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Serious crash, SH5, Rangitaiki

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Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

Emergency services are at the scene of a serious two-vehicle crash on SH5, Rangitaiki. 

Police were called about 11.30am. 

Initial indications are there have been serious injuries.

The road is closed, with diversions in place.

Motorists, please avoid the area if possible. 

ENDS 

MIL OSI

Speech: Barbara Edmonds’ speech to NZ Investment Summit 2025

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Source: New Zealand Labour Party

And what role you can play in helping us to address some of the biggest challenges we face, while also creating new opportunities for business and good paying jobs in communities across our country.

I also want to acknowledge our iwi leaders, and all our kiwi investors and firms in the room.

I also want to extend my thanks to the Prime Minister, Ministers and the current government for inviting me to address you this morning.

My presence here, and that of my colleagues Hons Dr Megan Woods, Kieran McAnulty and Peeni Henare, I hope it shows you, is that there is a broad agreement across the political spectrum that New Zealand stands to gain from greater overseas and domestic investment—especially when it comes to infrastructure, growing our own capability and innovation.

There is some common ground amongst our political parties, but what I want to clearly set out, are the boundaries that a future Labour government will have so you can invest with some certainty.

For me—and for the Labour Party—the key question will always be: what kind of investments are we talking about and who benefits?

With a limited pool of domestic capital, attracting foreign investment has to be a key part of our plan for economic growth.

But how that growth happens—and who it benefits—matters.

I’m not interested in an economy where one part of the country races ahead of the rest. Nor will I accept investments that depend on jobs that are low paid and insecure.

Our measure of success isn’t solely about the amount of money we attract.

It is about the people, about how families are doing and whether they have a warm place to live and jobs that pay enough to cover life’s essentials.

Whether we are creating opportunities for their kids, so they see a future for themselves in New Zealand.

Whether we are confronting the challenges we face in a way that creates new business opportunities and sets us up for the future.

The Labour Party commits to working constructively—and on a bipartisan basis—to help attract investment to this country. This is what our own infrastructure sector is calling for, and this is what we will try to do.

With your investment we want to create wealth and sustain wealth in New Zealand for future generations.

But it has to be the right kind of investment.

In the past, governments have too often made choices based on the view that investments and values are separable. But they’re not. Our investments must reflect our values.

When foreign investment is rushed, or lacks adequate safeguards, it can undermine our economy, drive up costs, and reduce local opportunities. Which, more often than not, means the benefits of investment are not shared fairly.

We have to do things differently.

I am in no doubt about the opportunity we have ahead of us. But how we go about seizing these opportunities—and who stands to benefit most—is the critical question that we all need to be asking ourselves.

For me, the answer is clear: we will only succeed if we increase overseas investment in a way that benefits all of New Zealand.

That means investments should be sustained, not one-off. They should be targeted at driving the long-term change we need in this country. And they should put people on a path to good-paying jobs in businesses of the future.

You would have heard yesterday about the opportunities from investing in Iwi and the Māori economy.

Recent data shows that the Māori contribution to the economy grew from $17 billion in 2018 to $32 billion in 2023 – and there is no reason why this trend cannot continue.

But this growth also reflects something deeper.

Iwi Māori take a long-term approach to prosperity, with a strong focus on the wellbeing of both their people and the natural environment. And that is exactly how we should be thinking about overseas investment. Through an intergenerational lens.

And for me personally that’s important. Like the Minister of Finance, I too have many children. Together we have a football team and a reserve. I have eight children ages 20, 19, 18, 17, 15, 14, 13, 12. Yes eight children in nine years and no twins.

So I too have a lot invested in the future of our country.

Where I see a role for government is in creating the conditions for you to plan and invest. We need to set a clear framework – and we will work with the current government to do so, but it is up to you to seize the opportunities it will create.

Before becoming a Member of Parliament, I worked for over a decade in tax law and also in the private global and domestic insurance industry. I know how important continuity and certainty is to business and investors.

So let me reassure you, Labour isn’t going to spend our first year back in government pausing, cancelling, and reviewing everything.

