Dec 20, 2024
Rewiring Aotearoa
Rewiring Aotearoa's Year in Review: what we've done and what we're doing next

As we conclude another rotation around that free nuclear fusion reactor in the sky, we’re looking back on a big year for Rewiring Aotearoa - and looking forward to New Zealand’s inevitable transition to electric machines powered by renewable energy.

In its first year, Rewiring Aotearoa has become a philanthropically funded ‘think / do tank’ that’s raised millions of dollars, grown to a team of over 15 energy and climate experts, policy advisors, data analysts and storytellers, pushed an appealing electrification narrative to New Zealanders that makes climate action tangible and achievable while saving them money, established our reputation for transparent data-led work in the halls of power, and formed key relationships across multiple sectors.

We’ve done the foundational research and identified the key areas of focus. We believe we have a once in a generation opportunity to create a massive positive impact on our country over the next two years and set New Zealand on a course to become the world’s most electric economy.

“We are now a mature, established, data-driven and fully independent NGO ready to leverage what we’ve learned to create real change and a true legacy by 2026 that Aotearoa New Zealand will be proud of,” says Rewiring Aotearoa CEO Mike Casey. “Thank you to every funder - large or small - for voting with your wallet and putting faith in us. Thank you to all those who have already started on their electrification journey, contributed their own story or put their hand up to spread the word and help others in their community electrify. And thank you to the decision makers who have taken the time to listen to our views  - and especially those who have changed their minds or pushed for change as a result of our work.”

Renewable energy is on the ascendancy here and around the world and the economic argument of electrification has now joined forces with the environmental argument. It’s a powerful combination. Our goal is to speed it up by growing awareness, fixing the system and convincing the Government to support rapid electrification at scale.

Below we’ve listed some of our highlights from the year, and our plans for the future.

Papers

Rewiring Aotearoa’s Electric Homes report, produced in collaboration with EECA, showed that New Zealand was one of the first countries to reach the ‘electrification tipping point’, where upgrading to electric machines and running them on renewable electricity from the grid, rooftop solar and batteries was cheaper than buying and fuelling fossil fuel machines, even with upfront costs and interest added. The paper was downloaded over 4,000 times and received a huge amount of media coverage.  

Investing in Tomorrow: the electrification opportunity, which was co-authored by Reserve Bank chief economist Paul Conway, proved that big savings for households add up to big savings for New Zealand. It showed that we can respond to climate change and save billions each year by avoiding expensive, imported fossil fuels and that electrification was an opportunity to invest, not a cost to bear. Rewiring America and Australia founder Saul Griffith presented the findings in Wellington and made a number of high-profile media appearances.

Our Symmetrical Export Tariffs paper showed that New Zealand homes, farms and businesses with solar and batteries could contribute much more to our energy system, lower the price of energy for all New Zealanders, and provide a more secure and resilient electricity system overall, but the playing field is not level. Importantly, we were not asking for rebates, just for the playing field to be levelled so the system can be more efficient.

Our Electric Farms paper looked at the huge cost-savings and emissions reductions from upgrading to electric machines and avoiding diesel, with the all-electric Forest Lodge Orchard used as a case study. This has led to a huge amount of interest from farmers around the country.


Our Delivered Cost of Energy paper was aimed at the decision makers and argued that the most important energy cost is not what a corporation pays to generate it, but what a consumer pays to buy it. Location is also crucial, so the modelling assumptions and calculations we use to make investment decisions need to change to reflect new technologies like rooftop solar and batteries and the value that they offer to customers and the system as a whole.

Policy

Our submission to the Commerce Commission’s Default Price Path Four resulted in a big win for customers and helped reduce the total allocation given to EDBs to spend on poles and wires by $1.2 billion. This is important as new technology now enables networks to significantly increase utilisation and therefore lower costs for consumers, but they have been slow to adopt it. The time has come to make our network thinking more innovative, not 20th century. We need to embrace the reality of modern technology (rooftop solar, batteries, flexibility) and use it to lower electricity bills for all New Zealanders and increase our system resilience.

