Tim Groser11 May, 2009
- Minister of Trade and Associate Minister
for Climate Change Issues, Tim Groser, will
meet with members of the new US Administration
including US Trade Representative, Ron Kirk,
and the US Special Envoy for Climate Change,
Todd Stern, when he travels to Washington
from May 12-15.
"US leadership
is critical to moving the WTO Doha trade
negotiations forward. I was delighted by
USTR Kirk's recent statement of commitment
to concluding the round and look forward
to discussing specifics when we meet,"
Mr Groser said.
"I will also be
engaging senior US figures on their approach
to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) -
an innovative FTA proposal involving eight
countries, including the United States and
New Zealand. The TPP would be a platform
for a wider trade agreement in the Asia-Pacific
region. New Zealand is a strong proponent.
"I'm also looking
forward to engaging with my counterparts
on climate change issues. The US has a fundamentally
important role to play as the international
community grapples with how best to address
climate change.
"New Zealand welcomes
the strong leadership the new Administration
has shown. We look forward to working with
the US in this endeavour, as we do on so
many international issues."
Graeme Harrison, Chairman
of the International Business Forum is accompanying
Mr Groser on his programme in Washington.
Nick Smith8 May, 2009
The Next Phase of RMA
Reform
It’s great to be here addressing you as
Environment Minister at a time of considerable
reform in resource management and planning
policy.
The new Government is
embarking on an ambitious programme of reform
involving significant changes in the law;
changes in institutions; and changes in
policy. This morning I want to give the
overview of Government thinking on the rationale
behind our reforms, canvas some of the contentious
issues in the first phase of reforms, and
announce the programme for the next phase
of reform.
First, I want to acknowledge
the work of the Institute. Members of this
organisation make a real contribution to
the long-term wellbeing of our country.
New Zealand needs a well organised professional
planning body to engage in the sort of debate
we are having on resource management law
and I thank you for your input.
I want to give some
broader context to where Resource Management
law reform sits within the John Key Government’s
wider ambitions for New Zealand. Our agenda
is about raising living standards and ensuring
New Zealand has the sort of future where
bright, talented young people want to build
their future here.
The reason resource
law is so important to this is that we,
probably more than any other developed country,
are dependent on our natural resources for
our competitive advantage. It does not matter
whether it is dairy, tourism, meat, wine,
forestry or fish – the wise use of our natural
resources is at the core of our economic
success.
And our natural environment
equally goes to the core of our national
identity and our way of life. All New Zealanders
view our country’s natural heritage – parks,
beaches, rivers, lakes, and mountains –
as part of who we are. It is very fitting
then that I speak to you here today in Rotorua,
our country’s thermal wonderland, that is
recognised around the world for its spectacular
natural attractions.
So, my first message
to your conference is that the new Government
views good natural resource law as critically
important to lifting our nation’s game and
securing the sort of future we want for
our children.
This reform of our resource
laws is also underpinned by a well developed
set of Bluegreen principles that represent
a new generation of thinking on environmental
issues.
The Bluegreen philosophy
is based on five principles:
First, economic growth
and the environment can and must go hand
in hand,
Secondly, resource use must be based on
sustainability – we have no right to mine
new Zealand’s natural balance sheet for
short term gain,
Thirdly, good science is essential for environmental
decision making,
Fourthly, people respond best to change
when given incentives,
And finally, Kiwis have a unique birthright
to access our special places and this is
a heritage the new Government wants to enhance.
These underlying principles are driving
the Government’s broader environmental agenda.
The new Government has
been working with the Ministry for the Environment
to re-jig their work programme around our
priorities. Again I think it useful early
in this Government’s term to set out our
priority areas of work.
The first priority,
which should not surprise you, is the huge
global challenge of Climate Change.
The second priority
is fresh water management where we think
New Zealand faces important challenges and
we will be announcing new initiatives.
The third priority is
our biodiversity. It is a uniquely New Zealand
challenge and is the only area of the environment
by international standards where we face
significantly greater problems than many
countries.
The issues of ocean
management, implementation of the Waste
Minimisation Act and improving our air quality,
are the Government’s other environmental
priorities.