Just because the current government started something, we aren’t just going to stop it because it was their idea and not ours. If it’s working, contracted or underway, we will keep moving forward.

But let me also be clear about where we will step in.

The next Labour Government will not support any step towards the private ownership or operation of our public hospitals, schools, prison or critical infrastructure.

These are essential public services, and people expect their government to safeguard them for the benefit of all New Zealanders long into the future.

The reason why investing in New Zealand has been seen as a privilege is because successive governments agreed that there are some things too important to New Zealanders to sell off.

Our land, our hospitals, our schools, and infrastructure are not just assets to be traded—they are the foundation of our communities and economy and must remain in public hands.

And so, to anyone who is interested in new opportunities created by the recent proposed changes to the Overseas Investment Act, I want you to know this: Labour will restore the protections necessary to ensure that investment serves New Zealand’s long-term interests, not just short-term profits.

Overseas investment must create real benefits for New Zealanders, and uphold our values as a country. Where it doesn’t, we will make different choices.

I say this not to deter investment, but to make clear what investments an incoming Labour Government will prioritise.

***

We have always supported—and will continue to support—high-quality, strategic investment that delivers benefits to New Zealanders.

For us that means:

  • Investment must create jobs and raise wages for Kiwis, not just deliver profits that flow offshore;
  • It must protect key national assets, like housing, healthcare, and public education, for the long-term benefit of all New Zealanders;
  • It must protect our natural environment;
  • It must honour Te Tiriti o Waitangi – our founding document.
  • And it must contribute to our long-term economic growth, rather than speculative and short-term buyouts.

There is no question that investment—both domestic and foreign—will play a central role in New Zealand’s future.

We know this, as it was a Labour Government that created the Super Fund and Kiwisaver that today have collectively over $200 billion dollars in assets.

There has been a lot of mention of PPPs at the summit, but we know there are other forms of financing and funding you may be interested in, such as Infrastructure, Government or Green bonds and equities. Because we have a stable political environment, I know that sometimes the more conservative investment instruments may help with the diversity of your portfolio. I also know that scale is of importance to international investors, so we will look at ways to group projects to achieve an investable offering. We are open to these discussions.

The challenge will always be ensuring that we invest in the right things, in the right way, with the right protections in place.

When done right, overseas investment can help to create jobs, support communities, and grow local businesses.

It can help us address some of the biggest challenges we face, encourage innovation, and plant the seeds of new growth.

We will support investment in housing that gets Kiwis into warm dry affordable homes—without creating a speculation market.

We will back investment into infrastructure where there is also a long-term commitment to New Zealand.

And we will enthusiastically support new opportunities, like renewable energy—not just to cut climate emissions, but to lower power bills, support our advanced manufacturing sector and create local jobs.

I am so proud to be a first-generation New Zealander, and to be able to stand here and advocate for what is right for our people.

I am also somebody who understands that what you have to offer has the potential to change New Zealand for the better.

Labour is committed to working constructively to ensure our investment settings support growth while safeguarding New Zealand’s interests.

We want a future where our infrastructure is world-class.

Our industries are strong and innovative.

Our workers benefit from high-wage, high-skill jobs.

Our economy remains resilient and secure.

We want a future that is climate-resilient and built for the next generation.

We know we don’t have all the answers, and that we must all work together to solve the big challenges facing our beautiful Aotearoa New Zealand.

My door is always open, and as we move forward and into the next election, know that Labour will be up front with you and provide certainty where you need it.

But we also have a responsibility to get this right—not just for today, but for the generations to come.

Nō reira, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou, tēnā koutou katoa.

Fa’afetai lava mo le avanoa.

Thank you. 


Media: Check against delivery.

MIL OSI

Release: Labour does not support PPPs for prisons

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Source: New Zealand Labour Party

Labour does not support the private ownership of core infrastructure like schools, hospitals and prisons, which will only see worse outcomes for Kiwis.

