Climate change – challenges and opportunities – a Pacific perspective

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Climate change – challenges and opportunities – a Pacific perspective

Address to the Paris Institute of Political Studies
16 April 2018
Paris
I feel incredibly humbled and proud to be here today.  I also feel hopeful. 
Humbled because I come from a small country thousands of miles away. We are self-deprecating people, quick to downplay our relative importance, but in spite of that, one that has never been afraid to use its voice. 
And that’s why I also feel proud. 
It may not seem obvious but in New Zealand the generations before me were shaped by the debate on Vietnam, the politics of sport and apartheid, and the nuclear-free movement. 
But my generation – my generation will be shaped by climate change.
And when thinking about how this generation will react and how we will collectively respond, I feel hopeful. 
I haven’t always felt that that way.
In 2008 I ran for Parliament for the first time. I was 28 years old. The seat I was contesting was in the rural Waikato, the place I grew up and one that centred around our agricultural community.
A public meeting was held weeks before the election in the heart of the seat. As one of only a few meetings it was well attended. I brought my grandmother and mother as moral support and took position with the other candidates at the front of the hall for speeches and a question session. 
Near the end of the eventing I was asked two especially controversial questions. One on environmental regulation, the other on climate change.
I answered them both matter-of-factly, but also shared my view around the need for decisive action on global warming. The response I received was somewhat unexpected – it started with a low murmur then an audible groan – and then a full-blown booing washed across the audience.
I have often joked since that time my grandmother was probably amongst those who booed that evening. In fact, I am almost certain of it, such was the environment of the day.
I entered Parliament that same year, but as an Opposition MP with my party losing that election after nine years in office. I distinctly remember sitting in the debating chamber and watching from the backbenches as legislation that brought in our emissions trading scheme was eroded, and as a committee of Parliament was established to question climate change. It felt to me like we were slowly but surely sliding backwards.
That was just 10 years ago.  There are many things about where we are now that I wouldn’t have predicted – me being Prime Minister and being very pregnant are two of them.
Another is that we have moved both our national, but also our global response to climate change to the place that we have.  There is reason for hope, and you have sat at the centre of why.
On 12 December 2015 it was late in New Zealand when the decision to limit temperature rises was beamed out beyond Paris. It was the cause of much celebration.
Seeing the Eiffel Tower lit up with messages supporting this work lifted people’s spirits around the world that night. It is truly historic that 196 countries could agree to take this action on climate change.
But I am sure every one of the nations present there that day had both their own domestic situations to consider, and their own motivations.
My party wasn’t the one that signed up to the Paris Agreement, but we have heartily supported it. And I can tell you what is driving us now as a coalition government to fulfil these obligations.  The first is where we are. 
We are a Pacific nation.
We have an extensive coastline and most of our major cities are on the coast.
One recent estimate from our Ministry for the Environment suggests that $19 billion of assets are at risk from sea level rise and flooding events – including five airports, 50 kilometres of rail, 2,000 kilometres of road and 40,000 homes.
Not only that but large portions of our economy are linked to our agricultural, horticultural and tourism businesses, all of which are particularly sensitive to extreme weather events.
Estimates for “the costs of weather events to New Zealand’s land transport network alone have increased in the last 10 years from $20 million a year to over $90 million annually.”
But weather events that have struck us in recent times have struck somewhere else first, and with devastating consequences.
I saw this for myself on a recent visit to the island nations of Samoa, Tonga, Niue and the Cook Islands. Two of these islands had recently endured a cyclone that had affected homes, schools, the electricity network, even the Parliament buildings were destroyed in Tonga.
But even before Cyclone Gita, if I was to pick one issue that has been a consistent theme in the Pacific in recent years, it has been climate change.
I know you too have a strong connection with the Pacific with your own territories.
Collectively these islands represent a tiny portion of global emissions. They play almost no role in creating the crisis we now face, but they are already the first to face its devastating impacts. 
