Media Release
29 May 2007
RMA letting us down
New Zealand is failing to deliver on its 100% pure brand “because of inadequate legal and regulatory frameworks,” says Rod Oram, a guest speaker at an environmental conference being held in Auckland this week.
Mr Oram says a high quality, sustainable environment is crucial to the primary sector’s business model and is part of the pitch to overseas customers by the education, creative, manufacturing and some other sectors.
“Of all OECD countries, New Zealand is the most dependent on its environment for the living it earns in the world economy,” he says. “It is an intrinsic part of our national brand and a factor in attracting immigrants and retaining residents."
“But in its current form the RMA serves New Zealand poorly and is not responding well to escalating environmental pressures and rising public demands."
Mr Oram is speaking at the Environmental Defence Society (EDS) national conference, Beyond the RMA in Auckland later this week (30-31 May).
The Environmental Defence Society has long campaigned for improved environmental outcomes under the RMA including better landscape protection, improved management of coastal development, and protection of aquatic areas.
“EDS’s agenda for improving the RMA includes the preparation of National Policy Statements and National Environmental Standards that would bolster the existing legislation,” says EDS Chair, Gary Taylor.
Mr Oram says since the RMA became law in 1991, most of the effort to develop it has focused on its processes rather than its purposes. For example, councils and the Environment Court have significantly improved their skills in handling consents and cases. But far less work has gone into ensuring the RMA has kept pace with economic and environmental developments.
“The effectiveness of the RMA is patchy. In rural areas it can cope with allocation and management of relatively abundant resources. But it cannot cope when resources, particularly water, are fully allocated. Nor can it cope with cumulative effects.
“Administration of the Act might have become more efficient but the legislation has failed to respond to greater pressures on the environment from, for example, the intensification of some economic activities or greater demands from the public for higher standards and more certain sustainability,” he says.
Mr Oram says he predicts a situation in which, without an adequate legal and regulatory framework, New Zealand will suffer serious damage to its reputation and ability to earn part of its living in the global economy.
ENDS
Beyond
the RMA - An in-depth exploration of the Resource Management
Act 1991
A not-for-profit conference organised by the
Environmental Defence Society
30-31 May 2007, Langham
Hotel, Auckland
In association with the New Zealand Business Council for Sustainable Development and the New Zealand Council for Infrastructure Development
www.rma2007.com
See... RMA: Oram Paper May 2007 (PDF)