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Politics | Mark Cameron

Councils considering climate change in consent decisions stifles productivity - ACT MP

ACT MP Mark Cameron. Photo: RNZ / Angus Dreaver

This article was first published by RNZ.

The ACT Party has submitted a members’ bill seeking to stop regional councils from considering the negative impacts of climate change in consenting decisions.

ACT MP Mark Cameron said it was not feasible to have regional councils trying to save the world’s climate, describing their attempts as hopeless.

He said it was about getting local government back to basics.

Speaking to Midday Report, Cameron said council interference was contributing to a productivity crisis.

“We’ve got a productivity crisis in New Zealand as you’ll be well aware. I think we have all seen now everyday New Zealanders finding it exceedingly hard to get ahead for many reasons including this growing consentable regime to do pretty much anything, whether farming, the building industry, the heavy construction industry, you can name all of them, they’ve all now got this metaphorical ring of fire that they’ve got to jump through with consenting.

“Now add to that, councils have put a veil of ‘thou shall not do’ until you can meet, and I’m paraphrasing here, certain emission reduction targets that they operationalise at a council level.”

Local councils needed to let Kiwis get back to their everyday life without them interfering in what emissions profiles they had, he said.

“Councils interfering in the backyard of everyday New Zealanders and their emissions profile quite literally down to a farm gate level is problematic.

“It’s robbing Peter to give to Paul. We all agree we want to play our part on the global stage as a trading nation at the bottom of the world in reducing emissions, there’s no argument there, but it’s about what is the right mechanism to do it and if we are stifling productivity for the sake of one council putting onerous constraints on those sort of operations and perhaps another council not...”

Cameron said climate change was a global problem, and when it came to managing it, it had to be done on an international level.

He agreed New Zealand had its role to play internationally and we had “all agreed” to a set of national reduction targets.

But the “onerous nature” of councils intruding was stifling productivity and needed to stop.

Before entering Parliament, Cameron had posted on social media that climate change was “a farce” and that “nut jobs” believe in global warming.

In 2023, Cameron told TVNZ he was not a climate denier.

“People have potentially questioned whether I thought climate change was real or not, I maintain that it is and again I stress the point I represent the interests of rural New Zealand,” he said at the time.

- RNZ