Clean Power Payment the smartest way forward to reduce emissions and bills

Source: Green Party

Green Party co leader James Shaw visited a home in Auckland today that has been upgraded with a wide range of energy improvements, similar to those that would be supported through the Green Party’s Clean Power Payment.

“Our Clean Power Payment will help people cover the cost of upgrading their home to run on clean energy, and save them money each month on their power bills,” says Green Party co leader James Shaw.

“The Green Party will install solar on the roofs of 30,000 Kāinga Ora homes over the next three years, instead of just 1,000 per year as Labour has proposed. We would also roll out the Clean Power Payment to 60,000 homes a year, as opposed to only retrofitting 5000 homes per year.

“Kāinga Ora rooftops provide a huge opportunity to create free electricity from the sun and reduce power bills for thousands of families. Only the Green Party will significantly increase the number of Kāinga Ora homes that will benefit from cheap, renewable energy.

“Through a mix of grants and interest-free loans, the Clean Power Payment will help people cover the upfront cost of things like better insulation; replacing fossil-fuel appliances, like gas heaters, with clean alternatives, like heat pumps; and purchasing rooftop solar power.

“As a proportion of their income, the lowest group of income earners pay more to power their homes, compared to the highest income group. Far too many families are forced to choose between keeping their homes warm and having food on the table.

“Kāinga Ora rooftops provide a huge opportunity to create free electricity from the sun and reduce power bills for thousands of families. The estimated savings on power bills for households in homes would be around $700 to $850 with solar panels.

“The Clean Power Payment will deliver lower bills, more jobs, and cut climate emissions. That is what the Green Party is offering this election. Once again we are the only party with the bold solutions people need right now.

“If you want a government that will ensure everyone has enough to live on, free dental care and a warm, dry and affordable place to call home, then the time is now to put more Green MPs around the decision making table,” says James Shaw.

Free school lunches paid for with a wealth tax

Source: Green Party

The Green Party will expand free school lunches and pay for it with a fair tax system. 

“The time is now to make sure that every child has healthy, affordable food at home and at school. The Green Party’s plan to expand free school lunches alongside our Income Guarantee will make sure no child in Aotearoa goes hungry – and it will all be paid for with the wealth tax,” says Green Party co leader Marama Davidson. 

“Right now, thousands of children across Aotearoa are going hungry. Families are struggling to cover the basics and far too many parents are forced to skip meals so their children can get something to eat. 

“The Green Party will put community wellbeing at the heart of education. Free school lunches will support families with the rising cost of living and ensure that no matter what happens, tamariki can get a good lunch at school. 

“The Government’s Healthy School Lunches programme, Ka Ora Ka Ako, provides a decent free lunch to 230,000 children and young people. But its future is at risk following Labour’s decision earlier this year to only provide funding for one more year of lunches.

“The Green Party’s plan to keep the current programme going, funded by a wealth tax, and expand free school lunches to 135,000 more children is the right thing to do. 

“Free school lunches builds on the Green Party’s Income Guarantee and our commitment to ensuring whānau have a safe, warm and affordable place to call home,” says Marama Davidson. 

Teanau Tuiono, the Green Party’s education spokesperson added:

“Over the past few weeks we have seen clearer than ever the choice people have in October. A selfish National and ACT government that would serve only to benefit big business and the wealthy few. 

“Or a government with a strong Green voice so we can work together to make sure everyone has what they need to live a good life.

“Only the Green Party will ensure that everyone has an income that covers life’s essentials; children have enough to eat, and a warm, dry and affordable place to live that is powered by cheap, clean energy; with access to free dental care – as well as creating climate-safe communities where people and nature thrive.

“Poverty is a political choice. Our plan will provide lasting solutions that will guarantee everyone has what they need to live a good life and cover the essentials – even when times are tough,” says Teanau Tuiono. 

Greens would push Labour much further on solar power

Source: Green Party

Labour’s plan to support rooftop solar is a step in the right direction, but falls short of what could be achieved through the Green Party’s Clean Power Payment.

“Only the Green Party has a plan to help people cover the full cost of installing solar panels, alongside a wide range of other clean energy upgrades,” says the Green Party’s energy spokesperson, Julie Anne Genter.

“The Green Party’s Clean Power Payment will help many more people cover the cost of upgrading their home to run on clean energy, and save them money each month on their power bills.

“We’re pleased that Labour is, again, picking up our ideas but they need to go further.