“Despite all of this Government’s talk about bipartisanship on infrastructure and the importance of long-term planning and investment, Labour wasn’t briefed on this,” Labour corrections spokesperson Tracey McLellan said.

“The National Party thinks PPPs are the solution to all problems, but they often end up costing us more. This isn’t how we would’ve gone about it – it is unclear what the ongoing costs over 25 years will be, whether it is good value for taxpayer money, or even if it is cheaper or better than what public investment would do.

“They are already planning to spend $800 million on only the first phase of this project, so New Zealanders are paying for this regardless.

“Previous iterations of PPPs in prisons have gone terribly wrong – but at least National has learned its lesson on operations and this facility will continue to be run by Corrections. 

“This is a backwards announcement. We shouldn’t be building more beds to lock more people up and this kind of investment should be going towards reducing crime and increasing rehabilitation,” Tracey McLellan said.


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MIL OSI

Food prices increase 2.4 percent annually – Stats NZ media and information release: Selected price indexes: February 2025

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Source: Statistics New Zealand

Food prices increase 2.4 percent annually 14 March 2025 – Food prices increased 2.4 percent in the 12 months to February 2025, following a 2.3 percent increase in the 12 months to January 2025, according to figures released by Stats NZ today.

Higher prices for the grocery food group and the restaurant meals and ready-to-eat food group contributed most to the annual increase in food prices, up 4.3 percent and 2.5 percent, respectively.

The price increase for grocery food was due to higher prices for milk, butter, and olive oil.

The average price of 2L of milk was $4.55 in February 2025, up from $3.94 in February 2024.

Files:

MIL OSI

Selected price indexes: February 2025 – exclusion of rental data

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Source: Statistics New Zealand

Selected price indexes: February 2025 – exclusion of rental data – 13 March 2025

The February 2025 SPI release due out tomorrow, 14 March 2025, will not include actual rentals for housing data.  

The dataset used to compile this information for this month is incomplete and we are not confident the measure will meet customer expectations. We will provide a further update in due course.

MIL OSI

Government Plans – PPPs pose risks to New Zealand workers – PSA

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Source: PSA

The PSA is warning that Private Public Partnerships (PPPs) will lead to New Zealand workers losing their jobs, being paid lower wages and having conditions reduced and poorer quality, and more expensive services and infrastructure.
Privatisation is based on the myth of private sector efficiency, which in reality equates to reducing service and staffing levels, wages and conditions for workers so companies can turn a profit.
Private companies need to make a profit. They do this by reducing service levels, staffing and wages and conditions, Fleur Fitzsimons National Secretary of the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi says.
We saw this in 2015 when British company Serco lost the right to manage Mt Eden prison after videos surfaced of fight clubs in the prison. It emerged that drugs and cell phones were not controlled, there were inadequate staffing levels and staff turned a blind eye to violent behaviour.
“PPPs are a failed model. It makes a false assumption that private enterprise will be more efficient. The reality is the need to make a profit means money is taken away from providing the service.
PPP contracts have hidden costs because private sector borrowing is more expensive, and they are highly complex and expensive to set up with tendering, advertising and procurement processes needing to be paid for,” Fitzsimons says.
Public services, such as health, social services, prisons and education, are by their very nature a public good that the State should provide directly.
“Delegating provision of public services to corporates reduces the public control and oversight of how services or infrastructure is managed over the life of PPP contracts.
Contracts reduce the ability of governments to intervene for the public good and performance failures can get hidden behind a curtain of “commercial confidentiality”.
Ultimately the taxpayer ends up having to bear the risks of the contracts because the State has to intervene when the corporates fail or fail to deliver a safe service, Fitzsimons says.

