# Reporting on Climate Emergency Response Fund (CERF), Quarter 4, 2023-24 Prepared/created by: The Treasury Date published/issued: 6 November 2024 ## About this Data Release ### Description: In 2021, the Government announced the establishment of a new ‘Climate Emergency Response Fund’ (CERF). The fund was set up with an initial $4.5 billion ‘down payment’ for Aotearoa New Zealand’s climate spending, proportional to the proceeds of the Emissions Trading Scheme. The CERF is an enduring, multi-year fund which is designed to address the long-term nature of many of the challenges presented by climate change. The CERF is intended to provide a dedicated funding source for public investment on climate-related initiatives distinct from the main Budget allowances. An initiative is eligible for funding from the CERF if it: - is included in an Emissions Reduction Plan, or directly supports emissions reductions (domestically or internationally), - is included in a National Adaptation Plan, or directly reduces vulnerability or exposure to the impacts of climate change, - supports a te ao Māori approach to the climate response, - addresses the distributional impacts of climate change or the climate policy response, or - supports the development of any initiatives meeting these criteria in the future. CERF Monitoring and Reporting Any agency which receives CERF funding is required to provide regular monitoring and reporting updates on its CERF initiatives to Treasury for publication. Financial reporting is required on a quarterly basis and non-financial information is required annually. The information is focused on initiative level insights. This approach is different to the Crown’s existing monitoring and reporting processes, which are focused on appropriation-level data. This shift in granularity in CERF reporting has been done to provide an additional layer of scrutiny for special purpose funding provided for climate objectives. For each initiative these results show the actual spending for the year to date, alongside forecasts for the next three quarters. Spending is tracked against the baseline appropriation for each initiative and any material changes to that baseline are also indicated. The data in this release comes from data provided by agencies. Users of this data should note that it is subject to audit. The Government has decided to cease CERF reporting, barring a close-out report at the end of the 2023/24 financial year, which is now released. Copyright: © Crown Copyright Rights (license for re-use): Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) Rights explanation: This copyright work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence. In essence, you are free to copy, distribute and adapt the work, as long as you attribute the work to the Crown (The Treasury) and abide by the other licence terms. Please note that no departmental or governmental emblem, logo or Coat of Arms may be used in any way which infringes any provision of the Flags, Emblems, and Names Protection Act 1981 or would infringe such provision if the relevant use occurred within New Zealand. Attribution to the Crown (The Treasury) should be in written form and not by reproduction of any such emblem, logo or Coat of Arms. Contact for feedback: The Treasury welcomes feedback and suggestions for improvement of this dataset. Email performance.info@treasury.govt.nz ### Related files: Four files for this Report. - MS Excel Workbook - Includes raw data, data dictionary, introduction notes. reporting-cerf.xlsx - Introduction Notes - Text format - reporting-cerf-notes.txt - Data Dictionary sheet - CSV format: reporting-cerf-data-dictionary.csv - Raw Data sheet - CSV format: reporting-cerf.csv ### Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ### NZGOAL (New Zealand Government Open Access and Licensing) framework https://www.data.govt.nz/manage-data/policies/nzgoal/