In Tonga, I visited a primary school which had a few weeks earlier been ripped apart by the country’s worst storm in decades. The children were taking their classes in tents provided by UNICEF, surrounded by the battered buildings that used to be their classrooms.
The courage and resilience of the children left a mark on me. I was led by officials to see the state of the buildings post the cyclone only to find, after walking across a muddied field, that a child had followed us.
She was standing outside one of the buildings that had no roof or internal walls. Through a translator, she told me it was her classroom. She showed me
where she used to sit, and pointed to the posters and drawings that were tattered and shredded around the room.
It was work that her class had produced, and a shattering reminder of the extreme weather that now rages through these countries on a regular basis.
But it is not only storms that threaten Pacific nations. There is already salt water intrusion into fresh water supplies. Staple crops like taro have been devastated in some areas near the coast due to salt water intrusion. And more importantly, some aquifers are at risk of becoming salty.
On top of this, increasing ocean acidification is driven by carbon dioxide absorbed into the oceans, changing the chemistry of the seawater.
Warmer and more acidic oceans threaten to deprive communities of the tuna, reef fish and other the marine life which for some represent their main source of protein and their only reliable natural resource.
All of this could just point to a change in lifestyle or adaptation. Not in low-lying Kiribati and Tuvalu. There the oceans that have sustained local communities for thousands of years could soon rise up to swallow them forever.
Across the Pacific already eight low lying islands have been immersed by rising sea levels.  While globally the increase is around three millimetres a year, it is more like 12 millimetres per year in the western Pacific Ocean, an effect of the trade winds.
For the Pacific, climate change is not a hypothetical. It is real. And it is happening now.
It is no wonder then that there has been some debate around the issue of refugee visas. This discussion must first recognize the desire of people to stay. To remain on their land and in their homes, nurturing their culture.
We know and understand this. New Zealand does not simply sit in the Pacific. We are the Pacific too, and we are doing our best to stand with our family as they face these threats.
That’s why we are working in partnership with our Pacific neighbours on various aid and research projects. We are active in disaster relief but also building resilience. For example, New Zealand has a track record of supporting the installation of successful renewable energy supplies in Samoa, Tonga, the Cook Islands and Niue.
These help not only in reducing the world’s greenhouse gas emissions but they free up much needed money that would otherwise be spent on expensive diesel stocks to run generators.
We have joined the Pacific Islands Partnership on Ocean Acidification with the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme. The Pacific Islands Partnership is providing important research to better understand the long-term impacts of ocean acidification and the risks it presents for Pacific island nations’ fishing resources.
All of this tells you a bit about where we geographically. But it doesn’t tell you much about who we are, and that ingredient is just as in important in the way we view our global challenges.
There are things of course that you might already know – like the prevalence of certain animals in New Zealand.  That goes some way to explaining why agriculture is the single biggest contributor to New Zealand’s greenhouse gas emissions. 
You probably know we are small, and we make up 0.17 percent of global emissions.
You might also know that we are sports mad – especially rugby league and rugby union played by both men and women I should add. But none of that tells you about our culture or our character.
New Zealand has a proud record of independence, and world-leading reforms. In 1893, our women became the first in the world to win the right to vote. In the decades that followed, we were among the world’s first countries to introduce the key foundations of a modern welfare state – universal pensions, healthcare and education.
We were at the table when the United Nations was born, and we have always stood up for rules-based, multilateral action, whether in the battle against commercial whaling, ensuring fair and consistent trade rules, or standing up against nuclear weapons and testing.
But on the environment, our approach is probably best summed up by one Maori word – Kaitiakitanga. It means guardianship and I would like to think it underpins the motivation for taking the decisions we need to for the next generation.
But whether your motivation is a moral one, or an economic one, both stack up.
Around the world we see oil companies investing billions of dollars in clean energy. Companies are investing in charging stations for electric vehicles. Oil companies themselves are looking to the future and that includes renewables. We all know we are going to have to do things differently.
