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'Shameful': Outrage as New Zealand scraps its standalone environment department

Legal changes will now see the environment managed under a "mega-ministry" covering housing, urban development, and transport.

A single tree known as the Wanaka Tree stands in a lake against snow-capped mountains.
The New Zealand government has said the changes will cut down on bureaucracy. Source: Getty / Nur Photo

In brief

  • New Zealand is set to scrap its Ministry for the Environment entirely.
  • The move has been widely condemned by both the NZ Greens and Labour parties.

New Zealand's Ministry for the Environment is set to be scrapped entirely under new legislation passed on Wednesday.

The bill to dismantle the agency was introduced by the centre-right National Party in February and incorporated a public submission as part of the procedure.

The Ministry for the Environment will now be folded into a new "mega-ministry" for cities, environment, regions, and transport, known as 'MCERT."

The changes have been condemned by the NZ Greens Party and the Labour Party, who both voted against the bill.

"The track record of this government is just bad for our environment," Labour MP Rachel Brooking, former Minister for Oceans, said. "We know their track record is to cut, cut, cut, and to make things into culture wars and it is deplorable."

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"This Government is cementing their place as the most anti-environment Government in New Zealand's history. This is a shameful end of an era," said Green Party environment spokesperson Lan Pham.

NZ Minister for the Environment Nicola Grigg, speaking in the country's parliament, argued that the legal change represents a purely functional one.

"The Environment Act of 1986, with the requirement to advise the minister for the environment on all of the aspects of environmental administration continues as it is today — it does not go away," she said.

"The act's requirement to resolve conflicts with environmental policies does not go away. The role of the secretary of the environment does not go away.

"This bill represents a change of form but not function."

New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon speaks in a dark room.
New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has overseen a raft of major anti-climate policies. Source: Getty / Phil Walter

Public submissions seeking comment from New Zealanders on the proposed changes were almost entirely against the idea. Legal consideration by the Environmental Select Committee was given to the bill for just 40 minutes.

"At a time when all our environmental outcomes across freshwater, air, biodiversity and oceans are going backwards, climate change is flooding communities week after week, costing billions of dollars, lives, and livelihoods, this Government's response is to dismantle the ministry responsible for environmental protection," Pham said.

"This is yet another callous blow to the environment, where this Government is demonstrating their only intention for the environment is to exploit it for a quick buck. New Zealanders deserve so much better," said Pham.

The National government has claimed that the issues to be managed by the new ministry are fundamentally intertwined but have been difficult to administer in a siloed system. They say the joining of the departments will improve efficiency.

Grigg argues that other countries like France, Türkiye, Switzerland, and Finland all have similarly combined departments to administer their environmental laws.

Since taking office in 2023, Christopher Luxon's coalition government has implemented a sweeping overhaul of the country's environmental policies, with strong support from its coalition partners ACT and NZ First.

A ban on new offshore oil and gas exploration was overturned, with approvals fast-tracked for investors. Funding for conservation programs, including Maori-led climate resiliance schemes, has been slashed. So too has support for the independent body tasked with ensuring the country reaches its legislated emissions targets.

Earlier this month, the government passed legal protections for major polluters to ensure they cannot be held accountable for climate-related natural disasters and rising sea levels.

The Ministry for the Environment is the only department set to be a part of the merger that was created by an act of parliament and therefore requires a legal amendment to disestablish it.

"The environment is deeply loved and deeply embraced by New Zealanders," Grigg said. "I acknowledge that for many, the disestablishment of the ministry may feel like the end of an era."


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4 min read

Published

By Jack Revell

Source: SBS News



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