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Southeast Asia – the Foreign Policy reset

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Source: New Zealand Government

[Speech delivered to the ASEAN – NZ Business Council, at 7:35am, Auckland Business Chamber]

Good morning.

Simon Bridges, Chief Executive of the Auckland Business Chamber; Kathleen Morrison, Chair of the ASEAN–NZ Business Council; Ambassadors and High Commissioners; distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen.

It is a pleasure to be with you at this early hour. Foreign policy may not seem like breakfast fare. Yet it shapes the deals you strike, the people you employ, the stability your businesses depend on, and the markets you seek to grow.

Why a Foreign Policy Reset?

Last year, Cabinet approved a reset of New Zealand’s foreign policy. It requires us to focus harder, move faster, and lift our ambition with our key partners in Southeast Asia.

Why a reset? Because the world has changed – and because drifting is not a strategy, however much our predecessor treated it like one.

The global outlook is worsening. Ukraine remains under illegal assault. For two years, the Middle East has been beset by conflict and humanitarian crisis. The rules, institutions, and norms that steadied the post-war order are now seriously strained. In too many places, power is replacing principle.

A generation ago, the picture looked different. Trade liberalisation was advancing. Democracy was on the march. Multilateralism was effective and widely respected. Today, uncertainty is the operating environment. The system is under pressure, and geography offers no protection.

That is why foreign policy matters to every New Zealander. It is not an abstract exercise in Wellington. It is the framework that underpins our export earnings, secures our supply chains, and gives businesses the certainty to invest for the long-term. It sets the rules for our vast Exclusive Economic Zone, safeguards Antarctica as a place of peace and science, and establishes how nations should act in the new frontiers of cyberspace and outer space – where rules are still being written.

It is also central to our security. UN Charter principles recognise our sovereignty, and respect for them underpins regional stability. Partnerships with trusted countries help us stop illicit drugs at the border, disrupt terrorist threats, and protect New Zealanders in times of crisis. And foreign policy expands opportunity – through tourism, education, and the chance for young New Zealanders to work abroad, gain skills, and bring them home.

The reset is defined by its realism, delivery and national interest. Realism takes the world as it is; delivery comes through practical diplomacy and clear priorities; with a clear-eyed focus on advancing New Zealand’s security and prosperity. For a small state, rules matter – without them, size decides.

Why Southeast Asia?

Southeast Asia is central to our foreign policy reset because it is central to New Zealand’s future.

Collectively, Southeast Asia is New Zealand’s fourth-largest trading partner. Last year we exported over $10 billion in goods and services to the region. Nearly 10,000 students from Southeast Asia studied here, contributing around half a billion dollars to our economy. ASEAN countries held NZ$18 billion of investment in New Zealand. And the upgraded ASEAN-Australia-New Zealand Free Trade Area entered into force in April 2025, modernising rules to grow those flows.

But the case for Southeast Asia is not just today’s trade ledger – important as it is. It is the trajectory. This is one of the world’s most dynamic regions, where demographics, urbanisation, and rising middle classes are reshaping demand. Economies are investing in digital infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, agri-food systems, and the energy transition – areas where New Zealand is competitive, and where your businesses can find new customers, partners, and investment.

For New Zealand firms, Southeast Asia is not just a destination – it is a growth multiplier.

Security matters just as much as economics. Transnational crime, irregular migration, and radicalisation in the region can have a direct impact on New Zealand. Through close cooperation with our law enforcement partners in Southeast Asia, the New Zealand Customs Service intercepted 1.8 tonnes of illicit drugs last year – preventing $1.4 billion of harm here in New Zealand. That is what practical cooperation looks like – quiet work, real results.

Defence partnerships strengthen our resilience and underpin regional stability. Our Status of Visiting Forces Agreement with the Philippines, signed in April 2025, enhances the New Zealand Defence Force’s ability to train and operate with a key partner – building interoperability, lifting capability, and improving crisis response from humanitarian relief to maritime security. Our emergency-management partnerships reduce natural-hazard risk, protect communities, and keep economies running.

Our International Development Cooperation also supports the step-up. It advances shared priorities – renewable energy, climate resilience, sustainable agriculture, public-sector capability – and creates opportunities for New Zealand expertise. Scholarships bring outstanding students here; technical assistance and joint projects open doors to future commercial partnerships; and climate cooperation links our science and private sector to the region’s green-economy transition.

In short: Southeast Asia advances New Zealand’s prosperity, security, and resilience. It aligns with our Government’s “Going for Growth” agenda – doubling export value, attracting investment, tackling non-tariff barriers, and lifting innovation. And it is a region where New Zealand is respected as a principled, practical, and reliable partner.

What have we achieved so far?

Since the reset, we have lifted our tempo and our ambition. We have undertaken 38 Prime Ministerial and Ministerial visits to Southeast Asia. These visits are not symbolic gestures. They are the hard yards of statecraft – building trust, unlocking market access, advancing security cooperation, and deepening people-to-people links. The return visits to New Zealand, and the growing flow of delegations and officials in both directions, confirm that the region welcomes a stronger New Zealand presence.

We’d like to highlight three tangible outcomes of this step-up.

First: Viet Nam. Marking 50 years, we elevated ties to a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership – a serious, practical commitment to do more together. Prime Ministers have set a NZ$5 billion two-way trade target by the end of 2026; Climate Change Ministers signed a new arrangement; and officials are finalising a 2025–2030 Plan of Action including pillars in climate, science and technology, and defence, oceans and security. With growth around six per cent and a path to high-income status, Viet Nam has momentum – and New Zealand will be a reliable partner on that journey.

Second: Singapore. Marking 60 years, Prime Ministers Wong and Luxon launched our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership last Friday – lifting cooperation across trade and the economy, defence and security, science and innovation, people links, and resilient supply chains. Singapore is our largest Southeast Asian trading partner and a critical hub for Kiwi firms, with exports already above NZ$2.5 billion. The point is simple: two small states using trust, foresight, and the rule of law to set standards, connect supply chains, and create opportunity – by being reliable, creative, and prepared to do the work.

Third: ASEAN. Marking 50 years of ASEAN–New Zealand dialogue, we are deepening the partnership at pace. In July in Kuala Lumpur, Foreign Ministers endorsed a Leaders’ Joint Vision Statement and tasked a new ASEAN-New Zealand Plan of Action – practical steps to support a peaceful, stable, and prosperous Indo-Pacific. We acknowledge Viet Nam as our ASEAN Country Coordinator and Malaysia’s effective Chairmanship. ASEAN’s weight will grow as Timor-Leste joins. Later this month in Kuala Lumpur, the Prime Minister will attend the Commemorative Leaders’ Summit at which we expect to establish a Comprehensive Strategic Partnership with ASEAN under four pillars – Peace, People, Prosperity, and Planet – a clear signal that New Zealand will match words with action.

And we are not stopping there. In 2026 we will upgrade our relationships with Thailand and the Philippines. With Malaysia and Indonesia, we are exploring the best way to elevate our partnerships in the years ahead. Each upgrade is a political commitment backed by work plans, sector priorities, and measurable outcomes. Each one deepens our ties, creates opportunities for our businesses, and strengthens New Zealand’s position in a region that matters to us.

How have we resourced this step-up?

Words are not enough. So we have acted.

We have added 22 new roles focused on Southeast Asia – new diplomats at our posts in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Viet Nam, Indonesia, and the Philippines; new primary industry experts to advance market access, food safety, and agriculture cooperation; and new Business Development Managers in Singapore and the Philippines to help firms land deals, navigate regulations, and follow through after trade missions. NZTE support for New Zealand companies in the region is now better aligned with business interests and in step with other key markets.

Budget 2025 funded the Government’s priorities to double export value and deepen relationships in Asia – lifting engagement with priority Southeast Asian partners; tackling non-tariff barriers; and implementing, leveraging, and expanding existing trade agreements. This is practical work – market access, standards, certification, digital trade, and services commitments – so Kiwi exporters and investors can compete on a level playing field.