Norwegian-based Energy Company Statoil has developed its own climate road map in support of the Paris Climate Agreement. It includes by 2020 putting 25 percent of its research funding into developing new energy and energy efficiency solutions, and making decisions that support a low carbon future.
Oil giant Shell back in 1988 was writing reports predicting the impacts of climate change. They followed that up just this week, some 30 years later, saying they strongly support the Paris Agreement and the need for society to transition to a lower carbon future, while also extending the economic and social benefits of energy to everyone.
I completely agree.  So in New Zealand we have also started taking action.
We are a unique government, formed in October last year with the New Zealand Labour Party which I lead, our coalition partner, New Zealand First, and our confidence and supply partner, the Green Party.  We are united on many issues, and climate change is one of them.
Our climate change work is led by Green Party co-leader and our Minister for Climate Change, James Shaw. But collectively, we have all committed to the goal of becoming a net zero emission economy by 2050.
We have committed to making our electricity system 100 percent renewable by 2035.
Right now, we are preparing to consult with the New Zealand public on legislation to help us reach Zero Carbon that will become law next year.
The process will be inclusive and transparent, with input from Non-Government Organisations, businesses, communities and ordinary New Zealanders.
We are setting up an Independent Climate Commission of experts who will develop carbon budgets right through to 2050. That means they’ll set the amount of carbon we can afford to put into the atmosphere each year to get us to carbon neutrality, while ensuring we have enough energy available to run our economy and country.
As part of our regional development work and under the leadership of New Zealand First Minister Shane Jones, we have started a programme to plant one billion trees in the next 10 years. This will contribute to reducing CO2 emissions, both through C02 absorption and by reducing erosion.
To tackle the biggest contributor to our emissions profile, New Zealand has led a Global Research Alliance of 49 nations -including France – that is working to identify technologies that can reduce greenhouse gas emissions generated from agriculture.  It is our intention to help lead the world to low emission but highly productive agriculture and food production.
But this is not the only industry that is undergoing transformation. Astonishingly, governments currently spend more than US$400 billion each year on lowering the price of oil, gas and coal.
This is an enormous impediment to our efforts. Reducing these subsidies would help cut emissions. That’s why, at the Paris climate conference, we launched a communique on fossil fuel subsidy reform that was endorsed by
forty governments. France was one of the first to sign on, and has of course taken a leadership role on the role of oil and gas exploration generally.
In New Zealand our sense of responsibility to those whose livelihood is based around the production of fossil fuels, means we too have started planning for the future.
Several weeks ago we injected $20 million dollars into one of our oil and gas producing regions to explore a range of alternative economic development opportunities.
And because of the need to ensure a just transition around fossil fuels, this past week we also announced that we will no longer be granting any new offshore oil and gas exploration permits.
We are making this decision now because we cannot ignore the inevitable. No doubt it would have been politically easier to leave this call to someone else, but I refuse to stand by and watch as communities who have economies that rely on these industries without certainty and a plan for what the next 20 to 30 years will look like.
And this brings me to the final point. For all of the fear that surrounds this issue, I come back to that feeling I expressed at the start. And it is one of hope.
This is the chance to transform our respective economies, to face our collective future with knowledge. To grow the job opportunities and the health and well-being of our communities as we go. To put people and the need to preserve our environment for the next generation right at the centre.
You are already playing a leadership role.  And I would like to believe that as a small island nation embedded in the Pacific, we are too.
But our action alone will not be enough. Collectively we must call to action not only other governments, but civic society, business, and the public.
Wherever we are, whatever our motivations or our roles,  I hope each of us can look back on this period of time and say that we were on the right side of history.
That we were humbled in the wake of the science, that we were proud of what others before us made possible, and that we were hopeful in taking on this challenge, and most of all – that we were guardians for the next generation.
Thank you.
 