MIL OSI

Greenpeace – Luxon’s mining obsession drives away second offshore wind investor

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Source: Greenpeace

Greenpeace is calling on the Government to restore confidence to offshore wind investors by cancelling the fast track process for seabed mining, after it was revealed today that another offshore wind investor announced they were halting plans to invest here due to seabed mining.
“On the very day that Prime Minister Luxon is spruiking his pro-investment qualifications at his own Infrastructure Summit, a second offshore wind investor is in the news being driven out of New Zealand by Luxon’s obsession with mining, seabed mining in particular,” said Dr Russel Norman, Greenpeace Aotearoa Executive Director.
“The offshore wind industry is a $50 billion opportunity for New Zealand to benefit from cheap renewable generation while creating thousands of jobs but it is blocked by the Luxon government’s support for seabed mining.
Newsroom has reported today that a second offshore wind group, Sumitomo, has been forced to halt plans for massive new electricity generation in the south Taranaki Bight after the government announced it was promoting seabed mining in the same space.
In 2024, Spanish offshore wind developer BlueFloat Energy announced it would no longer pursue its plans for wind farms off the coast of Taranaki and Waikato, citing uncertainties around seabed allocation.
“This is a government that is hostile to offshore renewable energy investment and that irrational position is now embarrassing New Zealand with coverage in offshore media such as Bloomberg,” says Norman.
“The Luxon Government has slammed the door shut in the face of offshore wind investors, instead promoting the environmentally destructive seabed mining industry of their campaign donors.
“If the government is serious about climate change, serious about attracting investment to meet the energy needs of the country, then it will cancel seabed mining and open the door to offshore wind investment.”

MIL OSI

Arts – NZSA 2025 CompleteMS Programme

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Source: NZSA Te Puni Kaituhi O Aotearoa

Do you have a completed draft of your manuscript that’s ready to take to the next level? Poetry, fiction, short fiction, non-fiction…

Apply now for the NZSA Te Puni Kaituhi O Aotearoa CompleteMS Manuscript Assessment Programme.

See: https://authors.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=905a5275ec5c023659502ec21&id=92ffb1a8a6&e=466373ae7c

The NZSA CompleteMS assessment programme is open for applications
 until 28 May 2025.

CompleteMS is for writers who have completed a manuscript through a number of drafts and now require the objective view of an experienced assessor to provide a constructive critique.

The thirteen successful applications will receive essential critical written feedback (followed by a Q+A session) from an NZSA Assessor on an advanced work, moving it closer to publication. (ref. https://authors.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=905a5275ec5c023659502ec21&id=c80495500a&e=466373ae7c )

To apply for this professional development you need to be a current member of the New Zealand Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi o Aotearoa (PEN NZ) Inc. Membership of NZSA is $150 per annum, with a reduced rate for students – more about membership here: https://authors.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=905a5275ec5c023659502ec21&id=a19ec62458&e=466373ae7c

New Zealand Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi O Aotearoa seeks to reflect and expand the depth and breadth of our sector and welcome applications from diverse writers working across a range of genres and writing disciplines. We tag three assessments for diverse writers and for Māori.

Further information and application forms: https://authors.us5.list-manage.com/track/click?u=905a5275ec5c023659502ec21&id=38a26544ce&e=466373ae7c

Some comments on the assessment experience:

From writer’s who received assessments through CompleteMS last year:

‘The comments were insightful, applicable, and specific. I feel as though I left this assessment with concrete next steps not only for my manuscript but also for my ongoing practice.’
‘The Q&A session was really useful as I was able to brainstorm plot tweaks and improvements on the spot and get instant feedback about whether I was on the right track now. ‘

From one of our NZSA Assessors:

As an CompleteMS programme assessor, author, editor and creative writing lecturer Siobhan Harvey says: This is an absolutely indispensable service offered by the NZSA to a key author market.

The CompleteMS Programme is made possible with support from Creative New Zealand.

MIL OSI

Finance Sector – Otago retains top spot in ASB’s latest Regional Economic Scoreboard – ASB

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Source: ASB

Otago top of the leaderboard for second quarter running
The South Island secures top four places through an uptick in tourism, strong rise in construction and increased consumer confidence
Economic recovery expected to be gradual, rather than swift, across 2025

South Island leads this quarter, with Otago remaining on top

The South Island finished 2024 on a high with Otago, Canterbury, Tasman and Southland taking the top four spots in this quarter’s ASB Regional Economic Scoreboard.

