Conservation area to be freed up for mining
A report prepared for the Government proposes opening a large area of conservation land to mining, it was reported today.
In Parliament on Tuesday, Energy Minister Gerry Brownlee said a discussion paper on proposed changes would go out for consultation early next month.
Mr Brownlee last year controversially started a stock take of valuable minerals in conservation land protected under schedule four of the Crown Minerals Act.
In his opening statement to Parliament this month, Prime Minister John Key said a discussion paper had been done and would recommend some land be removed from the schedule and other areas be added.
He expected "significant changes" to go ahead.
Radio New Zealand today reported that 7 percent of schedule four land was recommended to have protection removed to allow mining.
However it understood the Government thought that was too extreme and had scaled back the area, in a proposal to be considered by Cabinet on Monday, to 7000ha.
Mr Brownlee would not confirm the details when asked by Radio New Zealand.
- NZPA
Sponsored links
Murder sentence 'not excessive'
Death threat emails 'clearly a hoax'
Climber dies in Fiordland fall
School bus crash accused in court
Heavy rains, wind pound country
Man jailed for crossbow, machete incident
Engineer denies conflict of interest'
Carterton tragedy: Safety chief would refuse balloon ride
Foreign Affairs Ministry confirms 305 jobs to go
Carterton tragedy: Safety chief would refuse balloon ride
Major courts overhaul proposed
Foreign Affairs Ministry confirms 305 jobs to go
Mob cancels star's performance
Kiwis not up with online security
Helena Bonham Carter 'honoured'
New hope for kiwifruit growers
Gender non-conformity linked to abuse
Nelsen cleared to lead NZ against Jamaica
Robinson starts for Chiefs against old team
Man's childhood comic collection fetches $4.2m
Rate the Government's restructuring of the public service:


