Kapiti News

Climate plan gets thumbs-up from Kāpiti mayor

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A new national plan for adapting to climate change provides valuable support for councils and communitie­s struggling with the costs and complexiti­es of preparing for environmen­tal and social challenges caused by our changing climate, Kāpiti Mayor K Gurunathan says.

“The plan includes actions that will directly support issues we’ve been dealing with in Kāpiti, such as changing legal requiremen­ts for land informatio­n memoranda (Lims) so people are better informed about natural hazard risk when buying a property.

“This will give councils greater certainty about what informatio­n to include on LIMs, including linking to a suite of informatio­n and data portals about the risks, which are also being developed as part of the plan.”

Gurunathan said the plan explicitly acknowledg­ed that local government is on the front line of climate change.

“Councils have statutory responsibi­lities to avoid or reduce the effects of natural hazards and must have regard to the effects of climate change when making certain decisions.

“Councils are also responsibl­e for emergency management and improving community resilience through public education and local

planning. This all adds up to a big ask of local communitie­s, especially those like ours whose sole income is from our ratepayers rather than big income-earning public assets like ports.

“It makes complete sense that data, tools, informatio­n and funding is shared or comes from better resourced and skilled central government agencies.”

Council coastal manager Lyndsey Craig said the plan aligned well with the goals and activities of the Takutai Kāpiti coastal adaptation project.

“This and the recent MfE interim guidance on the use of new sea

level rise projection­s shows Takutai Kāpiti aligns with national direction and puts Kāpiti on the map as leading the charge in a tangata whenua, council, community-based approach to coastal adaptation.

“The plan provides useful guidance and informatio­n to assist Kāpiti’s efforts to develop a strategy for managing coastal hazards caused by sea level rise or the increasing­ly wild and unpredicta­ble weather due to climate change.

“A key goal for our project is to reduce or eliminate exposure to risk for public assets and infrastruc­ture. The national plan is an important acknowledg­ement that we’re not the only community dealing with this.

“It will apply economies of scale to crucial data and projection­s and create legislativ­e and institutio­nal changes that we need to support local adaptation planning and action.

“It acknowledg­es our feedback that smaller, less well-resourced local councils with small ratepayer bases may require additional central government support for adaptation planning and implementa­tion but at this stage doesn’t provide any certainty for us on funding.

“However, it’s good to see actions in the plan such as setting national direction on natural hazard risk management and climate adaptation through the proposed new National Planning Framework show how vital this work is — it’s not just a ‘nice to have’ and no longer anything we can ignore.

“Crucially, it will provide guidance, framework and funding which will elevate te ao Maō ri and mātauranga Māori into the overall climate response.

“This will enrich our understand­ing of coastal hazards and climate impacts on our community and embed iwi knowledge and tikanga in all our decisions.”

 ?? Photo / Jack Penman ?? Kapiti Mayor K Gurunathan says the climate plan acknowledg­es local government’s front-line role in the fight.
Photo / Jack Penman Kapiti Mayor K Gurunathan says the climate plan acknowledg­es local government’s front-line role in the fight.

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