“Whereas Labour’s plan would help people with around 20% of the upfront cost of solar, the Green Party will help people cover the entire cost – through a mix of grants and interest-free loans that together could unlock solar for every household.    

“The Green Party would also install solar on the roofs of 30,000 Kāirnga Ora homes over the next three years, instead of just 1,000 per year as Labour is currently proposing. 

“We estimate that the Green Party’s Clean Power Payment will lead to a third of all homes having solar over the next 15 years. 

“Together with measures to save energy, harnessing the power of the sun is the single cheapest way to slash emissions and save people money on their power bills. 

“The only obstacle in front of us is political. 

“Over the course of this election, Labour and National have offered little more than small tinkering in the face of record inequality and a climate crisis. Things can be better. 

“There is no doubt that we need to leave the age of fossil fuels behind, quickly and decisively. But what drives our machines won’t change until we change what drives our government. 

“With more Green MPs in the next Parliament and more Green Ministers in the next Government, we can take climate action that makes our lives better and saves people money,” says Julie Anne Genter.

Green Party confirms plan for five weeks annual leave

Source: Green Party

Speaking at the E Tū Election Launch in Auckland today, Green Party co leader Marama Davidson outlined the Green Party’s manifesto commitment to ensure everyone has five weeks of annual leave. 

“Everyone should be able to spend quality time with their whānau and friends, but right now Aoteroa is not working for all working people. Tens of thousands of people are working two, sometimes three, jobs just to make ends meet. This leaves hardly any time in the day for people to rest and enjoy time with the people they love,” says Green Party co leader Marama Davidson. 

“For decades, the Green Party has fought to improve the lives of working people. We have helped pass Fair Pay Agreements and increase sick leave to 10 days. 

“We have also pushed to introduce pay transparency requirements – to help close the gender and ethnic pay gap, and foster fairness for Māori and Pasifika workers.

“The time is now to build on the work we’ve already done and make sure that everyone, no matter what job they do, has enough time off. It should not be that only the lucky few in well paying jobs get to take proper time off. 

“The Green Party would phase in five weeks of annual leave. We will provide organisations plenty of notice, and ensure the full five weeks is available for everyone by the end of 2025. 

“The Green Party is the only party with a plan to make sure all working people have strong rights, good pay and secure work. And, our Income Guarantee would ensure that if anything happens to stop someone from working, people will always have enough to put food on the table and pay the bills.

“A National-ACT-NZ First Government who would only serve to benefit big business and line the back pockets of their wealthy mates. 

“National have already made clear their intention to make life harder for working people by repealing Fair Pay Agreements. Their coalition partner ACT’s plan to get rid of 15,000 people from the public service would immediately bump unemployment from 3.6% to 4.1%. I cannot think of a worse outcome from this election for working people than a National-ACT government. 

“With a strong Green voice in the next government with Labour, we can make life better for all working people in Aotearoa,” says Marama Davidson. 

A National/ACT Government would make life miserable for those already worst off

Source: Green Party

Only a party vote for the Greens will end poverty. ACT’S welfare policy announced today is as cruel as it gets.

With National doing absolutely nothing for those on low incomes, it’s clear that these two parties in government would be dangerous for those already struggling.

“The Green Party’s plan is the right and compassionate thing to do to make sure that no matter what, everyone will always have enough to cover life’s essentials. All paid for by a simple and fair tax on the wealthiest few,” says the Green Party’s social development spokesperson, Ricardo Menéndez March.

“Over the last week or so, we have seen clearer than ever the choice people have in October. A National and ACT vision so bleak, so selfish, so petty, it’s hard to believe. Or a vision of an Aotearoa where we work together to make sure everyone has what they need to live a good life.

“National refuses to be upfront about what happens after people are evicted from state homes. ACT and National also have no answer to what happens next once income support is ripped away – particularly for whānau with children.

“ACT and National’s policies would literally leave people out in the cold.

“What ACT also spectacularly fails to realise is that being on a benefit or in work is not an all or nothing choice. A huge number of people are on benefits because they are unable to work full time. This support is essential to these people coping with the cost of living crisis that these two parties apparently care so much about.

“The Green Party understands that when times are tough, people need support – not punitive hoops to jump through right when they’re already struggling.

“The Green Party’s Income Guarantee includes a family top up that will replace Working for Families with a single, simple payment for all families who need it and end the unfair discrimination of the In Work Tax Credit. It will provide parents or caregivers with up to $215 every week for the first child, and $135 a week for every other child.