MFAT has also established the Southeast Asia Growth Fund – $12 million over four years – to support targeted, cross-government activity. It ensures we can back the best ideas, at the right time, with the right partners. And we are increasing funding for ASEAN initiatives under our next Plan of Action (2026–2030), giving us the means as well as the mandate.

Tourism New Zealand has received an extra $6 million for international market development in emerging markets in South and Southeast Asia –expected to generate around $60 million in additional visitor spending.

Implementation: the year ahead

Delivery is the test. Our focus is threefold:

First, we will turn upgraded agreements into results and deeper capital flows. Through AANZFTA and new CSPs with Viet Nam, Singapore and soon ASEAN, we will cut behind-the-border barriers, open digital trade and services, and help Kiwi firms plug into regional value chains and scale. We will also lift two-way investment – quality capital into renewables, infrastructure, logistics and high-value manufacturing here; and into Kiwi firms expanding across Southeast Asia – under stable rules and clear, cooperative regulation.

Second, we will keep building the people-to-people fabric that sustains a long partnership. Scholarships bring the region’s best students to New Zealand. Alumni networks, internships, and exchanges turn one-off experiences into life-long ties. Tourism and air connectivity bind our societies together. And our diaspora communities – New Zealanders with roots in Southeast Asia – are bridges of trust and practical know-how. We will invest further in those links.

Third, we will deepen security cooperation – maritime domain awareness, law enforcement, counter-terrorism, emergency management – anchored in international law and regional priorities. Our Status of Visiting Forces Agreement with the Philippines shows how we lift capability together. Training with ASEAN partners at institutions like the Jakarta Centre for Law Enforcement Cooperation builds networks that keep our communities safer. And our support for the rules-based order – the UN Charter and United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea – is not rhetoric; it is how small states protect their rights and resolve disputes peacefully.

That is the plan: trade and investment; people and skills; security and resilience – delivered through disciplined diplomacy and clear outcomes.

Closing reflections

Let us end where we began: with the logic of our foreign policy reset.

Our approach rests on three foundations. First, a realism that is underpinned by prudence. In an unsettled world, prudence is not passivity; it is judgment – knowing when to speak, how to speak, and when to hold our counsel.

Second, a conviction that diplomacy is the indispensable tool of a small state. Talking with each other – rather than at each other – is the lifeblood of international order. Understanding may not always produce agreement, but it creates opportunity. From diplomacy comes compromise; from compromise, the building blocks of peace.

Third, an unshakeable belief that small states matter, and that all states are equal in dignity and voice. That is not sentiment; it is the principle that protects us all.

It is fitting, then, to recall the 1967 Bangkok Declaration that founded ASEAN: the “collective will … to secure for their peoples and for posterity the blessings of peace, freedom and prosperity.” Peace, freedom, prosperity – those three words still map the horizon for our region, and they map New Zealand’s ambition as well.

The world we face is demanding, but also full of opportunity. We have many friends, but no one owes New Zealand a living. We must chart our course, assert our priorities, and cultivate our partnerships. We must be present, reliable, and useful.

That is how we deliver a more secure, more prosperous New Zealand – and a better environment for your businesses to thrive.

That is the promise of the foreign policy reset – a sharper focus, a faster tempo, and a clearer link between what we do abroad and what that delivers at home. And that is the task we will carry forward: to deliver security and prosperity for all New Zealanders, now and for generations to come.

Thank you.

MIL OSI

Commercial fisher fined $15,000 for trawling marine reserve

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Source: NZ Ministry for Primary Industries

A commercial fisher who trawled in a marine reserve has been fined $15,000. 

Kelly Gavin Scoles (37) appeared for sentence through audio visual link at Kaikohe District Court today on one charge under the Marine Reserves Act and one under the Fisheries Act, following a successful prosecution by the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI). 

In May last year, Mr Scoles, who was master of the fishing vessel Winbill, deployed a bottom trawl net about 1.6 km outside the Kahurangi Marine Reserve, off the northwest coast of the South Island. He then towed the trawl through the entire length of the 16km reserve. 

