Our Climate Declaration

Our Climate Declaration

WEBINAR: Fuel, Physics, and What Comes Next

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Our Climate Declaration
Apr 17, 2026

With Nathan Surendran

Date: 29 April
Time: 7:30 PM
Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86393820926?pwd=XlsEfAQn8FEWePltJZ7722pWTZcnUK.1
Meeting ID: 863 9382 0926
Passcode: 070776

Nathan is an energy engineer and Chair of the Wise Response Society who has been writing extensively about the current energy crisis and its implications (see below)

Portrait photo of Nathan Surendran

NZ will probably hit its climate targets. Not because of good policy, but because the economy is being forced into contraction by an energy crisis that mainstream institutions didn’t see coming - or chose not to. Nathan Surendran connects the immediate fuel emergency to the biophysical economics that conventional policy ignores: declining energy returns, thermodynamic constraints on transition, and a coming wave of insolvency and default that may cause more damage than fuel shortages themselves. He presents practical tools for community resilience, from mutual aid frameworks to fair rationing mechanisms, and argues that the response must start at the community level because government is not going to lead it.

OUTLINE: Be Prepared for a Lively Discussion

1. The good news on climate (that nobody wants to hear)

NZ is likely to meet its climate targets. Not because of policy. Because the economy is falling off a cliff. Energy price-driven demand destruction is cutting emissions faster than any government programme. Diesel above $4/litre, petrol not far behind. Businesses are closing, freight is contracting, discretionary travel has collapsed. When you can’t afford to burn fuel, you don’t burn fuel. Emissions fall. This is the climate trajectory nobody modelled - involuntary degrowth driven by energy supply disruption and price shock.

2. Why this is happening - the energy supply picture

The Strait of Hormuz closure and the wider Middle East conflict have taken out a significant share of global crude and LNG supply. NZ imports 100% of its refined fuel. 81% comes from refineries processing Middle Eastern crude. We have roughly 18 days of diesel physically onshore. The government’s fuel plan has no volumetric allocations. Force Majeure declarations have cascaded across every link in our supply chain. I’ve been tracking this in detail:
- “The Limits to the Energy Transition” (white paper):

Energy and Resilience
The Limits to the Energy Transition: What Physics Means for New Zealand’s Economy - Whitepaper
As I write this, the Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed to commercial shipping. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards are broadcasting warnings to all vessels. Hapag-Lloyd has halted traffic. Maersk is rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope. Maritime insurers are withdrawing cover…
Read more
3 months ago · 75 likes · 13 comments · Nathan Surendran

- “Hoping the Ship Arrives Isn’t a Strategy”:

Energy and Resilience
Hoping the Ship Arrives Isn’t a Strategy
Nathan Surendran, 12 April 2026…
Read more
a month ago · 100 likes · 18 comments · Nathan Surendran

- “Every Country in Our Supply Chain Has Declared an Emergency”:

Energy and Resilience
Every Country in Our Supply Chain Has Declared an Emergency. NZ just launched an Ad Campaign.
Every Country in Our Supply Chain Has Declared an Emergency. NZ just launched an Ad Campaign…
Read more
2 months ago · 340 likes · 93 comments · Nathan Surendran

3. The default tsunami - the crisis before the shortage

Everyone is watching fuel gauges. But the more immediate shock may be financial. NZ insolvencies were at a 15-year high before Hormuz. Mortgage arrears at an 8-year peak. IRD tax debt past $9 billion. Household debt at 165-170% of disposable income. There was no buffer. When diesel costs flow through to freight, food, fertiliser, and farm input costs, the wave of business failures and mortgage defaults will hit before physical fuel shortages do. I’m publishing a piece on this shortly - “The Default Tsunami” - arguing we’re watching the wrong metric.

