Ensuring the future wellbeing of land and people
How do we ensure the future wellbeing of land and people in Aotearoa New Zealand? That is the question our Long-term Insights Briefing 2023 considers.
How do we ensure the future wellbeing of land and people in Aotearoa New Zealand? That is the question our Long-term Insights Briefing 2023 considers.
The Ministry for the Environment has an important role as an environmental steward. This requires us to look after the land today, think broadly and look ahead.
This includes considering the:
Publishing a long-term insights briefing at least every three years is also a statutory requirement. The briefings are independent of government ministers and are not government policy.
Their purpose is to:
Our first long-term insights briefing Where to from here? How we ensure the future wellbeing of land and people considers:
The briefing also sets out a vision for the future of land and measures that could help to achieve this vision.
Our activities on the land, including agriculture, forestry and urban development, provide for essential needs and support prosperous and vibrant communities. However, they also place pressure on our environment.
These pressures have impacts on the things we value, for example:
The pressures outlined above will continue to affect land, the environment, and people’s wellbeing in the years ahead. We have also considered drivers that may have a negative or positive influence on land use pressures in the next 30 years.
These drivers include:
We have used the feedback we received from two rounds of consultation and from our work with rangatahi (youth) groups to create a vision of what the land and our relationship with it could look like in 2050.
The people we engaged with envisaged a future where:
Achieving this vision would require a transformation of Aotearoa New Zealand’s politics, economy and society.
Our briefing identifies nine levers that would help us to change our course:
We wanted New Zealanders to contribute to our briefing, so we conducted an online survey about the future of land in May 2022. We received 49 responses (this is a small sample size and not representative of the wider population).
Those who took part in the survey recognised that the land supports their wellbeing in many ways.
They told us they wanted:
Ngāi Tahu and Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research also contributed to the briefing by sharing insights with us in conversations and hui after the survey.
We invited community feedback on a draft briefing document in October 2022. We received 25 submissions. They were mostly from central and local government, industry groups, non-governmental organisations and academics.
About 70 per cent of submitters said they agreed with our vision for the future of land. We made changes to the briefing to reflect some of the feedback we received and published the final briefing in February 2023.