“We would also transform ACC into an Agency of Comprehensive Care so if anyone has to stop working due to illness, they will receive a minimum payment of 80% of the full-time minimum wage

“As ACT continues to introduce cruel policy and National struggles to explain how they would *actually* pay for their tax cuts, it’s becoming increasingly clear they could resort to cutting essential public services and make life harder for people.

“Poverty is a political choice. The Green Party is choosing to end it, rather than making it worse. Our plan will provide lasting solutions that will guarantee everyone has what they need to live a good life and cover the essentials – even when times are tough,” says Ricardo Menéndez March.

State of books makes clear case for wealth tax

Source: Green Party

The case for a wealth tax has never been stronger.

“The evidence is out and it shows an urgent need to change the tax system,” says Green Party finance spokesperson Julie Anne Genter.

“The case has never been clearer for changing the tax system to raise the money needed to invest in things that will make a real difference to people – like increasing Working for Families, doubling Best Start, and building thousands more warm dry homes.

“While the books are better than expected, it is completely ridiculous that both of the major parties are resigned to cutting back spending and public services instead of making the tax system fairer. This will impact lower income people most of all.

“It is a political choice to leave the tax system as it is and to expect thousands of families up and down Aotearoa to take the hit. We need a government with a strong Green voice that will tax the wealthiest few and use that money to support everyone.

“The money we need to make life better for everyone in NZ is already there. All that’s missing is the political courage to make the tax system fair and to invest in lifting incomes.

“The Green Party has a plan to make sure the wealthiest few pay their fair share. This would raise enough money to guarantee everyone an income that covers life’s essentials; a warm, dry and affordable place to live that is powered by cheap, clean energy; and access to free dental care – as well as creating climate-safe communities where people and nature thrive.

“And don’t let National pull the wool over your eyes. Their plan is a cynical ploy to do the absolute least for middle income earners in order to get away with tax cuts for the wealthiest few.

“As they struggle day after day to explain how they would *actually* pay for their tax cuts, it’s becoming increasingly clear they could resort to cutting essential public services that support all of Aotearoa. This is a cynical, ideological push to gut our public services.

“Only the Green Party has a fully costed, robust, coherent plan to make things better for everyone in Aotearoa. People struggling to make ends meet will be much better off under our plan. It’s that simple,” says Julie Anne Genter.

Healthy Ocean Act – Marama Davidson Speech

Source: Green Party

He mōhio ō tātou tīpuna ki te tirotiro taiao.

I mātakitaki rātou i ngā huringa o te marama, o te rā, o ngā whetū me ō rātou hononga ki te moana.  

I whakapaipaingia ake e rātou ēnei māramatanga i ngā marama, i ngā tau, i ngā rautau me te āta tuku iho.

***

Toitū te marae a Tāne-Mahuta, toitū te marae a Tangaroa, toitū te tangata. If the land is well and the sea is well, the people will thrive. 

I grew up on the shores of the Hokianga Harbour, in the far north Taitokerau.

My connection to our harbour has been maintained across the eons of whakapapa from our ancestor Kupe to my own little mokopuna Raeya.

When we took her to the Hokianga Heads for the very first time, she displayed the most un-Ngāpuhi trait because she was scared of her feet touching the sand. 

We all said this is a blessing from her Indian whakapapa. 

In my own childhood the moana is just a constant – with all of my hapū being coastal. 

Golden sands, getting dumped in massive waves, gathering kai moana, a place to play, a place to wag school at, a place to learn about our taiao, a place to care for, a place that cares for us. Home. Ko au te moana, ko te moana ko au.

From childhood and to this day, I am endlessly fascinated by how enormous and blue the moana is. How impressive and mysterious. 

But I was also brought up to look beyond the magic of the deep rolling waves; down to the sand and the shells – and the little creatures that made their home in the shallows.

I have an urge to connect with the ocean’s edge whenever I am near one. 

Relishing in those magical moana moments and a power both calming and exhilarating.

The journey Kupe made is the thread that runs through my whānau story here in Aotearoa. It is the foundation of my deep connection and aroha for the ocean. 

***

My people have a kaitiaki duty to safeguard the Hokianga, a responsibility we have held for hundreds of years.

I have dipped the toes of my newborn babies and mokopuna into the moana as a way to connect them to their own ancestral seas. 

