The Press

LIM changes part of NZ’s climate risk plan

- Eloise Gibson eloise.gibson@stuff.co.nz

The Government’s first plan for coping with climate hazards signals sweeping changes to how the country assesses risk.

Home buyers will get more climate informatio­n on LIM reports and councils will have to stress-test city plans against a hotter future. There will be public portals where people can see the latest informatio­n on how climate change will affect their areas.

However, the plan doesn’t answer who will pay when property is lost or damaged and insurance won’t cover it, or when whole communitie­s have to move.

Although the Government is scoping out the option of taxpayers covering losses when private insurers back away from covering flood risks, it hasn’t committed to doing it. Some homes could lose insurance in just over a decade, meaning they might also struggle to get mortgages.

What we’re adapting to

In New Zealand, risks to safe drinking water, farming profits, and people’s lives during heatwaves have been listed as special risks.

Climate change could also worsen the housing crisis. The Government’s first National Adaptation Plan notes about 675,000 (or one in seven) people live in areas prone to flooding, which amounts to over $100 billion worth of residentia­l buildings. More than 72,000 people live in areas at risk of storm surges, and the number of people exposed to these hazards will rise as rainfall increases, storms become more frequent and sea levels rise.

Buyers to be made aware

Alongside extra informatio­n on LIM reports, prospectiv­e buyers could receive an informatio­n sheet warning them that insurance premiums could skyrocket in coming years.

Details of what will go in LIMs haven’t gone through Cabinet, so Climate Change Minister James Shaw could not share details of what was involved when he announced the plan in Wellington yesterday.

Shaw noted 2017 guidance on preparing for coastal hazards had been ‘‘unevenly applied’’ by councils.

Both costly new developmen­ts and prices of existing houses have proven remarkably resilient to warnings about rising risks, with values bouncing back even after disasters. Fear of being sued and lack of expertise has meant many councils have balked at publishing climate hazards on property files and at saying no to new developmen­ts, for example on low-lying seaside properties. That’s seen billions of dollars in developmen­t go ahead in potential flood zones while properties have changed hands without full disclosure.

Better funding and support for councils is on the cards as part of a local government review related to the climate plan. The plan also includes interim rules requiring councils to stress-test new plans against a future of high global heating.

Who will pay for retreat?

Shaw said the Government was taking a hardship approach to compensati­on, recognisin­g that some people were less-equipped to defend themselves. ‘‘We will not cover every loss, and we cannot cover every loss.’’

Absent from the plan is a law governing what will happen when people are forced to retreat from parts of the coast. The adaptation plan says a bill covering managed retreat will be introduced to Parliament by the end of 2023.

Government lagging behind many businesses

The plan includes provisions for the Reserve Bank, Treasury, Waka Kotahi, electricit­y companies and others to build climate hazards into their planning. The goal is to avoid dry years and storms leading to road and rail outages, power blackouts or financial instabilit­y.

However, many of the actions and decisions in the plan remain years in the future.

For example, while about 200 large companies will soon be required to report on climate risks to their operations, public entities aren’t required to (with a few exceptions, including ACC and the NZ Super Fund). The Government won’t decide whether to require this kind of public entity risk reporting until 2024.

There is no discussion in the plan of including unlisted companies, which include some of the country’s biggest and most vulnerable entities.

At yesterday’s announceme­nt, Shaw acknowledg­ed ‘‘immense frustratio­n’’ at the slow pace of government

response to the crisis.

What else is in there?

Plans to prepare for these hazards announced in the first adaptation plan include:

■ By the end of 2022, the Government will have received advice on flood insurance options, including how the country might share the costs when private insurance is no longer available due to rising hazards.

■ June 2024: Niwa will have made projection­s showing how the latest IPCC reports relate to Aotearoa and the specific risks to this country.

■ By the end of 2023, the Government will introduce a bill allowing assets to be moved from overly hazard-prone areas.

■ By end of 2023, changes to local government law will require councils to put fuller climate hazard informatio­n in LIM reports to warn prospectiv­e property buyers.

■ By March 2024, there’ll be a public education strategy for getting ready for extreme weather, similar to the campaign for earthquake preparedne­ss.

■ By the end of 2024, have a framework for using nature-based solutions such as wetland restoratio­n and forest protection.

■ By 2024, look at how the public sector could use indigenous forest and other biodiversi­ty-boosting projects to offset its emissions in 2025.

■ Explore co-funding better flood protection in Westport as a case study for future investment.

■ Develop guidance for hillside landowners on planting to prevent slips.

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 ?? IAIN MCGREGOR/ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF ?? Climate Change Minister James Shaw announced the National Adaptation Plan at Owhiro Bay on Wellington’s south coast yesterday.
Inset: A property at Granity on the West Coast after it was swamped by the sea in 2018. Just who will pay when and if communitie­s like this have to move is still unclear.
IAIN MCGREGOR/ROBERT KITCHIN/STUFF Climate Change Minister James Shaw announced the National Adaptation Plan at Owhiro Bay on Wellington’s south coast yesterday. Inset: A property at Granity on the West Coast after it was swamped by the sea in 2018. Just who will pay when and if communitie­s like this have to move is still unclear.
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