 
 
 
 

PM welcomes signal of support for European Union FTA from President Macron

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: PM welcomes signal of support for European Union FTA from President Macron

 
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she was greatly heartened by positive comments made today by President Macron of France for the proposed New Zealand European Free Trade Agreement  (FTA) following their bilateral in Paris today.
The two leaders met for the first time at an hour long meeting at Elysee Palace.
“One of my key objectives in visiting Paris was the European Union FTA,” said Jacinda Ardern.
“New Zealand has been seeking a mandate for some time. It represents $15 billion worth of trade so it’s hugely significant to us. We anticipated that given the vote was coming soon, that we needed to build support for that mandate as broadly as possible.”
The European Union is due to discuss the mandate for the New Zealand European Union FTA at a meeting later next month.
“We know there have been roadblocks in the past, but the sense I have come away with today is that our focus on building an agreement that models environmental standards and social outcomes is something France is very much in support of so I was very heartened by the response of President Macron today.”
The two leaders also discussed climate change, and the Pacific during their talks.
“New Zealand and France are closely aligned on many global issues. Within the EU France represents possibly the greatest interest in the Pacific so to be able to discuss some of the issues that exist in that region, particularly climate change, was very important to us.
“We are both committed to driving global action on climate change. We’re both committed to the security and prosperity of the Pacific region.”
The leaders agreed to cooperate on promoting climate-friendly agricultural technologies and processes.
In addition, the Prime Minister announced New Zealand’s intention to convene a high level meeting of the Towards Carbon Neutrality Coalition later this year to promote cooperation on the transition to low-carbon economies.
“I also invited President Macron to visit New Zealand and I very much look forward to hosting him should his schedule allow it,” said Jacinda Ardern.
While in Paris, the Prime Minister also met with French and New Zealand business representatives and delivered a speech outlining New Zealand’s vision for global action on climate change at the prestigious Paris Institute of Political Studies.
Jacinda Ardern will visit Germany on Tuesday 17 April and meet with Chancellor Angela Merkel, before travelling to London to participate in the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting from 18 April.

Progress on payment terms and e-invoicing

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Progress on payment terms and e-invoicing

Minister for Small Business Stuart Nash has congratulated Fonterra for its change of policy around payment terms for small and medium suppliers. The dairy co-operative has adopted a new policy where suppliers whose contracts are worth up to $300,000 per annum will be paid on the 20th of the following month.
“I expressed concerns earlier this year about the tough payment terms faced by some small and medium businesses, after reports some were waiting up to three months for payment. I also raised this directly with Fonterra. The company has now advised that from 1 August it will change its payment terms for smaller suppliers, who make up around 86 per cent of its vendors.  I commend Fonterra for the change, which will affect more than 4,000 suppliers.
“I do not generally seek to single out individual businesses but this positive change by Fonterra deserves to be acknowledged. I hope it serves as an incentive for other large organisations to ensure prompt payment of their suppliers and contractors.
“Payment terms can vary widely across the New Zealand economy. A recent media survey found payment terms of major corporates ranged from 14 days following the invoice to 60 days from the end of the month of the invoice.
“The government is also looking at what support it can create for a business climate where prompt payment of invoices is the norm rather than the exception. Timely payments are essential for good cash-flow, and for small businesses, cash-flow is commonly a number one concern.
“Businesses can also ensure they are paid in a timely way by making sure invoices are issued promptly and accurately. Incorrect invoices are a common problem. E-invoicing can make a big difference. It automates many processes and allows incorrect invoices to be instantly bounced back to alert a supplier to an error.
“The Prime Ministers of New Zealand and Australia agreed last month to work on common approaches to e-invoicing as part of the trans-Tasman Single Economic Market agenda. This will build on the mutual recognition of each country’s business identifiers and we anticipate making good progress on this initiative in the coming months,” Mr Nash says.

Mali Deployment for Defence Force Officer

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Mali Deployment for Defence Force Officer

Minister of Defence Ron Mark has today announced the deployment of an officer to an intelligence leadership role in the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilisation Mission in Mali (MINUSMA).  The deployment is for one year.
“This contribution to the United Nations mission in Mali will further our reputation as a credible contributor to peace and security efforts globally,” Mr Mark said.
“Although this deployment is of one person, it is into a leadership position, allowing a high-quality contribution to the intelligence area of peacekeeping in support of the protection of civilians, mission safety, and security.”
MINUSMA was established in 2013 following a security crisis in Mali and deteriorating humanitarian situation. The mission focuses on ensuring security, stabilisation, the protection of civilians, and the promotion of human rights.
The new role will be filled by Colonel Angela Fitzsimons.
“Colonel Fitzsimons will provide the specialised skills that the United Nations mission in Mali needs,” Mr Mark said.
“Her deployment will also boost the participation of women in peace operations, which is an important focus for both New Zealand and the United Nations.”