As kids, I can remember wading through water in all seasons with all the cuzzies to gather kaimoana for our marae hui. 

Whatever it was – birthday celebrations, weddings that had been months in planning, or tangi to farewell our hapū descendants – there would always be a kaimoana expedition to make sure we had enough to feed everyone.

There’s nothing like all the kids in the Whirinaki valley being rounded up to go and collect kaimoana from our harbour.

Once, my aunty showed us how to literally suck oysters straight off the rocks. 

We all thought that was gangsta! 

The harbour has fed my whānau and our valley for generations. 

But that has all changed. 

In just one generation I have seen our harbour struggle under the immense pressure of pollution, sediment, overfishing, and climate change.

It breaks my heart that my mokopuna may never experience the thriving life of these waters in the way my nana did. 

I know from travelling around the country that every hapū with a connection to the moana has noticed similar changes in their rohe.

Sea sponges, penguins, shellfish, snapper and other fish species are dying off in vast numbers. 

Here in Auckland, late last year, fishers reported catches of milky, mushy, starving snapper in the Hauraki Gulf. 

And right now, parts of the Gulf are being suffocated by an invasive seaweed that smothers everything in its path.

These changes are a signal of what is happening in our ocean – and every single one of them should serve as a wake-up call.

***

Nowhere on earth is more powerful and unknown – and yet so beautiful and endlessly fascinating than the moana, than our oceans. 

Scientists say they have more accurate maps of the surfaces of Mars, Venus and Mercury than they do of the deep, blue sea.

Despite its mystery, the ocean touches every single one of us. 

It is home to more than half of all life on earth. From tiny graceful seahorses, to darting fish, to precious tuna and tohorā. 

More than 71 percent of the planet is connected by the currents and migrating animals of the ocean. 

And every inch of it sustains us. 

People often talk about how forests are the lungs of the planet, but the ocean also plays a huge role in our breathing.

Every second breath we take, comes from the ocean. 

More than three billion people around the world rely on the ocean for their livelihoods, including thousands here in Aotearoa.

The ocean is also the world’s largest carbon sink; home to hidden underwater forests and incredible little creatures that absorb carbon dioxide from seawater and the atmosphere. 

Without a healthy ocean, we are without our whakapapa, we cannot have a healthy planet.

It is as simple as that.

We cannot have healthy communities, with food to eat, and clean air to breathe. 

We cannot tackle climate change. 

We cannot preserve our invaluable cultural connections to the sea.

The ocean is our life support system.

When that system starts to break down, it will affect every one of us.  

Keeping the ocean healthy is crucial to climate action – the defining challenge of our generation. 

Ka ora te Moana, ka ora tātau. When the ocean is healthy, we are healthy – and our humanity survives. Because the ocean deserves protecting in its own right, for its own splendour.

***

Our ancient kōrero, “Ki uta ki tai – from the mountains to the sea” reminds us that ocean health is connected to whenua health. 

But that connection is breaking. 

Successive governments have enabled pillaging and destruction of the moana. 

They have treated the marine environment as a resource to be exploited. 

They have pursued short-term goals without seeing the bigger picture.

Pollution, plastics, the plunder of corporate overfishing, invasive pests, and mining has degraded the natural mauri of the ocean.  

Species have been pushed to the brink.

Once thriving ecosystems are disappearing. 

Fish and other marine mammals are making one-way migrations to keep cool and move away from warmer waters.

Ancient species like leatherback turtles which have been around since dinosaurs roamed the land are facing pressures that could push them to the brink. 

Politics and policy is often made out to be a lot more complicated than it is.

The question is simply whether we want to protect our precious ecosystems, or whether we put our head in the sand and ignore the growing crisis.  

The answer is pretty bloody simple: he taonga te moana, the ocean is taonga – and it should always be treated as such. 

***

When the Green Party went into government for the first time six years ago, we immediately got started on what would quickly become the largest government programme of work to cut climate emissions this country has ever seen.

Thanks to the work of James Shaw and the Green Party, Aotearoa now has a single legal framework that will require every government, now and in the future, to take action to cut climate emissions. 

A key part of the Zero Carbon Act James led was the creation of an independent Climate Change Commission that would ensure all future Governments receive the best possible independent, science-based advice on what needs to be done to tackle the climate crisis. 

That advice led, last year, to the country’s first, comprehensive, all-of-government Emissions Reduction Plan. A blueprint for a zero-carbon Aotearoa that we have never had before. 

