New Zealand is in the midst of an energy transition — moving to a fully renewable electricity system, electrifying transport and industry, and dramatically reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Grant funding supports this transition at multiple levels — from government subsidies for household insulation to research into next-generation energy storage. Understanding this landscape matters for businesses, communities, researchers, and funders involved in New Zealand's decarbonisation.
Electricity generation
New Zealand generates approximately 80-85% of electricity from renewable sources (hydro, geothermal, wind) — making it one of the highest shares globally. The goal is to reach 100% renewable electricity by 2035.
Decarbonisation challenge
Despite clean electricity, significant emissions come from:
- Process heat (industrial heat using gas and coal)
- Transport (internal combustion vehicles)
- Agriculture (methane from livestock, nitrous oxide from soils)
- Buildings (heating and hot water)
Electrifying these sectors is the central decarbonisation challenge.
Climate Change Commission
The Climate Change Commission provides independent advice on New Zealand's emissions reduction pathway — informing government investment priorities.
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (EECA)
EECA is the primary government agency for energy efficiency and conservation:
GIDI Fund (Government Investment in Decarbonising Industry)
The GIDI Fund co-invests in industrial decarbonisation:
- Replacing fossil fuels with clean alternatives in manufacturing and industrial processes
- Electrification of industrial heat
- Fuel switching (coal to biomass, gas to electricity)
- Large amounts — typically $500,000 to several million per project
Warmer Kiwi Homes
Warmer Kiwi Homes provides grants for insulation and heating in low-income homes:
- Ceiling and underfloor insulation (fully subsidised for eligible homes)
- Efficient heating (heat pumps, wood burners)
- Available to Community Services Card holders and community service organisations
Energy Efficient Products
Standards and labelling requirements that drive efficiency across appliances.
Low Emission Vehicles
The Clean Car Standard and Clean Car Discount (now evolving) supported EV uptake. Specific grants for fleet electrification have operated through EECA.
Waka Kotahi transport decarbonisation
Land transport investment in cycling, walking, and public transport — reducing transport emissions through mode shift.
Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE)
MBIE funds energy research and innovation:
- Te Ara Paerangi (Future Pathways) science investment
- Energy storage research
- Green hydrogen research
- Building energy efficiency research
Climate philanthropy
International climate philanthropy has reached New Zealand:
- Bloomberg Philanthropies
- Packard Foundation (clean energy focus)
- New Venture Fund (climate grants)
New Zealand foundations
New Zealand foundations increasingly include clean energy and decarbonisation in their portfolios:
- Tindall Foundation (climate and environment)
- Foundation North (climate resilience)
- Community foundations (local solar and energy efficiency)
Community energy funds
Some community foundations fund community solar and energy efficiency:
- Community energy trusts and co-operatives
- Marae solar installations
- Community facility energy upgrades
Community solar
Community solar installations — enabling communities to collectively own renewable energy:
- Marae and community hall solar
- Low-income household solar access
- Community energy co-operatives
Building energy efficiency
Grants for energy efficiency upgrades to community buildings and social housing:
- Insulation (wall, ceiling, underfloor)
- Heat pump installation
- LED lighting
- Hot water cylinder replacement
Transport electrification
Industrial decarbonisation
Māori energy initiatives
Marae solar and energy efficiency — significant interest in marae as community energy hubs:
- Solar with battery storage for marae resilience
- Energy efficiency upgrades across marae
- Māori economy clean energy development
Research and innovation
EECA programmes
EECA programmes have specific eligibility criteria and application processes for each programme. Key requirements:
- Energy audits or assessments to document baseline
- Economic case for clean energy investment
- Co-investment from applicant
- Technical specifications meeting EECA requirements
GIDI Fund
GIDI Fund applications require:
- Detailed technical project specifications
- Energy and emissions baseline data
- Cost-benefit analysis
- Contractor specifications
Community energy
Community energy grants typically require:
- Community ownership or governance structure
- Community benefit case (who benefits, how much)
- Technical assessment of the proposed installation
- Co-funding from community fundraising or loans
Māori energy
Marae and Māori economy energy grants often have simplified pathways through TPK or community foundations — lower barriers than EECA commercial programmes.
MBIE Endeavour and Smart Ideas
Research grants through MBIE for clean energy innovation:
- University and research institute partnerships
- Technology development and demonstration
- Translation from research to commercial application
New Zealand Battery Project
Research and investment into large-scale pumped hydro storage (Lake Onslow scheme).
Tahua's grants management platform supports clean energy funders and organisations — with project milestone tracking, energy outcome measurement, emissions reduction reporting, and the tools that help clean energy programmes demonstrate impact across grant-funded and contracted renewable energy investments.