Horizons climate change group for Manawatū-Whanganui; public consultation first on agenda
Buildings could be among the items people value in Horizons Regional Council's consultation on climate change. Photo / Supplied The heads of the Horizons region's eight councils are to form a Climate Action Committee that will work across the region. Horizons region councillors approved the committee at their August 25 meeting. It will eventually receive a regional climate change risk assessment, and an inventory of the region's greenhouse gas emissions. An initial regional action plan has been drafted and will be moved toward a climate action strategy by the end of this year. The committee will have one representative from each council: a mayor, chief executive or their delegate. Iwi/Maori representatives could be added if regional chiefs agree, Horizons strategy and regulation manager Nic Peet said. The group will meet three to four times a year and Horizons will pay for its administration. The cost was unlikely to top $10,000, Horizons strategy and policy adviser Tom Bowen said. The committee's meetings will be publicly advertised. The first is expected in December. "In recent years activist groups have criticised local authorities in New Zealand and overseas for apparent inaction and a perceived lack of transparency in their responses to climate change," Bowen said. "Establishing a Climate Action Committee and conducting its business in the public domain may go some way toward allaying those concerns." Councillor Fiona Gordon liked the word "action" in the committee's name. "It might be just a word but it has an important meaning, so I'm looking forward to some climate action at a regional level," she said. Starting on September 7, and for the next two months, Horizons will engage with its community about climate change, using social and other media. The responses will be used in the risk assessment. There will be a short survey but much of the consultation will take place online, using a tool called Social Pinpoint. People will be asked to mark things they value on an interactive map. Those things could be tangible, such as buildings and native species, or intangible such as social cohesion and cultural values. People will be prompted by information on the council's climate change page, and by a list of possible values. Those without access to the internet will be able to record their priorities on paper. Negotiations are expected to be finalised in early 2025.