Over the last six years, the Green Party has taken more action on climate change than all previous governments before us. 

The time is now to do the same for the ocean. 

And so today, I am delighted to announce that if you elect the Green Party into a strong position in the next government, we will get started immediately on the most significant programme of work to protect the ocean that Aotearoa has ever seen. 

***

A key part of this is a commitment to protect at least 30 percent of the ocean that surrounds Aotearoa by 2030. 

The Green Party will pass a Healthy Ocean Act to create a legally binding commitment to establish and maintain an Aotearoa-wide network of ocean sanctuaries, free from harmful human activity. 

These marine protected areas will be co-designed with iwi and hapū – and mātauranga Māori will play a central role in how they are managed.

Māori fishing will also be prioritised next to protected areas to guarantee the tino rangatiratanga over our moana and resources that we were promised more than 180 years ago. 

In the past, when governments have attempted to protect the ocean, they have neglected Tiriti justice and failed to uphold tino rangatiratanga, which is essential for underpinning decisions about the moana.

The Green Party’s unwavering commitment to ensuring ecosystems can thrive is matched by our unwavering commitment to the sovereignty of hapū across the motu. 

We will weave these kaupapa together in a new framework for marine protection.

The time is now for a government that will whakamana te Tiriti o Waitangi. 

The time is now for a government that will uphold tino rangatiratanga.

The time is now for a government that will guarantee the wellbeing of tangata whenua and tangata moana.

***

To begin this, the Green Party will create a new, politically independent Ocean Commission in the first 100 days of the next government. 

Just like the Climate Change Commission has held the government’s feet to the fire on what needs to be done to meet our climate targets, the Ocean Commission will provide independent, science-based advice on what needs to be done to protect the ocean. 

For decades, successive governments have failed to acknowledge how every part of the ocean is connected. 

Governments have made decisions based on impacts on a single species, sector, activity or concern, rather than considering the mauri of the whole moana. 

Political parties have put in place more than 20 laws that apply to the ocean – and yet this piecemeal approach has seen the health of the ocean decline for decades. 

Aotearoa urgently needs a better approach to protecting and managing the ocean that works for everyone.  

One of the first jobs of the new Ocean Commission will be to develop a comprehensive, all of government Ocean Strategy to deliver ecosystem-based management of the ocean. 

This will ensure a joined-up approach to meeting the 2030 protection target that reflects and supports the way ecosystems actually function, and the risks they face.  

***

From climate change to ocean acidification, overfishing and pollution, our ocean is under threat like never before. 

If we don’t act now and address the problems of our oceans with the seriousness they demand, we are in trouble. 

Action to protect the ocean simply cannot wait. 

Nearly a quarter of a century ago, former Green Party co-leader Jeannette Fitzsimons called on the government to protect at least 20% of the ocean. 

What progress have Labour and National made?

Less than one half of one percent. It is pitiful. 

There is not a single marine protected area in the deep, open ocean that Aotearoa is responsible for.

The crisis facing our ocean is growing more urgent by the day. 

In the two decades since Jeanette pressured the then Labour government, the big two political parties have failed at nearly every opportunity to prioritise the health of the ocean.

Time and time again they have made the political choice to put short-term corporate profit ahead of what’s right for people and nature.  

In failing our seas, they failed Aotearoa. We simply cannot risk any more delay. 

The major parties have been mostly indifferent to the plight of our precious moana – and that must stop. 

Right now. 

It will not be acceptable to the millions of people who are demanding bolder action; nor to the Green Party; nor to me… If the next government fails to muster the courage and moral clarity necessary to restore the health of the ocean with the urgency it demands.

***

There is no doubt in my mind that the only way to make this happen is with a Green Party Minister of Oceans and Fisheries.

Over the last six years more action has been taken on conservation, waste, and climate change than ever before thanks to the work of Green Party Ministers.  

However, without a Green Party Minister responsible for the ocean and fisheries, progress has been far too slow.  

Over the last few weeks, we have been very clear that political leaders do not get to decide what will and won’t happen after the election. 

That is your job. You create the mandate for bold political action.

But if you want a government that will take bold action to address the challenges we face, then the only option is a vote for the Green Party.

More Green MPs means more Green Ministers in Cabinet, influencing the direction of the next government.

What I want to be clear about with our announcement today is that one of those ministers must be a Green Party Minister for Oceans and Fisheries. 