“We use GPS to monitor all commercial fishers in near real time to ensure they are fishing where they are legally able to. Our expectation is that commercial fishers know where they’re fishing and what areas are closed to fishing, such as marine reserves,” says Fisheries New Zealand regional manager fisheries compliance, Phil Tasker. 

Mr Scoles landed about 700kg of finfish, including gurnard, snapper, rig, john dory and various other species. The total commercial value was $1502, and Mr Scoles was also ordered to pay that amount for damage to the marine reserve. 

In addition to fishing in a marine reserve, Mr Scoles also failed to submit 27 out of 47 catch reports on time between March and May 2024. 

“Commercial fishers must ensure their catch and landing reports are on time and accurate. It is an essential requirement of the Quota Management System and to keeping our shared fisheries sustainable into the future,” says Phil Tasker. 

Fisheries New Zealand encourages people to report suspected illegal activity to the ministry’s 0800 4 POACHER number (0800 476 224). 

For further information and general enquiries, call MPI on 0800 008 333 or email info@mpi.govt.nz

For media enquiries, contact the media team on 029 894 0328 

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Durra brand Tahina recalled due to possible Salmonella

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Source: NZ Ministry for Primary Industries

New Zealand Food Safety is supporting Aldiery’s Mediterranean Market Limited in its recall of a batch of Durra brand Tahina due to the possible presence of Salmonella.

Durra brand Tahina (800g) with a best-before date of 06/04/2027 and a batch marking of Lot No. 78 is affected by this recall. 

“Salmonellosis can be serious, so it’s important that people do not eat the affected product. You can return it to the place of purchase for a refund. If that’s not possible, throw it out,” says New Zealand Food Safety deputy director-general Vincent Arbuckle.

The affected product is sold in a few ethnic supermarkets in Auckland, Hamilton, and Wellington.

Up-to-date information on the affected product, photographs, and retailers of this product are available on the New Zealand Food Safety recall page.

“Symptoms of salmonellosis can appear within 12 to 72 hours and include abdominal cramps, diarrhoea, fever, headache, nausea, and vomiting. Illness usually lasts between 4 and 7 days but, in more severe cases, it can go on for up to 10 days and cause more serious illness,” says Mr Arbuckle.

If you have consumed any of this product and are concerned for your health, contact your health professional, or call Healthline on 0800 611 116 for free advice.

New Zealand Food Safety has not received any notifications of associated illness.  

The product has been imported from Jordan. It has been removed from store shelves and has not been re-exported.

“As is our usual practice, New Zealand Food Safety will work with Aldiery’s Mediterranean Market Limited to understand how this happened and prevent its recurrence,” says Mr Arbuckle.

The vast majority of food sold in New Zealand is safe, but sometimes problems can occur.  Help keep yourself and your family safe by subscribing to our recall alerts. Information on how to subscribe is on the New Zealand Food Safety food recall page.

For further information and general enquiries, call MPI on 0800 008 333 or email info@mpi.govt.nz

For media enquiries, contact the media team on 029 894 0328 

MIL OSI

AgriZeroNZ board reinforced to drive methane reduction

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Source: New Zealand Government

Two experienced agribusiness leaders have been appointed to the AgriZeroNZ board to help the public-private joint venture’s efforts to drive the adoption of new tools to reduce on-farm emissions.

Agriculture Minister Todd McClay today announced Simon Limmer and Murray Dyer have been appointed as directors for three-year terms. They will join an existing five-member board chaired by Rob Hewett.

“Simon Limmer is a former chief executive of Silver Fern Farms and an experienced sector leader who contributed to the establishment of AgriZeroNZ,” Mr McClay says.

Mr Limmer, who is the current chief executive of Indevin Group, is the Government’s appointee to the board. Murray Dyer is the sector appointee and is a principal partner at Prime Markets.

“Mr Dyer has more than 30 years’ experience across the agribusiness, energy, and infrastructure sector and is an excellent addition to the board,” Mr McClay says.

“Both appointments will help drive AgriZeroNZ’s upcoming work to rollout and drive uptake of new mitigation technology – keeping Kiwi farmers productive whilst achieving our recently announced biogenic methane reduction targets.

