Skip to main content

Wellington, New Zealand (AFP) – New Zealand’s government said Sunday it plans to reverse a five-year-old ban on new oil and gas exploration, igniting a backlash from political opponents and environmental groups.

A bill to be introduced this year would end the ban that has only allowed exploration for new petroleum on some onshore fields in the country’s North Island.

Resources Minister Shane Jones claimed the ban had stymied international investment and left the country’s energy security compromised.

“Natural gas is critical to keeping our lights on and our economy running, especially during peak electricity demand,” Jones said in a statement.

“When the exploration ban was introduced by the previous government in 2018… it also shrank investment in further development of our known gas fields which sustain our current levels of use.”

Greens co-leader Chloe Swarbrick said the government was “tipping oil and gas onto the climate crisis fire”.

“We can have a more sustainable and efficient economy by prioritising clean energy that works with the environment, not against it.”

Jones said the ban would mark the start of a “suite of proposed amendments” designed to spark investment, saying the petroleum and minerals sector contributed US$1.2 billion to GDP in 2020-21.

He said the government plans to ease how petroleum exploration applications are tendered.

The announcement comes a day after thousands protested in New Zealand’s biggest cities, objecting to another government initiative to boost the economy.

The “Fast Track Approvals” bill would allow several environmental regulations to be bypassed and the consenting process sped up for major infrastructure projects.

dgi/arb/mtp

© Agence France-Presse

Featured image credit: wirestock | Freepik.com

Image: Globe with stethoscope (climate, health, science)
Columbia’s Public Health School launches Climate and Health CenterNews

Columbia’s Public Health School launches Climate and Health Center

The Center for Achieving Resilience in Climate and Health (C-ARCH) will serve as a “solutions lab” to build resiliency to health impacts of climate change…
SourceSourceFebruary 28, 2025 Full article
Severe drought
Hottest year on record drives global water disastersNews

Hottest year on record drives global water disasters

A year of unprecedented heat in 2024 disrupted global water systems, exacerbating floods, droughts, and storms worldwide. A report by The Australian National University (ANU),…
SourceSourceJanuary 6, 2025 Full article
Image: 3D-render globe (s. monsoons)
Philippines evacuates one million, woman dead as super typhoon nearsNews

Philippines evacuates one million, woman dead as super typhoon nears

Manila, Philippines | AFP More than a million people have been evacuated and at least one person killed as floodwaters rose in the Philippines on Sunday…
SourceSourceNovember 9, 2025 Full article