Q+A: David Parker interviewed by Corin Dann
Q+A: David Parker interviewed by Corin Dann
Labour: Farmers must pay to clean up
our water ways
Labour’s
water spokesman David Parker’s standing by the party’s
plan for farmers to pay for water, and says critics who say
produce prices will go up are scaremongering.
Speaking on
TVNZ 1’s Q+A programme this morning Mr Parker estimated
the cost to farmers would be around two cents per thousand
litres of water used.
“It would be about 100 million
dollars across the country for a year,” he
said.
“Which is, coincidentally what (Minister for the
Environment) Nick Smith says we need to spend every year for
the next 23 years to clean up our water ways.”
Mr
Parker said all New Zealanders had the birth right to swim
in rivers without getting sick if they dived under.
He
described criticism that the plan would hike up produce for
Kiwi consumers as “scaremongering” and
“nonsense”.
“I don’t think there’s anyone in
New Zealand that doesn’t want to clean up our rivers. And
if the farmers are coming along and saying, ‘Look, we,
having caused the problem, we’re not willing to make a
contribution to that effort.’ Really, what would that say
about them as a sector?”
Q +
A
Episode
23
DAVID
PARKER
Interviewed by Corin
Dann
CORIN Good morning to you.
Let’s clear this up. What is the rate that you would
charge farmers?
DAVID Farmers,
as opposed to water-bottlers, we’ve said 1or 2 cents per
thousand litres. I think if you wanted me to a cent figure
on it, I’d say 2 rather than
1.
CORIN 2 cents.
Okay. So what’s that going to equate to per average dairy
farmer? Because Steven Joyce says it’s $50,000 a
farm.
DAVID Oh,
that’s rubbish. It would be at 2 cents – it would be
about $100 million across the whole of the country for a
year.
CORIN $100
million?
DAVID Which
is, coincidentally, what Nick Smith says we need to spend
every year for the next 23 years to clean up our
waterways.
CORIN Has
the Labour Party just been politically cute here? Because
you’ve gone after the low-hanging fruit – the bottlers
– which, let’s face it, even National was inching
towards
doing.
DAVID No,
they haven’t.
CORIN Well,
they’ve put a working group on it. They haven’t ruled
out the possibility of doing
it.
DAVID After
nine years on the
never-never.
CORIN Sure.
So you get the credit for going for that – great. But
going after our productive sector, putting an extra tax on
them, making them more uncompetitive – doesn’t make a
lot of sense, does
it?
DAVID You know,
the level of scaremongering around this would make Donald
Trump blush. We had Hort New Zealand saying $18 cabbages.
That equates to a million litres per cabbage. The thirstiest
cabbage on the planet. I mean it’s just
nonsense.
CORIN But
it is true that if farmers do have to pay an increased cost,
that they will pass it on to consumers.
DAVID Well,
let’s say that they did. It would be a tiny fraction of a
cent per cabbage. But actually, in respect of milk and
cheese, we know that’s set by the international price, not
locally.
CORIN So
they’re more uncompetitive and we lose more money to
overseas
competitors.
DAVID No,
look, you know, if there’s a cost of cleaning up our
rivers, cos I think it’s your birthright and mine to be
able to swim in our local river in summer, and for our kids
to put their head under without getting crook, there’s a
cost to that cleanup. As Nick Smith said last week, he
thought that the cost for central government was going to be
about $100 million per annum. Now, who should pay that?
Should we tax pensioners? Or working people? Or should the
farmers who are polluting make a contribution? And that’s
all we’re asking – not the cent per litre we’re
proposing for water-bottlers, but, say, 2 cents per thousand
litres.
CORIN Here’s
the thing – you’ve targeted farmers. But why are you
giving an exemption to Coca Cola and various other
businesses in the
cities?
DAVID Well,
what we’ve said is that domestic and stock water will
never pay. We’re not interested in the municipal sources
of water. You know, Coca Cola, they already
pay a dollar per cubic metre or a dollar per thousand litres
to the Auckland Council for the water they drew. We’re not
going to charge them
twice.
CORIN But
it does feel, there will be many in the
farming sector who will be frustrated and feel they’re
being singled
out.
DAVID It
is them who are polluting our rivers, so I don’t know how
that’s
unfair.
CORIN Well,
they’re certainly a
contributor.
DAVID Well,
no. Let’s deal with one of the issues that Steven Joyce
said. He said, ‘Look at the cities.’ You know, over the
last decade, cities have improved their
quality.
CORIN But
they do pollute waterways as
well.
DAVID Not
nearly as much as they did in recent decades. And who’s
paid for the cost of that cleanup? The people in the cities.