You will be aware that
the Environment Ministry has embarked on
a substantial restructuring. This follows
a year in which both the Minister and the
Chief Executive had to resign over the politicisation
of this important agency.
The problems for the
Ministry are that what has been a relatively
small policy agency, has been thrust into
the core of today’s challenges on issues
like Climate Change and has not been particularly
well equipped or organised to play this
role.
An important job for
the new Government has been refocusing the
Ministry and rebuilding morale so it has
the capacity to be a high quality, politically
neutral advisor on climate change, and broader
resource management issues.
The first phase of the
National Government’s resource management
reforms is well under way. Many of the issues
in that Bill were heavily canvassed by National
while in opposition and bring together a
number of process issues that have been
long debated in the discourse about the
RMA.
The reforms are primarily
about processes to simplify and streamline
the Act so we can achieve crisper decisions
in a more timely way.
It is important for
you to understand that National does not
want to change the overall economic-environmental
balance of the RMA. For that reason I have
not made changes to the purposes and principles
of the Act. Our focus is about getting process
improvements so Councils will be able to
deliver plans in a more timely way and to
process consents more efficiently.
We committed to introducing
the first phase of RMA reforms in the first
100 days of Government and passing this
into law in six months. We are on track
to do this.
Last year I established
the Technical Advisory Group to provide
an extra stream of advice separate from
that of government officials. I want to
pay tribute to the TAG which has contributed
well to our reform programme.
I must also acknowledge
the work of the Ministry for the Environment.
What I found in moving into government was
pent up frustration across government agencies
where people wanted to see resource management
reform but found no appetite for such changes
under the previous government. There has
been a huge amount of vigour and engagement
by government officials in bringing together
this reform programme. And there is a surprisingly
high level of consensus across government
agencies on the direction and detail of
the reforms.
The process for Phase
I is well advanced with the Resource Management
Simplifying and Streamlining Bill receiving
111 votes to 9 with only the Greens opposing
the Bill at its introduction.
The Local Government
and Environment Select Committee has been
inundated with 840 submissions and is currently
working around the clock to hear the 560
that wished to be heard in person. I must
emphasise that the Government takes the
Select Committee process very seriously
and there will be changes to the Bill in
the light of the thoughtful and constructive
submissions that have been made.
There are a few contentious
issues on which it is worth making comment.
The first of those is the strong push in
Phase I to tighten the process for the writing
and changing of Council plans. I cannot
overstate how important this is to the successful
functioning of the RMA. Plans are the lynchpin
to good resource management. In districts
where plans are well drafted we are getting
good environmental and economic outcomes;
where plans are poorly drafted and do not
reflect community issues they can impose
enormous costs on communities.
A fundamental problem
with the current Act is the time it takes
to write and change plans. I am advised
this is taking an average of seven years,
and is indefensible. The changes to the
process about when plans take effect, the
extent of cross submissions and constraining
appeals to the Environment Court are all
about changing the incentives so we might
get plans in a more timely way.
There is also an underlying
constitutional flavour to these reforms.
It is the view of Government that the primary
role of elected officials at Parliament
or Councils is to be making law and the
rules while individual consents and decisions
should be left to Courts and Commissioners.
That is also why the
Bill removes the Ministerial Veto associated
with restricted coastal activities. I know
this has caused angst among conservation
groups. But having been the Minister of
Conservation for three years in the 11000s,
I note there is ample opportunity for that
Minister to influence decision making in
the coastal environment.
They get to write the
National coastal policy statement, get to
approve everyone of the regional coastal
plans, get to appoint a member of the panel
deciding restricted coastal activities,
as well as the department being able to
be a direct submitter.
These five levers provide
ample opportunity for the Minister of Conservation
to have an influence without also requiring
a veto. The additional step of Ministerial
approval only adds time and cost to the
consent process.
There is considerable
debate and interest around the changes to
call-in, Boards of Inquiry and the new process
by which major applicants can apply directly
to the Environment Protection Authority
for consents. It is the view of Government
that more of the major nationally significant
consents need to be dealt with at a national
level, and that is why the Bill expands
the role of Boards of Inquiry. The strength
and advantage of these boards , is that
while chaired by an Environment Court judge,
specific technical expertise relevant to
the actual case can be utilised in the decision
making process . It is also the intent to
avoid the tedious process of controversial
consents going through a laborious first
consent process when everybody knows the
process will be repeated all over again
in the Environment Court.
