Rotorua Daily Post

New Zealand has become an obstructio­n economy

- Chris Bishop

It’s too hard to get things done in New Zealand. Too hard to build new renewable energy, too hard to build roads and public transport, too hard to build houses and too hard to develop the sort of sensible economic developmen­t projects that provide jobs and growth.

New Zealand has become an obstructio­n economy. The coalition Government’s mission is to change that, by cutting through the red and green tape holding us back.

Our Fast Track Approvals Bill will help rebuild the economy by making it faster and simpler to get regional and national projects consented and permitted.

It’s unacceptab­le that housing developmen­ts take years to get consent — if the consent is even granted — despite New Zealand experienci­ng a housing crisis.

It’s unacceptab­le that important roads that would help Kiwis get from A to B faster and more safely languish on paper rather than being built, just because getting consent takes so long and is so expensive.

It’s unacceptab­le that renewable energy projects that would help New Zealand meet our climate targets can take the best part of a decade just to get resource consent — and that’s before a single shovel goes in the ground.

The status quo is not an option. We have a housing crisis, an infrastruc­ture deficit in the hundreds of billions of dollars, ambitious climate goals, and a stagnant economy.

The Infrastruc­ture Commission estimates the current consenting processes cost a staggering $1.3 billion every year just to get the consent paperwork sorted. Its study also shows that within a recent five-year period the time taken to get a resource consent for key projects has nearly doubled.

The Fast Track Approvals Bill will help speed up developmen­t, while protecting the environmen­t.

Even the previous Government recognised that our planning laws make it too difficult to do things — so it developed its own fast-track process, which involved ministers selecting projects, just like ours does.

Our proposal uses essentiall­y the same framework, but strengthen­s it.

First, it applies to regionally and nationally significan­t projects (rather than smaller ones) and it also creates a “one-stop-shop” process.

So it doesn’t just deal with resource consents, it also deals with all the other things often needed for developmen­t, like conservati­on permits, heritage and so on. It makes sense to do all of that at the same time, rather than strung out over many years and with multiple different government agencies. That just costs time and money.

This one-stop shop will make a real difference. I recently met a housing developer who had finally received consent after a three-year process only to have an official turn up on the very day earthworks were to begin and demand a Wildlife Act permit. That process took more than a year to complete.

Such ineptitude would be funny if kids weren’t living in cars and a generation were not locked out of home ownership.

New Zealanders rightly care deeply about our natural environmen­t and most people are in favour of developmen­t, as long as environmen­tal effects are considered and mitigated against.

The good news is that the Fast Track Bill makes sure the environmen­t is protected. If the Government selects a project to be fast-tracked — say, for example, a wind farm or a new road — the project will go to an expert panel of resource consent experts to apply environmen­tal conditions and rules to the project. That’s exactly how the previous Government’s fasttrack process worked, and ours will too.

I actually think our fasttrack process will help the environmen­t. The electrific­ation of our economy presents enormous opportunit­ies but energy companies say our planning rules are the single biggest barrier to decarbonis­ing our economy through more renewable energy. The Fast Track Bill will help fix that.

It just shouldn’t take eight years to consent a wind farm. We can grow our economy, cut our emissions and protect the environmen­t all at the same time.

Some of the criticism of the Fast Track Bill has been overblown. It is not a licence to desecrate the environmen­t. It is a sensible response to real problems that are holding us back from growth.

Some of the criticism has been more reasonable and we are open to sensible ideas to refine the regime. The bill is currently at the select committee and we will be looking carefully at the feedback.

There are very few problems in New Zealand that wouldn’t be solved by a fast-growing economy.

The Fast Track Bill is about unclogging the arteries of our economy and making it easier for us to grow, while protecting the environmen­t.

"New Zealanders rightly care deeply about our natural environmen­t and most people are in favour of developmen­t, as long as environmen­tal effects are considered and mitigated against."

 ?? PHOTO / BEVAN CONLEY ?? It shouldn’t take eight years to consent a wind farm, says Chris Bishop.
PHOTO / BEVAN CONLEY It shouldn’t take eight years to consent a wind farm, says Chris Bishop.
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