The Borneo Post

New Zealand’s ‘green’ image under threat — OECD

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s strong economic growth is placing strains on the environmen­t that threaten to undermine its ‘clean, green’ reputation, the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) warned yesterday.

The South Pacific nation has long marketed itself internatio­nally as ‘100 per cent pure’ and is undergoing a tourism boom as visitors flock to see the spectacula­r scenery featured in films such as ‘The Hobbit’ trilogy.

But an OECD report said the environmen­t was paying the price for growth in the farm-reliant economy, which is currently among the strongest in the developed world at more than 3.0 per cent.

It said intensive dairy farming had left many rivers with elevated nitrogen levels, making them vulnerable to algal blooms.

The report, the result of a oncein-a-decade review, also noted that New Zealand had one of the worst rates of species extinction in the world.

In addition, per capita greenhouse gas emissions were the fifth highest in the OECD and rising, while emissions in most other countries were on the decline.

The report said government plans to double agricultur­al exports by 2025 were set to worsen the problems.

“New Zealand’s growth model has begun to show its environmen­tal limits, with increased greenhouse gas emissions and waste generation, freshwater contaminat­ion and threats to biodiversi­ty,” the report said.

“This may indicate that New Zealand’s strong growth has come partly at the expense of environmen­tal quality, a dynamic that puts the country’s ‘green’ reputation at risk.”

It recommende­d Wellington strengthen its emission trading scheme and expand it to agricultur­e, which is currently exempted even though it accounts for half of the country’s emissions.

Environmen­t Minister Nick Smith welcomed the report and said the government was already working on many of the issues it raised.

“This environmen­tal report card will help us sharpen our future direction and environmen­tal aspiration­s, as well as learn from the experience­s of other countries,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? A general view of a crude oil importing port in Qingdao, Shandong province. Indonesian police said yesterday, Interpol has issued red notices, the closest to an internatio­nal arrest warrant, for three Chinese executives suspected of fraud linked to a...
A general view of a crude oil importing port in Qingdao, Shandong province. Indonesian police said yesterday, Interpol has issued red notices, the closest to an internatio­nal arrest warrant, for three Chinese executives suspected of fraud linked to a...

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