Widening of loan scheme offers alternative to loan sharks

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Widening of loan scheme offers alternative to loan sharks

 

 

 
Minister for Social Development Carmel Sepuloni has today announced the widening of a low-interest loan scheme for people who might otherwise fall victim to loan sharks.
 Today “by Pacific for Pacific “ health support service provider Vaka Tautua has joined the Ministry of Social Development’s Community Finance Initiative (CFI).
 “CFI is a partnership between the Ministry, BNZ, and Good Shepherd New Zealand that aims to help people in financial hardship to borrow money safely,” Ms Sepuloni said.
 “It provides affordable credit to individuals and whānau on low incomes in the form of two loan products – a no-interest loan to be repaid over 12 months and a low-interest loan to be re paid over 36 months.
 Three sub-contract providers deliver the service – the Salvation Army, Aviva and now Vaka Tautua.
 “Vaka Tautua is the third provider to join the CFI, providing low-interest loans in Auckland and Wellington – and is looking to extend this service to Christchurch,” said Ms Sepuloni.
 “Vaka Tautua will help more Pacific people who are single parents, older, disabled or seeking support for mental health issues get access to loans that will lift their quality of life. 
“Already the CFI has helped people on low incomes borrow $2 million, saving them more than $1 million in interest and fees they might have had to pay if they’d borrowed from predatory lenders.”
 
Editors notes:
 
People can apply for an affordable loan through CFI at 15 sites around New Zealand – see table below:
 

Community Finance Initiative sites

Provider

Whangarei

Salvation Army

Waitakere

Salvation Army

Henderson

Vaka Tautua

Mt Wellington

Salvation Army

Manukau

Salvation Army

Manukau

Vaka Tautua

Hamilton

Salvation Army

Tauranga

Salvation Army

Napier

Salvation Army

Palmerston North

Salvation Army

Porirua

Salvation Army

Porirua

Vaka Tautua

Wellington

Salvation Army

Christchurch

Aviva

Invercargill

Salvation Army

  
Media contact: Amanda Snow 021 282 0078
 
 

 

Latest greenhouse gas figures show a rise in emissions

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Latest greenhouse gas figures show a rise in emissions