Our advocacy work on symmetrical export tariffs (and other work to level the playing field so customers are paid fairly for exporting more generally) has put this issue at the top of the agenda of the Energy Competition Taskforce.

We have established a relationship of mutual respect with the Electricity Authority and worked hard to ensure the necessary changes are made to things like distribution pricing, utilisation targets and fair export pricing from retailers. These are needed because the future energy system of New Zealand will include a lot of homes, farms, and businesses that generate their own energy and contribute back to the system.

We have also pushed to cut red tape for households, businesses and farms wanting to install rooftop solar, not just big generators hoping to build big power plants, and asked to update our installation standards to keep pace with more advanced markets. The Government announced over 400 outdated standards for solar and EV chargers will be updated, while it is also looking to increase export limits through modernising voltage ranges. All of this will help bring costs down, speed up adoption and incentivise larger rooftop solar systems.  

The Government’s policy statement on electricity talked openly about the role of households as part of the solution. It also committed to a review on the electricity sector. And, as always, we were fighting for the customer and ensuring they are considered part of energy infrastructure, not an afterthought.

Our mates at Rewiring Australia had a similarly successful year of awareness raising and advocacy and we watched enviously as the world-leading Electrify 2515 pilot project was launched. This is something we hope to see in New Zealand soon.

People

Growing the grassroots electrification movement is a key pillar of our strategy and we've got community electrification groups starting up across the country — including Auckland, Wairarapa, Kāpiti and Wānaka — with many more on the way. Two major community-led electrification events - Electrify Queenstown and Electrify Wairarapa - and other smaller events showed what’s possible. And in Australia, there are now over 50 community groups focused on electrifying their area.

We’ve launched household electrification guides that explain how much homes can save with electric machines and how to make it happen, searchable FAQs and a household electrification calculator to help New Zealanders make their next purchasing decision electric.

We’ve produced four popular explainers as part of our ‘Watt Now?’ series - everything from the opportunity electrification offers to create a more circular economy, to why New Zealand isn’t quite as renewable as many think.  

We’ve grown our social followings, website traffic and newsletter subscribers significantly, profiled lots of legends on our channels in an effort to create an electrification community and collected a number of success stories to help inspire those considering electrifying.

Mike Casey has presented at over 100 events in the past year, welcomed thousands more people to Forest Lodge Orchard to see how the all-electric orchard works, and made over 100 media appearances. He was also recognised as the winner of the transformational leadership category at Sustainable Business Awards.

We established our board: experienced director and chair Rob Hewett; ex-Plunket CEO and ACC deputy CEO Amanda Malu; Wellington lawyer and energy expert Nikki Bloomfield; and co-CEO of Harbour Asset Management Chris Wilson.

What's next?

We’re very proud of our achievements in 2024, but we still need to go faster and bigger.

Here’s what we promise to do in 2025:

  • We’ll continue to increase awareness of the many benefits of electrification through national community activation and education campaigns.
  • We’ll implement pilot projects to demonstrate the opportunities for electrification, leading to wide-scale activation.
  • We’ll produce an electrification policy manifesto to further political decisions relating to energy policy, strategy, and the budget.
  • We’ll produce an electrification finance proposal that will allow all New Zealanders - no matter their income level - to make easier and better electrification decisions.
  • We’ll partner more with iwi to support and accelerate community electrification.
  • We’ll seek to partner with regional trusts, councils and other organisations to fund local teams who can provide individual electrification advice to homes and small businesses to drive uptake and help communities build their resilience.

Te Whakahiko te ao / Let’s electrify everything!  

Rewiring Aotearoa is an independent non-partisan non-profit. We represent everyday New Zealanders in the energy transition, working to build an abundant electrified future where every New Zealander saves money on their energy bills. We transparently dive into the data, call out nonsense where needed and advocate for our whānau and communities. Our independence means we rely on donations and your tautoko to keep our organisation running. Your support means everything, and we will always aim to make you proud of the work you are helping us accomplish. We are a registered New Zealand charity: CC61533.

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