- Enhanced protection for Aotearoa New Zealandโs most productive land
- Councils required to identify, map, and manage highly productive land
- Helping ensure Kiwisโ access to leafy greens and other healthy foods
- Subdivision for housing on highly-productive land could still be possible in limited circumstances
The Government has today released a National Policy Statement for Highly Productive Land (NPS-HPL), which will enhance protection for our most productive land, providing security for both our domestic food supply and primary exports.
โThe National Policy Statement will greatly improve how we protect highly-productive land from inappropriate subdivision, use and development,โ Environment Minister David Parker said.
โWe need to house our people and to feed them too. Our cities and towns need to grow but not at the expense of the land thatโs best suited to grow our food.โ
โThe NPS-HPL will help protect our best growing areas so Kiwis continue to have access to leafy greens and other healthy foods.
โCouncils will be required to identify, map and manage highly productive land to ensure itโs available for growing vegetables, fruit and other primary production, now and into the future.โ
Agriculture and Trade Minister Damien OโConnor said highly productive land provides food for New Zealanders, significant economic and employment benefits to communities and underpins the value of New Zealandโs primary sector.
โOur Fit for a Better World roadmap that we developed with the sector will add $44 billion over 10 years to our primary sector exports, but is dependent on maintaining access to our highly productive soils,โ Damien OโConnor said.
โTodayโs changes enhance protection for our highly productive land giving farmers, growers, and other food producers certainty into the future, and provide greater economic security for all New Zealanders.
โOver the last 20 years, about 35,000 hectares of our highly productive land has been carved up for urban or rural residential development, while 170,000 hectares of this land has been converted to lifestyle blocks.
โOnce land is built on, it can no longer be used to grow food and fibre. Thatโs why we are moving to protect our most fertile and versatile land, especially in our main food production areas like Auckland, Waikato, Hawkeโs Bay, Horowhenua and Canterbury, โ Damien OโConnor said.
Associate Agriculture Minister Meka Whaitiri said the Government has worked closely with local authorities, industry, growers, and Mฤori organisations to develop a policy that is workable and fit-for-purpose.
โThis policy statement supports the sector by ensuring our best land will remain available for food and fibre production,โ Meka Whaitiri said.
The NPS-HPL sits alongside other national direction, including the National Policy Statement for Freshwater Management and the National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD).
The NPS-HPL will work in a complementary way with the NPS-UD. Urban intensification enabled under the NPS-UD will reduce the demand for outward urban growth on highly productive land.
โThis recognises that using land for primary production needs to occur within environmental limits, and ensures that all land can be used and managed to best effect,โ David Parker said.
โCouncils, in limited circumstances, will still be able to rezone highly-productive land for urban housing if less productive land is not available, or if certain tests can be met.
โHowever, the NPS-HPL will introduce strong restrictions on the use of highly productive land for new rural lifestyle developments.โ
The NPS-HPL will be transitioned into the two Acts replacing the Resource Management Act โ the Spatial Planning Act (SPA) and the Natural and Built Environments Act (NBA).
โThe work that councils will be required to do under the NPS-HPL can be transitioned with ease into the new plans required under the SPA and NBA,โ David Parker said.
The National Policy Statement for Highly Productive Land 2022 will be available here: https://environment.govt.nz/publications/national-policy-statement-for-highly-productive-land



Too little, too late. And not exactly a ban when you can still subdivide!
Subdivision for housing on highly-productive land could still be possible in limited circumstances
I guess tomatoes at $16kg and $8 cabbages, driven many road miles, are here to stay and increase.
There is already a glut of housing around Auckland including the CBD, but instead of filling what is already here, they keep removing productive land, charging people a fortune to put infrastructure to it and making surrounding areas very unpleasant to live in as years of disruption ensues.
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