|
|||||
| Media Release Latest
News | Archives “There are more options to meet New Zealand’s energy demand than Project Aqua provided,” according to Gerry Coates, Immediate Past-President of the Institution of Professional Engineers New Zealand (IPENZ). Mr Coates has led a team of engineers over the last year, looking at how sustainability could be more effectively implemented in New Zealand. “Sustainability seemed to have slipped off engineers’ - and the Nation’s - agenda,” he said. The outcome of the year’s work was presented to the IPENZ Convention last week in Christchurch, at which noted American sustainable protagonist Hunter Lovins was the keynote speaker, and supported the IPENZ initiative. Although Project Aqua, as a hydro scheme, was ostensibly a renewable energy project, it would have generated so much collateral damage that people did not accept that it was the best solution to a perceived coming energy shortage, he said. However there are a number of more sustainable ways to meet New Zealand’s energy demands. These include:
Coal is also not a long term answer if we are to meet our Kyoto obligations, although it may buy us time to investigate renewable alternatives. “The difficulty so far in lowering our demands for fossil fuels
shows that well-engineered implementation policies and strategies must
be developed without delay. Under-utilised cleaner technologies exist,
but what is needed is the resolve to use them. We do not want to look
back in ten years and find that the pressure for business as usual has
swamped our resolve for change. The government last year, under the Kyoto Protocol, signalled its commitment to a transition to renewable energy beyond 2012 – and to increasing it from the present 29 per cent to 31 per cent by 2012. Engineers have the skills and knowledge to help implement this. ENDS |
|||||
![]() |