12 April 2018

  MEDIA STATEMENT

The latest inventory of New Zealand’s greenhouse gas emissions shows that, as at 2016, there had been a 19.6 percent increase in emissions on 1990 levels, Climate Change Minister James Shaw has announced.
The inventory gives a picture of how much human-generated greenhouse gas is being emitted into and removed from our atmosphere – and shows there’s still much to be done to reduce emissions to 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.
Gross emissions in 2016 were 78.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide – 2.4 percent lower than 2015.
“Urgent action is needed, at a level not previously contemplated. 
“We all need to be focused on the transition to a net zero emissions economy,” says Mr Shaw.
“That is why the Government is introducing the Zero Carbon Bill, which will set in law a bold, new 2050 emissions reduction target for New Zealand and establish an independent Climate Change Commission.
“The Commission will recommend interim emissions reduction targets and provide advice. It will look at how we transition to 100% renewable electricity by 2035,” Minister Shaw says.
Methane from dairy cattle digestive systems and carbon dioxide from road transport were the biggest contributors to emissions increase. The agriculture and energy sectors contribute 49.2 per cent and 39.8 per cent respectively to New Zealand’s gross emissions.
Expansion in the dairy industry has largely led to the fertiliser and methane increases in the agricultural sector while more petrol and diesel vehicles on our roads are generating more emissions in the transport sector. 
“One of the things the Commission will look at is whether and how agriculture comes into the NZ Emissions Trading Scheme. We’ll continue to invest in research and technology that can reduce agricultural emissions while increasing productivity and profitability for farmers.
Other ways we are reducing emissions include the establishment of a Green Investment Fund which will direct investment towards low-emissions industries. We’ll move to electric vehicles – the Government’s own car fleet will be electric by 2025.”
The inventory shows the long term emission rise is also partly due to the increasing number of trees being cut down. 
“The Government’s committed to planting one billion trees over the next 10 years.”
“If we want to help lead the world towards meeting the goals of the Paris Agreement, we must create a moral mandate underpinned by decisive action at home to reduce our own emissions,” Mr Shaw says.
Key findings of the inventory:
New Zealand’s gross emissions have increased 19.6 per cent since 1990.
Methane from dairy cattle digestive systems and carbon dioxide from road transportation have contributed the most to this increase.
Between 2015 and 2016, gross emissions decreased by 2.4 per cent mainly from a decrease in the use of thermal fuels (coal and gas) and a decline in the number of sheep.
In 2016 the agriculture and energy sectors were the two largest contributors to New Zealand’s gross emissions, at 49.2 per cent and 39.8 per cent respectively.
The Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF)* sector offsets nearly one third of New Zealand’s gross emissions
Net emissions have increased by 54.2 per cent since 1990 because of more trees being cut down and an increase in gross emissions.
In 2016, approximately 5099 hectares of new forest was planted and 4945 hectares deforested.
About the Greenhouse Gas inventory
Inventory data is NZ’s official GHG estimate and is used for domestic and international reporting, and enables us to track progress towards targets. Data from the inventory will be useful when we consult with New Zealanders about the upcoming Zero Carbon Bill. 
*The LULUCF sector is where greenhouse gases from using the land (e.g. for forests, crops and pasture) are kept track of. This is separate from the livestock emissions reported in the agriculture sector. It covers our use of soil, trees, plants, biomass and timber and is the only sector where carbon dioxide is taken out of the atmosphere.
Further information
A snapshot of the Inventory
Reduce your emissions
 

Ambitious road safety targets needed to save lives

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Ambitious road safety targets needed to save lives

A 2015 evaluation of the previous government’s road safety strategy, released today, highlights the need for ambitious national road safety targets and political leadership in road safety, says Associate Transport Minister Julie Anne Genter.
The independent evaluation of the previous government’s Safer Journeys road safety strategy and action plans was released today, alongside a suite of documents, to inform the development of a new road safety strategy.
“This Government will take more ambitious action to keep people safe on the road,” says Ms Genter.
The independent evaluation states that the level of ambition in the previous government’s road safety strategy and action plan was ‘compromised by the absence of a specific set of national or regional targets [to reduce death and serious injury]’. It concluded that ‘the lack of a set of national targets for significant reductions in road fatalities and serious injuries is having an effect on the safety experienced by road users in New Zealand’.
“Without an actual target for reducing deaths and serious injuries you risk arriving at the absurd conclusion that your strategy is ‘on-track’ even when you’re not seeing any improvement.
“Ambitious targets are recommended by nearly every major international road safety body and will help focus policy and resources towards saving lives on our roads.
“While the evaluation identifies important progress made under the previous government, it also raised concerns that ‘there was not a strong political champion for road safety’ nor a ‘political mandate’ for senior executives to make change in ‘contentious road safety areas’. That’s something I intend to change,” said Ms Genter.
“This report makes a number of useful recommendations that will feed into the development of a new road safety strategy as well as this year’s road safety work programme.
“The report is now being made available to help inform discussion between stakeholders, government, and the wider public about what needs to be done to save lives on our roads,” said Ms Genter.