That is the only way we will confront the ocean crisis with the urgency it demands and restore its mauri for the good of everyone. 

Not only will the Green Party Minister create a new, politically independent Ocean Commission to advise the government on solutions that work for people and nature. 

Not only will our Minister put in place a binding target to protect at least 30% of the ocean surrounding Aotearoa so we can restore its mauri.

Not only will our Minister take action to protect our waters from invasive pest species by investing in improved marine biosecurity.   

A Green Party Minister for Oceans and Fisheries will also put an immediate stop to bottom trawling on seamounts. 

When massive fishing corporations drag huge weighted nets across delicate ecosystems, like seamounts, they destroy everything in their path.

Slow growing corals and sponges, that have provided a habitat for a diverse range of ocean creatures, are ripped to shreds.

It is estimated that this senseless bulldozing of the ocean floor also releases as much carbon dioxide as global air travel, every single year. 

On top of which, these habitat-damaging activities produce such large sediment plumes they literally choke filter-feeders, like mussels. 

One commercial trawl can create a plume the size of the Goat Island marine reserve – smothering all it touches.

A few weeks ago the Labour Government finally said it would consider a serious rollback of bottom trawling over substantial areas of the Hauraki Gulf.

This is a welcome step but let me be absolutely clear: bottom trawling has to stop on seamounts everywhere, and it has to stop in the entire Gulf.  

Allowing destructive dredging and bottom-trawling to continue will simply undermine any wider effort to protect the oceans. 

***

For decades, politicians have made excuses for why we cannot do things at the pace and scale we need to solve the connected crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and intergenerational poverty. 

They have repeatedly denied their own ability to fix major problems.

They tell us their hands are tied. 

They say only little steps are possible.

Rubbish. 

Where’s the imagination? 

Where’s the vision, the courage to stand up and say “we will do better”?

I’ll tell you where it is. 

It is in the Green Party’s Income Guarantee that will give everyone peace of mind that they can always afford the weekly shop, pay the rent, or cover unexpected costs – even when times are tough.

It is in our plan for free dental care for ALL, not just some. People over 30 need good teeth too!

It is in our promise to clear the housing wait list in the next five years and guarantee everyone a warm, safe and affordable place to live. 

***

This election is a chance to create the world we want our mokopuna to inherit. 

Bold political action can change the world for the better. But to do that, we must not ignore or downplay the challenges we face.

Like the tens of thousands of people across Aotearoa who are struggling to make ends meet.

Like the collapse of native plants and animals.

Like the climate crisis that is turbo-charging flooding and extreme weather in places like Auckland, Tairawhiti and Hawke’s Bay, the crisis facing our ocean will not wait for decades of incremental progress.

It is happening right now. And it needs action right now

The time is now for a government that will show the political leadership necessary to put ocean health ahead of corporate profit.

And to put the Green Party in charge of making it happen. 

Ko tēnei te wā.

***

In 34 days time we will have one of the most significant elections we have ever had in Aotearoa.

I wish all parties were committed to creating a world where people and nature can thrive. I wish our political debates could focus on what matters now AND for future generations. 

But National and ACT aren’t even trying to bring serious solutions for the big issues we face. 

Together, they would be the most damaging Government that Aotearoa has had for decades. 

We cannot let that happen. 

What we are announcing today is a clear, robust and enforceable plan that will protect the ocean and the benefits it provides for all.

It is a clear blueprint for a future of ocean justice. A future of ocean health. A future of ocean abundance. 

Imagine taking your kids down to the beach, paddling among the gentle waves and seeing the dark, silky shapes of fish darting back and forth through the water.

Imagine wading out to the rocks, running your hands over them and finding enough kaimoana to feed your whānau. 

Imagine strolling along the waterfront on a lunch break and being lucky enough to glimpse a whale breaching, spinning, and flicking its tail through the water – exactly as we saw in Wellington a few years ago.

We can have all this and more. 

It is all possible with the right political decisions. 

And so, to the thousands of parents and grandparents who remember stories of an ocean full of fish, dolphins, whales, and healthy underwater forests – and want the same for their own children.

To the volunteers, community groups, and tangata moana who have spent years advocating for the protection and better care of the sea.

To the tens of thousands of people who depend on a healthy ocean for their livelihoods. 

To the coastal hapū for whom the stories are all that remain of the abundant kaimoana their ancestors relied on for their sustenance, and traditions. 

