Dead in the water
OPINION: In a victory for common sense over virtue signalling, David Parker's National Policy Statement (NPS) work on freshwater is now dead in the water.
Farming leaders are stepping up to the mark on climate change and water quality, says environment and trade minister David Parker.
“Personally I am confident we are already on the path to a transition to a post-fossil-fuel economy, a low emissions economy,” he says.
“The leadership of some of the farm peak bodies is really good and to be applauded.”
Some individuals are “stepping up and leading and it is a hard space for them”.
“Some of them are elected to those positions and not all their members are as progressive in their thinking as they are,” he told an Environmental Defence Society conference on environmental reform last week.
Although he did not name them last week, he had singled out at an earlier conference Andrew Morrison, chair of Beef + Lamb NZ and Jim van der Poel, chair of DairyNZ. Fonterra chief executive Theo Spierings was also leading with some important examples.
Parker says fresh water is his priority as Minister for the Environment and he is happy to be judged on his performance on that.
“When politicians prioritise things and put themselves out there to be judged on them we cause the ministries and civil society to take note and that in turn helps achieve the outcome,” he says.
“Making those sorts of statements is also a signal to the system that we are serious about fixing this.”
He says he is willing to work with anyone who is willing to share in that duty.
“Again I applaud the emerging leadership that is coming from some parts of the primary sector. I believe we are seeing a real change in the primary sector and a drive to make improvements.”
Parker says that among initiatives to come will be a revision of the National Policy Statement on Freshwater Management.
NZPork has appointed Auckland-based Paul Bucknell as its new chair.
The Government claims to have delivered on its election promise to protect productive farmland from emissions trading scheme (ETS) but red meat farmers aren’t happy.
Foot and Mouth Disease outbreaks could have a detrimental impact on any country's rural sector, as seen in the United Kingdom's 2000 outbreak that saw the compulsory slaughter of over six million animals.
The Ministry for the Environment is joining as a national award sponsor in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards (BFEA from next year).
Kiwis are wasting less of their food than they were two years ago, and this has been enough to push New Zealand’s total household food waste bill lower, the 2025 Rabobank KiwiHarvest Food Waste survey has found.
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