022–2025, 2026–2030, 2031–2035) in May 2022. This was accompanied by the publication of the first emissions reduction plan, which sets out policies and strategies for meeting the first emissions budget.

The Climate Change Commission is tasked with advising the Government on emissions budgets and monitoring its progress.

For more information see Emissions budgets and the emissions reduction plan.

Government Target 9

In 2024, Cabinet set nine government targets, to focus the public sector on achieving improved results in health, law and order, work, housing and the environment.

Target 9 is focused on making sure New Zealand is on track to meet its 2050 net zero climate change commitments, with total net emissions of no more than 290 megatonnes from 2022 to 2025 and 305 megatonnes from 2026 to 2030.

For more information, see Target 9 [DPMC]

Reporting on progress towards our international targets

2020 target

New Zealand has met this target.

Although New Zealand chose to take its 2020 target under the UNFCCC rather than the Kyoto Protocol, we decided to apply the Kyoto Protocol rules in our target accounting to ensure transparency and consistency.

We applied the target accounting approach which uses only a subset of all emissions and removals from the LULUCF sector that include forests planted post-1989, changes in emissions and removals in pre-1990 forests that result from changes in forest management practices, and deforestation.

We reported on the 2020 target in the net position report.

For more information on target accounting see the Emissions reporting and accounting text box below.

Target accounting guidelines

To show progress towards our international targets, we use the accounting guidelines developed and agreed by the UNFCCC for the relevant target. Each target period has its own set of rules/guidelines, and we follow these as appropriate for the target period.

These guidelines ensure our approach has credibility and integrity.

More detail can be found at Transparency [UNFCCC website].

Emissions reporting and accounting

Gross emissions

They include emissions from all sectors of the New Zealand economy, except for land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF). This information can be found in the National Inventory Report submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Net emissions 

They represents emissions and removals from all sectors of the New Zealand economy, including the LULUCF sector. This information can be found in the National Inventory Report submitted to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Net emissions provide information on what emissions and removals the atmosphere sees in any given year as the result of all human activities in New Zealand. However, we do not use all of the emissions and removals included in the net emissions reported in the annual GHG inventory to account towards our emission reduction targets.

Target accounting emissions

They include all our gross emissions, but only a subset of emissions and removals in the LULUCF sector.

Aotearoa has large areas of plantation forests, which create peaks and troughs in net emissions as they move through growth and harvest cycles. This can obscure underlying trends.

Target accounting does not count these business-as-usual ups and downs from forests that existed before 1990, or from those that have already reached their average long term carbon stocks. This makes it easier to understand our overall progress.

It also incentivises new climate action by avoiding relying on past action (such as forests planted before 1990) to meet our targets.

2030 target

Every country sets its own Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) under the Paris Agreement.

The main purpose of an NDC is to outline the contribution countries will make towards delivering on the goals of the Paris Agreement.

The Paris Agreement aims to:

  • keep the global average temperature well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C
  • strengthen the ability of countries to deal with the impacts of climate change
  • make sure that financial flows support the development of low-carbon and climate-resilient economies.

The Paris Agreement states that each country's successive NDC will represent a progression beyond the country's current NDC and reflect its highest possible ambition, reflecting its common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities, in the light of different national circumstances.

New Zealand’s first NDC (NDC1) was updated on 31 October 2021 and covers the period 2021-2030.

Our NDC1 target is economy-wide, covering all sectors and all greenhouse gases. In addition to containing detail on the scope and coverage of NZ’s 2030 target, the NDC1 is accompanied by information to facilitate clarity, transparency, and understanding that is requested from all countries under the Paris Agreement. 

Find out more on our Nationally Determined Contribution.

Responsibility targets

Our international targets are responsibility targets, meaning they can be met not only by reductions in our domestic net emissions, but also (if needed) by using international units (emissions reductions occurring offshore but paid for by New Zealand).

For the 2013-2020 target, we can also use carryover units from overachievement on our 2008-2012 target (first commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol). The Government has said it will not use any carryover units from the 2013-2020 period towards the 2021-2030 target under the Paris Agreement.

Our emissions data

We report our emissions and removals for two different purposes:

  • to compile a National Inventory Report of all of our domestic emissions and removals which we submit annually in April to the UNFCCC (see About New Zealand’s national greenhouse gas inventory)
  • to show progress towards our emissions reduction targets (see the Target accounting guidelines text box further up the page). Information on target accounting quantities as well as international unit holdings is included in our National Inventory Report.

Forestry

Forestry and other land-use emissions are included in New Zealand’s national greenhouse gas inventory under the land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF) category. While under the LULUCF category we report on the human-caused changes in carbon stored in all of our land area, most of the impact from LULUCF in New Zealand is due to forests.

Accounting for forestry is complex because:

  • trees can both remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere (as they grow) and then emit this to the atmosphere again (when/if they are cut down)
  • a choice has to be made about what vegetation to count as forest, since it is impractical to track the planting and removal of every single tree and shrub
  • there are different accounting rules for forests which existed before 1990 compared to those established in or after 1990. This distinction was created in the international accounting rules of the Kyoto Protocol (which apply to our 2020). We currently intend to use a modified version of the Kyoto Protocol for accounting for forestry towards our 2030 target (under the Paris Agreement). The detailed explanation is on the NDC Registry website.