This page outlines the main elements of the Government’s Fresh Start for Fresh Water reforms.
It provides details of the reforms and outlines their genesis as part of the New Start for Fresh Water work programme that began in 2009. The work programme has now been renamed Fresh Start for Fresh Water to align with the Land and Water Forum’s report of September 2010 [Land and Water Forum website, PDF 1. 07 MB].
On 9 May 2011, Environment Minister Nick Smith and Agriculture Minister David Carter announced a package of initiatives that recognises the strategic value of fresh water to New Zealand’s economy and way of life.
The National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management, issued under the Resource Management Act 1991, recognises freshwater management as a nationally significant issue requiring central government direction. It sets a consistent national regulatory framework to ensure there are clear limits to govern the allocation of water and management of water quality.
The Fresh Start for Fresh Water Clean-up Fund provides $15m over two years (2011/12 and 2012/13) for major projects to restore waterways affected by historical pollution.
The Irrigation Acceleration Fund [Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry website] of $35m over five years aims to unlock the economic growth potential of our primary sectors by developing more effective and efficient water infrastructure, such as storage and distribution lines. This is managed by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.
The Government will make further decisions on the direction of water reform as part of the broader Fresh Start for Fresh Water package. Its work programme is outlined in Cabinet paper: Fresh Start for Fresh Water – forward work programme (PDF 243 KB).
The work programme for 2012 includes:
In April 2012, the Forum made further recommendations on the limit-setting and governance aspects of the work programme in its report Setting limits for water quality and quantity, and freshwater policy- and plan-making through collaboration, April 2012 [PDF, 1.7 MB, Land and Water Forum website].
In September 2012, the Forum will develop further recommendations on how to manage within limits, and the Forum may also be asked to look at whether further advice is needed on:
Officials will oversee, coordinate and manage the overall reform package, and advise Ministers. Once Cabinet has made policy decisions, officials will lead the design of instruments and continue to work with the members of the Forum to ensure that the detailed policy design reflects the consensus of the Forum.
There will be opportunities for more public input before further decisions are made in 2012 and beyond.
The Fresh Start for Fresh Water reforms 2011 followed on from the Government’s New Start for Fresh Water programme, which was part of Phase Two of the Government’s resource management reforms.
New Start for Fresh Water was started in June 2009 to address these critical issues:
The New Start for Fresh Water strategy was the start of a long-term work programme to look at:
New Start for Fresh Water took a three-pronged approach:
In September 2010 the Land and Water Forum reported back to Ministers. Its report [Land and Water Forum website, PDF 1. 07 MB] contained 53 recommendations. The Forum then held regional public meetings to discuss the report and recommendations.
Last updated: 18 May 2012
Last updated: 18 May 2012