Halting indigenous biodiversity decline: ambiguity, equity, and outcomes in RMA assessment of significance
Date
2008-08-27
Type
Journal Article
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Abstract
In New Zealand, assessment of ‘significance’ is undertaken to give effect to a legal requirement for local
authorities to provide for protection of significant sites under the Resource Management Act (1991). The ambiguity
of the statute enables different interests to define significance according to their goals: vested interests (developers),
local authorities, and non-vested interests in pursuit of protection of environmental public goods may advance different
definitions. We examine two sets of criteria used for assessment of significance for biological diversity under the Act.
Criteria adapted from the 1980s Protected Natural Areas Programme are inadequate to achieve the maintenance of
biological diversity if ranking is used to identify only highest priority sites. Norton and Roper-Lindsay (2004) propose
a narrow definition of significance, and criteria that identify only a few high-quality sites as significant. Both sets are
likely to serve the interests of developers and local authorities, but place the penalty of uncertainty on non-vested
interests seeking to maintain biological diversity, and are likely to exacerbate the decline of biological diversity and the
loss of landscape-scale processes required for its persistence. When adopting criteria for assessment of significance,
we suggest local authorities should consider whose interests are served by different criteria sets, and who will bear
the penalty of uncertainty regarding biological diversity outcomes. They should also ask whether significance criteria
are adequate, and sufficiently robust to the uncertainty inherent in the assessment of natural values, to halt the decline
of indigenous biological diversity.
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Copyright © New Zealand Ecological Society.