A vote for the Green Party is a vote to restore the health of the ocean. 

***

We are at a unique moment. 

Never before have we understood so clearly the consequences of what we are doing to the planet. 

And never before have we had such an incredible opportunity to finally elect a government that will do something about it. 

To preserve the ocean environments we all depend on, and carry treasured species and habitats into the future.

We do not have time to delay. We need to do this now. 

The ocean’s power of regeneration is remarkable – if we just offer it the chance. 

We can restore the health of the ocean within a generation. 

The choice lies with us.

Mō tātou, ā, mō kā uri, ā muri ake nei.

Our decisions are for the generation today, the generation tomorrow and the generations yet to come.

The time is now for a government that will show the political leadership necessary to put ocean health ahead of corporate profit. 

Ko tēnei te wā, the time is now to put the Green Party in charge of making   

Nō reira, tena koutou, tena koutou, tena koutou katoa.

Greens will demand Minister for Oceans and Fisheries to lead ocean rescue plan

Source: Green Party

The Green Party will protect 30% of the ocean by 2030, create an independent Ocean Commission to advise the government, and put a Green Minister for Oceans and Fisheries in charge of making it happen. 

The Green Party has a rescue plan for the ocean – an Aotearoa-wide network for marine protected areas to put large parts of the sea off limits to destructive industries, and an independent Ocean Commission to guide how it happens,” says Marama Davidson. 

“This election, only the Green Party is putting forward evidence-based solutions to the challenges we face. All we are seeing from the two big political parties is bickering over inconsequential issues and the kind of tinkering that leaves people with little hope that we can create the Aotearoa we need. 

“This is particularly the case when it comes to the ocean. The ongoing plunder of overfishing, pollution, and climate change is pushing the ocean to the brink.

“Instead of allowing large parts of the ocean to be torn apart for profit, as successive governments have done, the Green Party has a bold, achievable, and brilliantly simple plan: cover large parts of Aotearoa’s ocean in protected areas, putting a third of the ocean off-limits to fishing, mining and other destructive industries. 

“Our plan will start straight after the election, when we will make it a top priority in negotiations to have a Green Minister for Oceans and Fisheries at the Cabinet table. We simply cannot leave the future of the ocean in the hands of any other political party. 

“A Green Minister will get to work immediately on the creation of a new independent, science-led Ocean Commission to advise the government on te Tiriti-led action to protect the ocean, in much the same way as the Climate Change Commission has done on climate action. 

“Advice from the Ocean Commission will provide the foundation for a new Healthy Ocean Act, which will provide a legally binding framework to create a network of marine protected areas that cover at least 30% of the ocean by 2030 and uphold te Tiriti o Waitangi.

“A vote for the Green Party is not only a vote to guarantee everyone a decent income, a warm place to live, and bold climate action – but also to protect the ocean and the benefits it provides for all. A better Aotearoa is possible. All it takes is the political willpower to make it happen,” says Marama Davidson. 

Green Party co leader James Shaw added: 

“Without a healthy ocean, we cannot have a healthy planet. It is as simple as that. We cannot have healthy communities, with food to eat, and clean air to breathe, and we cannot tackle climate change.

“The ocean is our life support system, and when that system starts to break down, it affects every one of us.  

“Over the last six years, the Green Party has taken more action on climate change than all previous governments before us. The time is now to do the same for the ocean. 

“Our plan to protect the ocean is based on what we have so successfully achieved for climate action in Aotearoa – a legally binding target backed by independent, expert advice on the best way to achieve it. 

“Our plan for a Healthy Ocean Act will do the same for the ocean that the Zero Carbon Act has done for the climate. 

“It will be the centrepiece for meaningful ocean protection and create a legally binding commitment on all future governments to establish and maintain an Aotearoa-wide network of ocean sanctuaries, free from harmful human activity. 

“An Ocean Commission will be formed as quickly as possible to make sure the government gets the best possible advice on meeting the 30% target in a way that upholds te Tiriti o Waitangi and supports the ways marine ecosystems actually function. 

“The Ocean Commission will then hold the government’s feet to the fire to make sure it happens. 

“Over the last six years more action has been taken on conservation, waste, and climate change than ever before thanks to the work of Green Party Ministers. However, without a Green Party Minister responsible for the ocean and fisheries, progress is much too slow.