An innovation in this
Bill is to combine both the local and national
considerations of a major project by a single
Board of Inquiry process that brings together
both national and local expertise.
I acknowledge, that
while the bulk of submissions have been
supportive of the Bill, there is considerable
debate over the provisions that remove the
non-complying activity class, that restrict
blanket urban tree protection, that limit
plan appeal rights and which change the
decision maker over designations. The Government
will be carefully considering these issues
over the next couple of months, as we finalise
the amendments to the Act.
Phase II Reforms
That brings us to Phase
II of the RMA reforms. While Phase I was
about simplifying and streamlining the RMA,
further reforms are needed to improve the
economic and environmental outcomes of the
RMA.
Greater Central Government
direction and closer alignment with other
legislation are the primary objectives of
the second phase of reform.
Phase II is a far more
complex reform process with 10 related work
streams. The first four work streams involve
greater central Government direction to
improve management of aquaculture, infrastructure,
urban design and water. There is also a
major job to develop the scope, functions
and structure of the proposed Environmental
Protection Authority.
A further four work
streams involve better alignment of the
Resource Management Act processes with those
of the Building, Conservation, Forests,
and Historic Places Acts. The final work
stream involves a number of generic RMA
process issues that were too complex to
include in Phase I of the reforms.
As you will appreciate
there is a great deal of work to be done
and due to the detailed and complex nature
of the second phase of the RMA reform programme,
work will progress at a more modest pace.
It will involve a number of advisory groups
and significant opportunities for public
consultation and engagement. There is also
a lot of detail to work through and it will
take time to get it right.
Specific reforms
Let me highlight the
specific reforms that will be undertaken.
First, the need to align the RMA and other
statutes. The RMA and the Building Act is
a prime example. The Building Act is concerned
with the quality of the building; the RMA
is focused outwards at the effects generated.
Because building consents
and resource consents are often needed for
a single project, the public are often confused
about the difference between the two Acts
and why two approvals may be needed. This
is not a new issue.
I have asked Ministry
for the Environment officials, to work with
officials from the Department of Building
and Housing and others, to investigate mechanisms
that will bring about greater coordination
and communication. It may be a single approval
process can be provided for the building
and management of effects of minor projects
– or it may be that separate approvals are
still required but better information and
sequencing can be provided. This work will
run in close coordination with work being
done to review the Building Act being undertaken
as part of the Regulatory Review.
The RMA and the Conservation
Act is another example of where we are seeing
interface issues. An activity that occurs
on conservation land can require resource
consent from the council under the RMA and
also a concession from the Department of
Conservation to operate under the Conservation
Act. While the purposes of the legislation
are distinct – some of the issues being
considered are the same.
Similar problems arise
with the Forest Act (and its requirement
for sustainable forest plans for the commercial
milling and export of indigenous timber)
and the RMA’s requirements for sustainable
management of natural resources (indigenous
flora).
In both cases there
may be scope for single processing timeframes
or memorandum of agreements where issues
are dealt with in common.
Other areas for improved
co-ordination are the RMA and the Historic
Places Act. Work has been done in the past
to review the Historic Places Act and I
have asked officials from the Ministry for
the Environment and the Ministry of Culture
and Heritage, Maori Affairs and Conservation
to scope out the interface issues between
the Historic Places Act and the Resource
Management Act. A key focus will be on aligning
processes with particular emphasis on the
current archaeological authority provisions
in the Historic Places Act.
My officials will work
collaboratively with the relevant government
agencies on investigating these issues.
I have asked for joint work programmes with
report backs in August this year. In some
cases agencies already have reviews underway
and I would expect these reviews to form
part of the scoping advice provided in August.
In some cases the issues
might not be significant and there may be
some simple administrative solutions to
reduce duplication and enable better alignment.
But again, this work is overdue and in the
current economic climate the government
is looking to tighten up processes so as
to avoid duplication and unnecessary cost.
Designing the Environmental
Protection Authority:
As you will no doubt
be aware, the Phase I legislation proposes
that an Environmental Protection Authority
(EPA) be set up within the Ministry for
the Environment.
