WikiMini

Nature Heritage Fund

The Nature Heritage Fund is a funding body of the New Zealand Government set up in 1990 for the purchase of land which has significant ecological or landscape value.

It is administered by the Department of Conservation, but controlled by the Minister of Conservation. It was initially called the Forest Heritage Fund, but the name was changed in 1998[1] to reflect the need to protect ecosystems other than forests, for example wetlands, tussocklands and shrublands. Funding has declined sharply; while $10m per annum was allocated in the early 2000s, this has reduced to $2m per year in 2016.[2]

In its first 25 years, the fund purchased and protected 341,881 hectares (844,810 acres) of land, representing 1.3% of New Zealand's land area.[2] The fund was chaired by Di Lucas, a landscape architect from Christchurch, from its inception until 2017.[3]

In its 2025 budget, the Sixth National Government announced the closure of the Nature Heritage Fund, despite increasing revenue from the international visitor levy for the Department of Conservation.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bridge, Mike (7 December 2015). "Nature Heritage Fund turns 25" (Press release). Department of Conservation. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b Hutching, Gerard (26 May 2016). "'Quiet achiever' protects 1.3 per cent of New Zealand". Stuff.co.nz. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
  3. ^ "New Year Honour for Di Lucas". Landscape Architecture Aotearoa. 18 January 2019. Retrieved 3 June 2025.
  4. ^ Williams, David (26 May 2025). "'It was a bombshell': Govt culls pest eradication company". Newsroom. Retrieved 28 May 2025.
[edit]