4. The deeper structure - biophysical economics

This isn’t a one-off geopolitical shock. It’s the predictable consequence of building a civilisation on a depleting energy resource. EROI decline means we spend more energy to get energy. The economy is an energy system using money, not a financial system using energy. The “seamless transition” narrative assumes the global supply chains, fossil fuel inputs, and critical minerals needed for transition will keep flowing. They are not flowing. Drawing on Hall, Keen, Smil, Hagens, Garrett, Delannoy.
- White paper covers this in depth:

Energy and Resilience
The Limits to the Energy Transition: What Physics Means for New Zealand’s Economy - Whitepaper
As I write this, the Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed to commercial shipping. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards are broadcasting warnings to all vessels. Hapag-Lloyd has halted traffic. Maersk is rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope. Maritime insurers are withdrawing cover…
Read more
3 months ago · 75 likes · 13 comments · Nathan Surendran

5. What we can do - community resilience and policy

- Wise Response open letter: quantified essential use fuel allocation plan (with Mike Hodgkinson, Laloli Research)
- Tradable Energy Quotas (TEQs) as fair rationing:

Wise Response
Fair Shares: Why Tradable Energy Quotas Are New Zealand’s Best Option for the Crisis Ahead
Wise Response Society Inc…
Read more
2 months ago · 7 likes · 8 comments · Nathan Surendran

- “When the Trucks Stop” mutual aid guide

Wise Response
What can I do in response to the Fuel Supply Crisis in Aotearoa New Zealand?
At the time of writing, New Zealand has roughly 20 to 27 days of physical onshore fuel stocks. We import 100% of our refined fuel. The Strait of Hormuz crisis has already triggered Force Majeure declarations from Gulf and Asian suppliers, and the late March escalation has destroyed refining infrastructure that will take years to rebuild, if it is rebuil…
Read more
2 months ago · 88 likes · 13 comments · Nathan Surendran

- “No Fuel, Still Fed” regional food security framework

Energy and Resilience
No Fuel, Still Fed
“Collapse is living in the same conditions as the people who grow your coffee.” Vinay Gupta…
Read more
a month ago · 59 likes · 17 comments · Nathan Surendran

- Local action: council deputations, community preparedness networks
- Demand reduction, negawatts, fuel-free pathways


This webinar was organized by Our Climate Declaration

Our Climate Declaration
Our Climate Declaration aims for a just and sustainable post-carbon Aotearoa New Zealand.

Co-sponsored by:

Degrowth Aotearoa New Zealand https://www.degrowth.nz/

The Wise Response Society https://wiseresponse.org.nz/

Engineers for Social Responsibility https://esr.org.nz/

The Nelson Tasman Climate Forum https://www.nelsontasmanclimateforum.nz/

Discussion about this post

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D Neil Jones's avatar
D Neil Jones
Apr 27Edited

ENERGY DESCENT ACTION PLANS (EDAP):

Nate Hagens:

https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/frankly-original/132-what-to-do-as-the-world-falls-apart

Kinsale, Ireland:

https://web.archive.org/web/20071214144850/https://www.transitionculture.org/wp-content/uploads/kinsaleenergydescentactionplan.pdf

Rob Hopkins:

https://www.resilience.org/stories/2005-09-27/designing-energy-descent-pathways-one-communitys-attempt-designing-prosperous-way/

Rob Hopkins (Energy Descent Pathways):

https://www.transitionculture.org/wp-content/uploads/msc-dissertation-publishable-copy.pdf

David Holmgren:

https://holmgren.com.au/writing/energy-descent-action-plan/

Ted Trainer:

https://www.thesimplerway.info/

Totnes (UK):

https://web.archive.org/web/20130426065627/http://totnesedap.org.uk/book/

Lean Logic:

https://leanlogic.online/glossary/energy-descent-action-plan/

Transition Liverpool:

https://transitionliverpool.org/what-is-an-energy-descent-action-plan/

EDAP Primer:

https://web.archive.org/web/20120307213747/http://www.eatthesuburbs.org/edap-primer/

Sunshine Coast (Australia) EDAP (Draft):

http://gofile.me/6M09o/Fv1pHXGGN

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kadir's avatar
kadir
Apr 20

go Nuclear for it's energy needs. if NZ was depending 100% on ME for fuel, it was high time they thought about nuclear energy. NZ should waste no time. & yes it's Green, more than any be other non renewables!!

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