Māori tourism definite advantage for NZ

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Māori tourism definite advantage for NZ

There’s plenty of scope for Māori tourism in New Zealand to grow, says Māori Development Minister Nanaia Mahuta.
She has opened the World Indigenous Tourism Summit in Waitangi today and says a Māori dimension is crucial to this country’s hugely important tourism sector.
Tourism is our country’s biggest export industry, contributing 21 per cent of New Zealand’s foreign exchange earnings. Our tourism industry continues to grow, directly and indirectly employing 14.5 per cent of the workforce in Aotearoa.
In 2008, just 361,000 overseas tourists reported visiting a Māori tourism experience. Latest annual International Visitor Survey statistics show this number had grown significantly by 2017 with more than 50 per cent of 3.7 million overseas tourists engaging in a total of four million Māori tourism experiences. And the industry sees further great potential.
“While it is hard to ring-fence the economic value of Māori tourism we do know there are some indigenous rock-stars in the industry and plenty of scope for Māori tourism to grow,” said Nanaia Mahuta.
In a survey conducted by the Ministry of Māori Development in 2014, more than 100 Māori tourism operators indicated their desire to expand and to look to future markets so they can understand what they need to do to develop.
“Twenty years after the first Treaty of Waitangi settlements, many iwi now have a significant asset base to leverage off and many are choosing to invest in long-term sustainable tourism ventures.
“Alongside this has been a proliferation of small to medium Māori tourism enterprises – many of which start off small and are initiated by whānau or family groups,” said Nanaia Mahuta.
“A range of opportunities could be explored as we think about further development of a connected network of tourism products, experiences and events that could link to regional growth and employment.
“For example, I am keen see the development of heritage trails linking our famous battle sites and history across many of our regions.
“There are significant tourism opportunities for whānau and local communities to get into and the conference will help extract the valuable dimension that Māori culture can bring to the industry.”

Congratulations to NZ’s Commonwealth Games team

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Congratulations to NZ’s Commonwealth Games team

New Zealand’s Commonwealth Games team has done itself and New Zealand proud with their huge success on the Gold Coast, Sport and Recreation Minister Grant Robertson says. 
“This was our biggest ever Commonwealth Games team and they have delivered an amazing collective performance bringing home 15 Gold, 16 Silver and 15 Bronze medals,” Grant Robertson said.
“Those 46 medals make 2018 New Zealand’s most successful ever away Commonwealth Games, beating Glasgow (45) four years ago. That’s a fantastic achievement.
“These were a Games of diversity and inclusivity, with an equal amount of medal opportunities for men and women and with all our athletes able to compete alongside each other with emotion and pride. We have truly seen how the power of sport brings people together during these 11 days.
“It’s not just the NZ team that should hold their heads up high. New Zealanders up and down the country, our supporters on the Gold Coast and Kiwis around the world have given amazing support to our athletes. We have all been captivated and inspired by our team’s performances.
“I’d also like to congratulate the Gold Coast organisers for an extremely well-run Games. Roll on Birmingham 2022,” Grant Robertson said.

Ministers welcome another climate change breakthrough at International Maritime Organisation

Source: New Zealand Government

Headline: Ministers welcome another climate change breakthrough at International Maritime Organisation

Climate Change Minister James Shaw and Associate Transport Minister Julie Anne Genter today welcomed the successful adoption of a maritime greenhouse gas emissions reduction strategy at the United Nations International Maritime Organisation (IMO).
Yesterday the IMO agreed a strategy to reduce international shipping emissions by 50 per cent by 2050, compared to 2008 levels, and urgently phase out emissions from shipping this century.
“This is another important breakthrough in the global effort to preserve a safe and stable climate for future generations,” said Mr Shaw.
“There is now clear agreement that international shipping must urgently act to reduce emissions.
“The world is moving to take action on climate change and the New Zealand Government is proud to be part of that movement.
“I thank all those involved in the negotiations, especially the members of the High Ambition Coalition led by the Marshall Islands, who pushed for an effective outcome,” Mr Shaw said.
“The transport sector has an important role to play in the global climate change effort,” said Ms Genter.
“Developing clean, low-emission shipping will be vital for island nations like New Zealand and our Pacific neighbours.
“The IMO strategy is another significant example of what can be achieved when governments step up and countries work together,” Ms Genter said.