The Scoreboard ranks regions based on year-on-year growth across a range of measures, including employment, building consents and retail sales.

“It’s great to see Otago has achieved another back-to-back victory this quarter and the region could maintain its position for some time.” says ASB Chief Economist Nick Tuffley.

The recent tourism increase has greatly boosted the Central Lakes region, contributing to Otago’s leading position in retail trade and second in employment growth. Retail spending for the region was up 9.1% annually, compared to the national average of 1.4%. Despite the weak labour market nationwide, employment in the region expanded by 2.3% compared to a year ago.

Tasman and Canterbury coming in close behind

Tasman made significant strides this quarter, climbing four spots to third place due to a significant increase in construction and employment, boosting the region’s progress.

“Building consents in Tasman are up 40.6% annually, driven by a 165.8% annual increase in non-residential construction. This contrasts with the national average, which shows only a 0.7% increase in total building consents. It’s interesting to see Tasman is now significantly outperforming the rest of the country in this category.”

Canterbury remains steady and optimistic in second place, with an uptick in consumer confidence, and a robust 3.2% increase in retail sales – more than double the national average.

Gisborne has taken a tumble this quarter to 12th, down 8 places. After a strong 2024, Gisborne’s pace has slowed, with employment in the combined Gisborne/Hawe’s Bay regions declining 6.9%. Retail sales also softened, but there were bright spots, including an 11% rise in new car registrations, well above the national downturn.

Tuffley says that pursuing post-cyclone reconstruction, building resilience in the forestry sector, and improving economic growth conditions may support steady progress in the Gisborne region.

Cautiously optimistic for 2025

Despite OCR cuts, easing interest rates and inflation stabilising, the general state of New Zealand’s economy in the last quarter of 2024 remained weak.

“Thriving in 2025 might take longer than previously expected, with some headwinds facing the economy including rising unemployment and easing net migration inflows.”

“While we are seeing signs of recovery across a number of sectors, and the impact of lower interest rates, geopolitical uncertainties will mean a watching brief for 2025, with particular focus on the two T’s – Trump and tariffs.”

The full ASB Regional Economic Scoreboard, along with other recent ASB reports covering a range of commentary, can be accessed at our ASB Economic Insights page: https://www.asb.co.nz/documents/economic-insights.html

About the ASB Regional Economic Scoreboard

The ASB Regional Economic Scoreboard takes the latest quarterly regional statistics and ranks the economic performance of New Zealand’s 16 Regional Council areas. The fastest growing regions gain the highest ratings, and a good performance by the national economy raises the ratings of all regions. Ratings are updated every three months, and are based on 11 measures, including employment, construction, retail trade, and house prices.

MIL OSI

Fire Safety – Outdoor fires now banned in all of Auckland and Northland

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Source: Fire and Emergency New Zealand

Fire and Emergency New Zealand has declared a prohibited season for Auckland, Waitematā and Counties Manukau Districts from 8am Friday 14 March, until further notice.
Northland and most of Waikato are already in a prohibited season, which means no outdoor fires are allowed and all fire permits are revoked.
Te Hiku Region Manager Ron Devlin says the hot, dry conditions are forecast to continue, so the ban is in place to prevent unwanted wildfires in the region.
“Aucklanders can see the grass is about as dry as it can get, and we’ve had a lot of fires escape and get out of control this summer,” he says.
“These include the Māngere Mountain fire, the spate of fires at Port Waikato, and others just in the past week which needed multiple fire crews to get them safely under control.
“We know 97 per cent of New Zealand’s wildfires are caused by people. These fires threaten our safety, property, environment and wildlife – and they are preventable.”
Ron Devlin advises people to hold off on “hot works” such as welding, grinding, chainsawing or mowing the lawn while the region is so dry.
“Even parking a hot car on dry grass has the potential to start a devastating wildfire,” he says.
“If you don’t know what the fire restrictions are in your area, go to www.checkitsalright.nz and enter your location.
“You’ll find specific advice for your area and the current conditions, and guidance around fire safety.”

MIL OSI