They’ve paid for better sewerage treatment; the factories
have cleaned up. And over those same decades, the rural
sector rivers are getting worse. Now, who should pay? Should
the polluter pay or should we tax
pensioners?
CORIN Sure.
But how do the people in the cities enjoy their lifestyle
and their standard of
living?
DAVID They
are reliant upon the productivity of the rural sector. We
all are.
CORIN So
why would we penalise
them?
DAVID We’re
not penalising them. We’re saying that they should make a
small contribution to the cleanup of our rivers so that they
and you and your children and I can swim in our local rivers
in summer.
CORIN You haven’t really
dealt with the issue of iwi rights either, have you?
You’ve said you’ll try and deal with it. Is there going
to be some sort of Sealord deal on royalties that are
collected from water-bottling and
elsewhere?
DAVID Actually,
we’ve been quite explicit. We’ve actually said we’ll
settle the Treaty claim. You have to. The Waitangi Tribunal
has said that you have to; the High Court has said that you
have to. That came up when the current government was
flogging off shares
–
CORIN So
they’ll get a portion of the
royalty?
DAVID Yeah.
They will,
effectively.
CORIN How
much?
DAVID Well,
that’s a matter that you’ll have to negotiate with them.
But the vast majority will go back to the regions. Not one
cent stays with central government.
CORIN And you
think you can do that without saying who owns the
water?
DAVID Look,
National says no one owns the water; I say everyone owns the
water. Doesn’t take you very far. Some people have got
interests in water that other people don’t have – that
includes Maoridom; that includes people that have got a
right to take water. Some of those rights are very valuable.
We’re saying that for the likes of those water-bottlers,
they should pay a small
contribution.
CORIN Because
to be fair to the government – they’re criticised for
being slow on this stuff – but you need to go slow,
don’t you? Because these are complex issues, and if you
don’t go slow, you’ll end up with another Foreshore and
Seabed if you don’t give Maori what they feel is their
fair share of the water rights.
DAVID Well,
that’s a fair point, in respect of iwi interests. They do
have to be resolved. But the going slow doesn’t mean to
say you go backwards. National deliberately spiked the
national policy statement that came out from New Zealand’s
chief planning judge after they got into government. It said
a significant increase in livestock intensity, converting to
a dairy farm should no longer be permitted activity. Since
then, we’ve had a million extra cows, each producing the
equivalent effluent of 14 people, just about all of which
goes on to the land, and much of which gets into the water
ways.
CORIN Why
should Maori trust the Labour Party? Because it didn’t
work out so well for them on the Foreshore and
Seabed.
DAVID We’ve
been explicit that we will settle the treaty claim that is
recognised by the Waitangi Tribunal. No one else is saying
that.
CORIN Yes,
but why should they trust that you’ll be able to give
them? It just looks like it could easily end up in court
again, couldn’t
it?
DAVID I
actually think people should always have a right to go to
court if they’re dissatisfied with what the government’s
doing. So I’m not going to take that right away from
them.
CORIN Your
last Labour government removed that right.
DAVID That
was the big mistake that we made in Foreshore and Seabed.
That’s the same mistake that the current government made
in respect to the Kermadecs, and we criticised them for it.
New Zealand has to work this issue through. You actually
have to do that in consultation with Maoridom. There’s
actually two views within Maoridom – some Maoridom say,
‘Look, just give us a share of the water royalty’ ;
other Maori say, ‘Look, we actually want some water.’
Both of them actually want to clean up our rivers. So I
don’t think there’s anyone in New Zealand that doesn’t
want to clean up our rivers. And if the farmers are coming
along and saying, ‘Look, we, having caused the problem,
we’re not willing to make a contribution to that
effort.’ Really, what would that say about them as a
sector?
CORIN One last question. In the
last Labour government, we had the Fart Tax over the
greenhouse gas emissions. Tractors on the streets, up the
steps of Parliament, the government got cold feet, came out
with some sort of compromised arrangement. Again – why
should people trust that Labour will see this through in the
face of farmers who will be
outraged?
DAVID Well,
look, at this time in the election season, Federated Farmers
don’t bat for us – neither do Hort New Zealand.
CORIN Yeah, but
you wait till you’re in government. I want to know. Will
you stand up to them? Because the last time, it
didn’t.
DAVID I’ve
fought many decades of my life fighting for clean rivers. I
really feel this. I don’t like the fact that when I float
down a river on a tyre or float my kids down, I have to
question whether I put my head under. I’m determined to
fix
this.
Please find attached the full
transcript and here’s the link to the interview and our panel discussion.
Q+A, 9-10am
Sundays on TVNZ 1 and one hour later on TVNZ 1 +
1.
Repeated Sunday evening at around 11:35pm. Streamed
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