“Government and industry and have committed $400 million to accelerate the development new tools and technology to reduce on-farm agricultural emissions.”

AgriZeroNZ has already invested in 14 ventures and research projects with the first of these tools are expected to become available next year.

“We have increasing confidence in the pipeline of new mitigation tools. We expect to see up to 11 available by 2030,” Mr McClay says.

“We are committed to meeting our climate obligations without closing down farms and sending jobs and production overseas. This investment in AgriZero will offer farmers the tools they need to reduce on-farm emissions without reducing production.”

MIL OSI

New methane research barn boosts farmer options

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Source: New Zealand Government

The Government has invested $8 million in lower methane dairy genetics research Agriculture Minister Todd McClay has said at the opening of a new state-of-the-art methane research facility in the Waikato today.

“Livestock Improvement Corporation’s (LIC) new ‘Methane Barn’ will enable large-scale monitoring and measurement of methane produced by lactating dairy cows,” Mr McClay says.

“The research will enable farmers to select lower-emitting genetics and will be a valuable tool to help reduce biogenic methane without harming productivity.

“This research further bolsters confidence in the pipeline of new mitigation tools – giving farmers the choice in how they get emissions down.”

The Government and industry have committed more than $400 million to speed up the development of methane-cutting tools with as many as 11 to be commercially available by 2030.

“We are committed to meeting our climate obligations without closing down farms and sending jobs and production overseas. Investments like the Methane Barn will offer farmers the tools they need to reduce on-farm emissions without reducing production,” Mr McClay says.

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Auckland’s First Fully Eco‑Friendly Home and Office Cleaning and Lawn Care Packages

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Source: Press Release Service

Headline: Auckland’s First Fully Eco‑Friendly Home and Office Cleaning and Lawn Care Packages

Sparkle Property Services, a leading Auckland-based cleaning and maintenance provider, has launched New Zealand’s first eco-friendly property care packages, combining home and office cleaning with garden and lawn maintenance.

The post Auckland’s First Fully Eco‑Friendly Home and Office Cleaning and Lawn Care Packages first appeared on PR.co.nz.

MIL OSI

Important update: Changes to Electricity and Gas Safety Regulations

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Source: Worksafe New Zealand

The Government has recently made amendments to the following regulations:

  • Electricity (Safety) Regulations 2010
  • Gas (Safety and Measurement) Regulations 2010

You do not have to comply with amendments to the regulations until 12 November 2026.

You may choose to use the amended regulations from 13 November 2025.

What this means for you

Until the amendments take effect, all industry participants should continue to operate as usual:

  • Importers of electrical or gas equipment – continue importing and selling equipment as you currently do.
  • Retailers of electrical and gas equipment – continue selling products as usual.
  • Electrical workers – continue wiring and inspecting as normal.
  • Gasfitters – continue your gas fitting work as normal.
  • Approved practitioners – continue endorsing as you currently do.

What’s next?

  • WorkSafe will provide further information about the changes in due course.
  • We expect the amendments will be incorporated into consolidated regulations in the future.

View the amendments

Access the new amendments:

Gas (Safety and Measurement) Amendment Regulations 2025(external link)

Electricity (Safety) Amendment Regulations 2025(external link)

MIL OSI

New appointment to Guardians NZ board

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Source: New Zealand Government

Former investment banker Andrew Wilson has been appointed to the Board of the Guardians of New Zealand Superannuation, Acting Finance Minister Chris Bishop announced today.

The Guardians manage the $85 billion New Zealand Superannuation Fund.

Andrew Wilson worked at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, Bank of England and Rothschild Asset Management, before spending more than 25 years with Goldman Sachs Asset Management in the United Kingdom, where he was both Head of Fixed Income, Currency & Money Markets and CEO, Goldman Sachs Asset Management International.

“Andrew’s experience in global markets and his investment management expertise will enable him to make a significant contribution to the Guardians’ important work,” Chris Bishop said.

Andrew Wilson’s appointment takes effect on 20 October. 

