Renewable gases and CCUS valuable part of gas transition

A report released today has found that as natural gas demand declines, carbon capture, utilisation, and storage (CCUS) and shifting to renewable gases will ensure reliable, affordable energy for all New Zealanders and help meet the country’s carbon reduction goals.

The report, 2035/2050 Vision for Gas, by Castalia shows that gas in all its forms has a key role delivering New Zealand’s transition to a net zero emissions economy. The independent report was jointly commissioned by Energy Resources Aotearoa, GasNZ, and the Major Gas Users Group Inc to inform the gas sector’s input into the Government’s Gas Transition Plan.

GasNZ Chief Executive, Janet Carson says the report outlines a strong environmental and economic case for renewable gases for energy resilience over generations.

“A resilient energy system must provide energy choices that suit different needs. Households and businesses across Aotearoa rely on gas for different reasons, they are also concerned about their carbon footprint. This report shows, that with careful planning with a long-term lens, we can have both.”

The report also highlights potential costs of the transition.

Energy Resources Aotearoa Chief Executive John Carnegie says an aggressive phase-out of gas could see Kiwi households and businesses face upwards of $7 billion in higher energy costs over the next 12 years. “With cost-of-living pressures continuing to bite, the last thing New Zealand needs is needlessly expensive energy.”

The Castalia report shows CCUS could reduce as many emissions as the Government forcing us to abandon gas altogether – but at much lower cost to New Zealand businesses and consumers.

Major Gas Users’ Group Inc spokesperson Len Houwers says that a future without gas would lead to the deindustrialisation of major parts of the New Zealand economy.

“This report shows that there is a better way to achieve the same result. The emissions trading scheme will progressively drive down emissions and enabling exploration of opportunities like CCUS and green gas blending will allow us to chart a lower cost pathway to net zero without the need for direct intervention.”

Summary of the report

Full report

Media release

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