The purpose of this
‘transitional’ Authority is to provide efficient
and timely administration of the consent
process for proposals of national significance,
such as major infrastructure or public work
projects. We are proposing the Authority
receive, accept and process applications
for nationally significant proposals.
The EPA will provide
me with advice on proposals that should
be called in, but final decisions on the
proposals that are called in will be made
independently of me or the EPA, i.e. via
a board of inquiry or by the Environment
Court.
As part of phase two,
I see opportunities for the EPA to expand
to include a wider range of environmental
functions which are best performed at the
national level. There are a range of other
potential functions that an Environmental
Protection Authority could undertake such
as management of Exclusive Economic Zone
legislation when that is progressed.
But I need to consider
a number of issues with my cabinet colleagues
before the final scope and design of the
EPA is decided. The extent to which powers
and functions need to be under direct Ministerial
control will be discussed and the experience
of Australia and other EPAs noted. My aim
is to have legislation in the House later
this year.
My aim is to have the
expanded EPA fully operational by 1 July
2010.
Aquaculture
The National-led government
has identified that reform of the aquaculture
regime is a high priority. The Ministry
for the Environment and the Ministry of
Fisheries are leading this policy work,
with the Department of Conservation and
Te Puni Kokiri and the Ministry of Economic
Development.
The reform is looking
at the existing aquaculture legislation
and identifying the changes needed to improve
the regulatory regime, including the allocation
of coastal space. This is an area that is
in need of urgent reform and the Government’s
intention here is to have an Aquaculture
Reform Bill ready for introduction in late
2009.
Infrastructure
Improving planning for
infrastructure is another key area of focus
for the Government. The Government’s programme
for economic recovery is dependent on an
ambitious programme of infrastructure investment
covering roading, public transport, broadband,
electricity grid upgrades, new renewable
generation and water infrastructure.
The RMA and the Public
Works Act are two key statutes governing
the building of infrastructure. There needs
to be greater alignment between the two
and the ability for faster approval for
critical infrastructure.
We also want a streamlined
process where landowners who have to relinquish
their land for public infrastructure are
more generously compensated. The Phase II
work will also need to tie into the more
general work being done by Treasury on infrastructure.
I have asked for a review
of how designations work under the RMA and
whether any changes are needed to more efficiently
facilitate infrastructure development without
compromising environmental outcomes.
Urban Design
Another area of focus
is urban design. I am not certain at this
stage what shape a National Policy Statement
on urban design should have and how this
will deliver better results. I am also watching
the development of the Auckland One City
approach before I get too far into setting
out the vision for urban design.
To make a success of
urban design planning and to build on the
Urban Design Protocol, I need to achieve
greater connections between government departments.
We need Building and Housing, Economic Development,
Transport, Local Government and Internal
Affairs who add the community factor to
be working in synchronisation on this work.
I would like more research
done to examine the viability of setting
city limits and land supply and affordability
issues. We need to see better coordination
of urban development projects.
Water
Finally is the big issue
of water. We need new direction in water
policy. The Labour Government’s water programme
of action, established in 2003 was rather
cruelly but not entirely inaccurately labelled
a programme of inaction. Nothing much flowed
from it after five years. The issues of
water quality and allocation are hugely
important and need addressing.
The Government is working
hard on a Water Strategy that will engage
key stakeholders – water users, recreational
users, iwi and environmentalists – to help
shape and deliver better options for water
management.
I am currently discussing
with my colleagues the scope of the work
that needs to take place. I am of the view
that setting the direction of water management
is one of the more complex issues in Phase
II and will take considerable time.
Further details on the
Government’s water strategy will be announced
in the next few months.
Conclusion
May I conclude by noting
that the RMA is now 18 years old.
It was a revolutionary
statute at that time, but it has not lived
up to its full promise.
For many years its failings
have been excused by blaming its implementation
and its practitioners.
It is time to accept
that the Act itself, while having many strengths,
needs a significant tune-up.
I look forward to an
ongoing dialogue with your profession on
this challenge.
My goal is that together
we might prove that it is possible for New
Zealand to be rich and prosperous as well
as clean and green.