MIL OSI

Fix underway for underslip in Mangamuka Gorge

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Source: New Zealand Transport Agency

Progress is underway to fix an underslip that has reduced the Mangamuka Gorge down to one lane since late last month.

Enabling works have already begun to prepare the site for a new 48m retaining wall. 

As NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi (NZTA) explains, the location is complex due to the proximity to the Mangamuka River. 

“During this first stage of works, the team is focusing on stabilising the underslip, which will allow heavy machinery to work safely at the top of the slip when we’re ready to build the wall,” says System Manager for Northland, Steve Matene.

The route will remain under 24/7 stop/go for the next 2 months during the enabling works for the safety for both motorists and workers at the site.

“Construction will stop ahead of Christmas, and the road will be fully open over the busy Christmas/New Years period,” Mr Matene says.

The team will return early January 2026 to start construction of the permanent retaining wall, which should be complete by late May 2026. 

“The good news is – we can build the retaining wall without fully closing the road.  But we will need to reduce traffic to one lane again from late January to complete the job safely. 

“This is difficult terrain, and vulnerable to slips, but the recovery work we’ve been doing since the August 2022 weather event is paying off, with repairs on other slips standing up well,” Mr Matene says.

“A big thank you to everyone in the community for your ongoing support.”

If you’re travelling through, please be considerate to our traffic management teams and drive to the conditions, as it’s a winding road with many curves. 

For real-time travel information, visit Journey Planner or call 0800 4 HIGHWAYS (0800 44 44 49).

Journey Planner(external link)

MIL OSI

RIF projects create jobs, support communities

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Source: New Zealand Government

Projects backed by the Regional Infrastructure Fund are creating resilient communities and local employment opportunities, Regional Development Minister Shane Jones and Social Development and Employment Minister Louise Upston say.

“Regional New Zealand powers the country and it’s essential the regions are supported to grow and prosper. The Regional Infrastructure Fund (RIF) does just that. Through application criteria that focus on infrastructure, important work such as flood resilience, water storage, and energy are being funded to protect and improve the lives of Kiwis all over the country,” Mr Jones says.

Since the $1.2 billion RIF opened for applications mid last year, announced projects are projected to provide employment for more than 1750 fulltime workers during construction alone. Most of these will be drawn from the regions in which the projects are based.

“RIF applicants are expected to prioritise New Zealanders in their workforce planning, reflecting a ‘locals first’ approach to employment. This ensures local communities benefit directly from the opportunities these projects create,” Ms Upston says.

“Because RIF investments focus on infrastructure, they’re creating jobs in construction and related trades during the build phase of these projects. Post-construction these projects will offer employment opportunities in areas such as agriculture, horticulture and processing.”

For example, eight Southland projects supported by $38.31 million in RIF funding are generating jobs across construction, engineering, and project management during the build phase. The Rakiura renewable energy project, SpaceOps Satellite Station, Ocean Beach aquaculture and five flood resilience projects are projected to provide employment for 180 FTE during construction. 

Once complete, further employment opportunities will be created in areas such as renewable energy, satellite operations, and aquaculture through these projects – Rakiura renewable energy, SpaceOps Satellite Station and Ocean Beach Aquaculture Centre of Excellence.

As of 30 September 2025, government funding of more than $862m has been committed for RIF projects, of which $355.6m has been approved and announced. More project approvals are in the pipeline.

“The RIF is gathering momentum in regional New Zealand and delivering well-planned, resilient and enabling infrastructure that will support economic growth, create jobs and make a real difference to our regions,” Mr Jones says.

Editors’ note:

The Regional Infrastructure Fund is a capital fund which opened on 1 July 2024 with the primary purpose of accelerating infrastructure projects, particularly with a focus on water storage, energy, Māori economic development, enabling growth, and resilience.
The employment projections are based on estimates provided by each project’s applicants when applying for funding. These may vary from actual FTE figures, which RIF recipients report back to MBIE on a monthly basis.
Committed RIF funding includes approved funding and funding ring-fenced for specific purposes but yet to be approved for release.

More information about the RIF can be found on the Grow Regions website

MIL OSI