Power users will pay the price of Government's rushed ETS legislation

CURMUDGEON - BY KARL DU FRESNE
Last updated 07:57 16/03/2010

Relevant offers

Comment

NZ struggling to scratch up capital market Editorial: Let sex case justice be done Mallard case raises questions of behaviour Editorial: Abuse intervention to test government Holmes' attack on Waitangi Day unjustified High cost of living mars return to NZ Outcomes matter, not state service tinkering Memo to McCully: be more careful in future Editorial: Speaker needs to get Mojo working Money-fuelled madness no way to live

OPINION: Now that the heat has gone out of the global warming scare, if you'll pardon the pun, how is our Government going to justify its ill- conceived emissions trading scheme?

When the ETS kicks in later this year and people start squealing about higher power and fuel prices, how will National explain the fact that New Zealand, alone in the world, has chosen this quixotic stance?

At the time National rushed through its ETS legislation late last year, the global warming alarmists were in full cry and the Government was eager to make a good impression ahead of the Copenhagen climate conference.

We all know what's happened since then. Copenhagen was a fiasco and the discredited climate change alarmists are in undignified retreat.

The credibility of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (which National relied on to justify its ETS) has been shredded and the really serious polluters, such as China and India, are carrying on unrepentantly.

In Australia, the United States and the other developed economies with which New Zealand trades, policies to counter global warming are stalled.

Meanwhile, here's good old Enzed going it alone with an emissions trading scheme that is going to cost a huge amount - some estimates are as high as $1 billion a year - and won't make a blind bit of difference to global warming, assuming such a phenomenon exists.

When people see their already extortionate power bills rising later this year to pay for the ETS, Prime Minister John Key will have to do an awful lot of smiling to convince people it was a good idea.

* * *

I generally like Americans - heck, one of my children is married to one - but I wish something could be done to check the spread of some of their more irritating expressions.

My electricity company, which I'm disposed not to like anyway, insists on sending me email newsletters exhorting me to "Listen Up!". Nothing is more guaranteed to ensure I hit the delete key.

Whatever offers Genesis may be dangling in front of me, I'm not remotely interested in hearing from a company that addresses me in the language of skateboarders and US Army drill instructors.

Facebook, meanwhile, sends me emails that start, "Hey, Karl", as if assuming I'm one of those people who chew gum and wear a baseball cap back to front.

Addressing me with the words "Hey, Karl" does nothing to enhance my enthusiasm for Facebook, which I have come to regard as the digital equivalent of a dog turd that sticks to your shoe and defies all attempts to shake it loose.

Ad Feedback

* * *

Belated congratulations are due to the Dunedin District Court judge who refused to continue a suppression order on the name of former Green MP Sue Bradford's son, who was acquitted on charges of sexual violation.

Judge Paul Kellar acknowledged it was unfortunate that the stigma associated with serious allegations was rarely erased by acquittal, but said he had to weigh up whether the harm caused by publication of the accused's name outweighed the public interest in open justice and the freedom to receive information (as set out in our Bill of Rights Act). That Bradford's mother was a high-profile person was not a determining factor in his decision, Judge Kellar said. "The law should apply equally to all."

These are simple principles that many judges seem to have difficulty grasping, judging by the suppression orders granted recently to rugby players, entertainers, businessmen and a former MP.

When I was a court reporter decades ago, name suppression was rarely requested and even more rarely granted. Hard-bitten magistrates took a lot of persuading that offenders' names should be kept secret because their grandma was sick, or they might jeopardise their career prospects, or any other of the plethora of excuses that were commonly advanced.

"Tough luck" was the usual response from the bench.

If name suppression was then the exception rather than the rule, these days it often seems the reverse is true - especially on defendants' first appearances, when suppression now seems almost routine. One of the most dangerous consequences of soft suppression rulings, especially those that create an impression of protection for the privileged, is that they undermine public confidence in the courts - a risk you'd expect judges, of all people, to be acutely aware of.

* * *

I welcome approaches from people who might wish to join me in forming the Happy Philistines' Society Inc, for people who have no interest whatsoever in attending anything to do with the New Zealand International Arts Festival now on in Wellington.

Being of a curious disposition, I peruse all the articles and reviews about festival events - I can hardly avoid it, since they take up a big chunk of my Dominion Post - and I'm satisfied that I haven't missed a thing.

Better still, I have saved myself a heap of money that I can spend on worthwhile purchases like Barry Manilow CDs.

- © Fairfax NZ News

6 comments
Post a comment
antonysh   #6   05:14 pm Mar 16 2010

This column is mistitled. It should be called "Knuckledragger".

Ian McKinnon   #5   02:54 pm Mar 16 2010

National's best bet re ETS is to repeal the whole thing immediately. It is not as bad as Labour's commitment, but is still a rort.

zocor   #4   09:39 am Mar 16 2010

What a refreshing change, a media commententor that is not in the pocket of rabid left alarmists. I buy 'News'-papers, for critical informantion on bothsides of the debate, but i'm not paying to be brainwashed to accept a particular view. I am only one among thousands that "Got Wind Of" the hacked emails from the East Anglia Center for Climate Research, who scanned the NZ media for the days following, for followup information, but nothing. The people I spoke with were as bewildered as I, as to why, or even how it could be that almost our entire media was in censorship mode over the issue. I even called Paul Holmes on radio to discuss the emails, and was summarily dismissed. His comment was "I don't have time to follow everything that may arise on the subject, but do I believe in Man-made Global Warming" Even today, there are scientists colluding to legitamise, this false theory, but to what end, that is the real question.

rs   #3   09:10 am Mar 16 2010

nice one, Karl, that was a beauty, you're in good form today.

Ken Crafar   #2   08:52 am Mar 16 2010

Acquittal? Ahh... let me see that means 'Not Guilty' doesn't it? No fairness here!With publication lets see compensation for a wrongful accusation! That would be justice and might ensure better use of Court time 'a la taxpayer'. Now there is only one question. Who should pay the money? Police,Court,Government or Accuser? You be the judge.The answer is not Pontius Pilate Handwash, so popular these days. Quixote

Observer   #1   08:12 am Mar 16 2010

Du Fresne's comments on climate "alarmism" are absolute rubbish - like those of his ignorant counterpart George in the Herald.

Try putting your cents' worth in at this site Mr Du Fresne (as the Herald guy has done): http://hot-topic.co.nz/

Post comment


Required

Required. Will not be published.
Registration is not required to post a comment but if you , you will not have to enter your details each time you comment. Registered members also have access to extra features. Create an account now.


Maximum of 1750 characters (about 300 words)

I have read and accepted the terms and conditions
These comments are moderated. Your comment, if approved, may not appear immediately. Please direct any queries about comment moderation to the Opinion Editor at blogs@stuff.co.nz
Special offers
Opinion poll

Would you go to one of Jamie Oliver's restaurants?

Definitely

Maybe

No way

Vote Result

Related story: Jamie Oliver to open restaurant in Wellington

Featured Promotions

Sponsored Content