The Press

2050, NZ’s ‘predator-free’ target

- STACEY KIRK

The Government wants to make New Zealand predator-free by 2050, formally adopting a target to eradicate all pests that threaten New Zealand’s native birds.

Prime Minister John Key announced the goal, alongside Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry, as well as a $28 million funding injection into a joint venture company to kickstart the campaign.

‘‘Rats, possums and stoats kill 25 million of our native birds every year, and prey on other native species such as lizards and, along with the rest of our environmen­t, we must do more to protect them,’’ Key said.

The announceme­nt gives the Government a jump on the Green Party, which has refrained from setting such a target, though it has criticised the Government’s reliance on the private sector to save critically endangered birds.

Green Party conservati­on spokesman Kevin Hague welcomed the target, but said research showed it would cost $9 billion to make New Zealand predator-free.

‘‘The Government seems happy to once again put out the begging bowl to the private sector to fund what should be taken care of by the Government.’’

Labour’s conservati­on spokeswoma­n Nanaia Mahuta said the proposal lacked long-term funding and had to ‘‘be considered alongside years of funding cuts that have blunted the work of the Department of Conservati­on’’.

By 2025, the Government has set four interim goals, which include:

• Having 1 million hectares of land where pests are suppressed or removed; • The developmen­t of a scientific breakthrou­gh, capable of removing entirely one small mam- malian predator; • To be able to demonstrat­e that areas of 20,000 ha can be predator free without the use of fences; • And the complete removal of all introduced predators from offshore island nature reserves.

Introduced pests threatened the economy and primary sector, with a total economic cost estimated at $3.3b a year, Key said.

‘‘This is the most ambitious conservati­on project attempted anywhere in the world, but we believe if we all work together as a country we can achieve it.’’

The Government has set up a new Crown Entity – Predator Free New Zealand Limited – to drive the programme alongside the private sector.

Predator Free New Zealand would be responsibl­e for identifyin­g large, high-value predator control projects and attracting co-investors to boost their scale and success.

The Government would look to provide funding on a ‘‘one for two’’ basis – for every $2 local councils and the private sector put in, the Government would provide $1.

Barry said the target would require a ‘‘massive team effort’’ across public and private sectors, iwi and community groups.

‘‘Now is the time for a concerted long-term nationwide effort to rid ourselves of the introduced rats, stoats and possums that have placed so much of our natural heritage in jeopardy,’’ she said.

The Predator Free NZ Project would combine the resources of the lead Government agencies – the Department of Conservati­on and the Ministry of Primary Industries.

‘‘Possums and ferrets are the main carriers of bovine TB, which is a very destructiv­e disease for cattle and deer,’’ Primary Industries Minister Nathan Guy said.

Science and Innovation Minister Steven Joyce said New Zealand would prove itself a world leader in conservati­on science and technology.

‘‘For the first time, technology is starting to make feasible what previously seemed like an unattainab­le dream.

‘‘I think what’s really exciting is for those of us watching this closely, is that the technology has moved dramatical­ly,’’ Joyce said.

‘‘You used to have to put out a trap line across an area of land and send people back every time the traps were sprung.

‘‘Now you can set them and leave them, link them through GPS, it’s about one-seventeent­h of the cost.’’

‘‘This is the most ambitious conservati­on project attempted anywhere in the world, but we believe if we all work together as a country we can achieve it.’’ John Key

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Stoats, rats, feral cats and possums are all in the gun, as the Government moves to protect native species.
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