“Only a Green Minister for Oceans and Fisheries will transform how we treat the ocean and help fight climate change, protect the marine life we all rely on, and allow our oceans to thrive,” says James Shaw. 

A Green Party Minister for Oceans and Fisheries will:

  • Establish a new, politically independent Ocean Commission to work with iwi, hapū, local communities, councils, stakeholders and the public to advise the government on solutions that work for people and nature.
  • Pass a Healthy Ocean Act in the next three years to create a new framework for establishing marine protected areas in a way that upholds te Tiriti o Waitangi – putting in place a binding target of protecting at least 30% of the ocean surrounding Aotearoa, and helping restore the mauri of the moana.
  • Ban the most destructive fishing methods such as bottom trawling and set netting.
  • Increase our capacity to protect our waters from invasive pest species by investing in improved marine biosecurity
  • Create a new $100 million Moana Fund to support iwi and hapū to deliver on the marine conservation priorities

Bills lower, climate happier under Green Party plan

Source: Green Party

Labour’s announcement of an energy rebate is a step in the right direction, but the Greens’ Clean Power Payment would do much more for households.

“The Clean Power Payment will save households hundreds of dollars on their energy bills, every year, and slash carbon emissions,” says Green Party energy spokesperson Julie Anne Genter.

“People are struggling and the planet is heating at frightening speed. We can and must deal with both challenges at the same time. There is a clear answer staring us in the face: warm homes powered by clean, cheap, low-carbon energy, supplied straight from our roofs.

“We’re pleased that Labour is, again, picking up our ideas but they need to go further.

“Labour is planning to retrofit up to 5000 homes a year – while the Green Party is planning to roll out the Clean Power Payment to 60,000 homes a year.

“Progress has been made between the Greens and Labour through Warmer Kiwi Homes, a long-standing Green Party policy that we have been able to scale up as part of the government. But it’s not enough.

“Under our plan, people will be able to access grants of up to $6,000 to cover the cost of clean energy upgrades, like putting solar power on their roof, or installing a heat pump. Plus, interest-free loans of up to $30,000 to cover the cost of additional zero carbon home upgrades.

“And, zero carbon upgrades will be tax-deductible for landlords, helping deliver the Green Party’s Pledge to Renters.

“The Clean Power Payment will go further and deliver lower bills, more jobs, and cut climate emissions. That is what the Green Party is offering this election. Once again we are the only party with the bold solutions people need right now.

“Today’s announcement shows that with a strong Green Party in the next Parliament we can do more to help everyone live good lives within the limits of a safe climate,” says Julie Anne Genter.

Greens welcome launch of Te Ohu Tāmaki and challenges other parties on housing

Source: Green Party

The Green Party is welcoming the launch of Te Ohu Tāmaki, and affirms its commitment to clear the social housing waitlist in 5 years – and challenges other parties to say they will do the same.

“The commitment of Te Ohu Whakawhanaunga is to build a broad alliance that will think differently about how we grow community voice and power is something the Green Party is 100% on board with,” says Marama Davidson.

“We especially acknowledge the commitment to improving housing for everybody in Aotearoa. We know that even for those on decent incomes, high rents and poor quality housing can mean people struggle to pay the bills, and face cold damp winters.

“Right now, those on the lowest incomes spend too much of their income on rent. Many families also struggle to put down roots in communities because they have to constantly move to manage rising rents. This isn’t good enough in a country as wealthy as Aotearoa.

“The Green Party is committed to clearing the social housing waitlist in 5 years, and we challenge other parties to do the same. Our housing policy would deliver 35,000 new warm, affordable, public houses over the next five years. This would mean that everyone would have a safe, warm, dry place to call home.

“The current state of housing in Aotearoa is no accident. It is because of the decisions of successive governments that have not prioritised people, and instead let the rental market more closely resemble a game of monopoly than a public good – and it is landlords who hold all the cards.

“The solutions are as clear as they have always been: controls on rent increases, a rental warrant of fitness, and thousands more new homes in places people want to live. In the first 100 days of a new government, we will introduce a new Renters’ Rights Bill to give effect to these changes.

“Plus, everyone needs a decent income. Our Income Guarantee will ensure no one’s income ever falls below $385 per week, no matter what happens.

“We know how to make life better for people, and ensure that homes are safe, healthy, affordable, and warm. Everything we need to make life better for people in Aotearoa exists. What’s missing is the political willpower to use it,” says Marama Davidson.