Governments in New Zealand consider themselves "humanitarian managers" of the nation.
  They consider you and I so hopeless that, left to our
own devices, we would perish. We need direction, management, and instructions on how to
live our lives under their wise and omniscient guidance.
  After all mummy knows best.
  They do not understand the idea of a government
whose role is one of governance and not management.
  Where government sets out the rules so that markets
and individuals can operate freely; where each person can use their god given gifts of
intelligence and imagination to make life better for themselves and their fellow New
Zealanders.
  They micro manage our lives not from any sense of
duty or selfless sacrifice. No they do the hard work of gouging billions of dollars out of
their fellow citizens to rule every action of every waking day simply so that they can ingratiate
themselves with the voters and thereby get back into office.
  Health and education are wonderful examples of
centralised bureaucratic failures. The fact that private participation almost assures success
seems to have escaped their attention.
  So of course the environment has proved to be a
wonderful boon for government by meddling.
  Governments find enormous electoral advantage using
taxpayers’ money to “control” the environment. They consistently steal the private rights of
individuals under the excuse of managing the environment more sensibly.
  This grab, control and squander policy has reached
ludicrous proportions in wildlife management.
  Here again, the successful efforts of individual New
Zealanders are matched by a corresponding and continuing government failure.
  The Government¹s view of wildlife management is that
it¹s better being dead than privately bred.
  A very wise man once observed, "at nature’s banquet
table there are no reserved seats".
  There’s plenty of room for those species we would
regard as privatised or domesticated, but increasingly little room for what is described as
wildlife. In other words, species not owned except perhaps by default by the Crown or
government.
  There is a rather romantic notion that it is more
natural, and therefore more moral, to allow wildlife to roam open in bush or tussock country,
despite our certain knowledge that such a practice will ultimately ensure its demise in New
Zealand especially.
  Personally, I have never believed that nature herself is
pure and balanced in all she does. I have failed to understand the morality of a stoat killing a
kiwi chick, just because it can, rather than for food.
  The balance in nature was lost in New Zealand many
years ago with the introduction of mastilids, possums and rabbits.
  The battle to redress their devastating impact on our
biodiversity is never ending and is now only possible with the help of human intervention.
  And with that intervention came a new ethos
conservation and preservation became the new religion of the middle class. Saving all manner
of species became a badge of honour. A person doesn't actually have to do anything, you
understand, merely agree that such things were important and that "somebody" should do
something.
  Enter the Conservation Department which rapidly
became something of a Nirvana for all manner of well-meaning folk who believed in saving
things for future generations.
  Whether these future generations wanted the species
saved for them is not the point, we just assume they will. And who better to do the job than a
Government department? Please note my voice fairly dripping with sarcasm.
  DOC, since its inception in 1989, has enshrined in law
and practice that private participation and commerce in saving our indigenous wildlife is not
just downright unattractive, but illegal.
  In doing so, DOC effectively placed itself above the
laws of nature, economics and common sense. Conserving New Zealand's endangered
species has become institutionalized and monopolized by government decree. Nature
herself gave no such proxy to governments.
  Many New Zealanders today regard DOC stewardship
as little more than benign neglect – expensive at $300 million per annum, but neglect
nevertheless.
  There appears to be a complete blockage in officialdom
to the concept of commercial participation by those landowners willing and able to play a
role in the wildlife survival business.
  In every aspect of modern life private solutions are
available to problems.
  Why cannot this principle apply to wildlife conservation
as well?
  I look at the sale of farm produce that is plentiful –
beef, lamb, chicken and pork. There is no mystery why there is a surplus.
  It's worth the time and effort for people to foster and
increase the well-being and numbers of these species.
  Then look at the numbers of wildlife in New Zealand.
The numbers are in freefall.
  I see the huge success of one system: private
ownership and trade. Then, I look at the failure of another system: public ownership and trade
bans.
  If trade works for so-called exotic introduced species
like sheep and cattle, why should it not work for indigenous species?
  If a highly valued sheep or cattle beast is exported in
comfort and security to some foreign clime to breed happily while increasing the gene pool in
that country then what’s the problem?
  So why not the kea, kaka, kakapo or kiwi?
  Should farmers make a few dollars on the way, then I
imagine that would certainly encourage them to protect a very nice income source.
  Believe it or not, they may even create the perfect
habitat to assist nature in the propagation of that species and then on sell it to the world. At
the moment to do so is illegal.
  Why? Being exported in the animal equivalent of first
class seat sure beat the heck out of being smuggled out stuffed inside a PVC pipe and injected
with tranquillisers for the journey to the other side of the world!
  In 2002, I gave a speech advocating the "farming" of
our endangeredspecies. That is applying the principles of security, husbandry, supplementing
feeding and selective breeding.
  Labour got hold of my speech and attempted a public
roasting in the Debating Chamber. Most of the House enjoyed the Government's attempt at
ridiculing my idea.
  How, for example, would I farm Hectors dolphins?
Would I free range or battery farm kiwis? Would not their beaks jam the cage door? All,
including myself, had great fun.
  It is an amazing feeling believing that you are right
and the rest are wrong.
  The Conservation Minister at the time – one Sandra Lee
(long since banished to some outer island) scathingly announced that I was the only MP
since 1896 to suggest that private stewardship is a sound method of ensuring the survival of
indigenous wildlife. My chest swelled with pride. Quite the opposite of what Ms Lee was
hoping to achieve.
  Ladies and Gentlemen, in New Zealand we farm
whitebait – yes whitebait.
  Salmon, trout, deer, ostrich, ferrets, lobster are some
of the more unusual species being farmed alongside our more traditional livestock, including
sheep, cattle, pigs and goats all with a high degree of success. New and improved
management techniques ensure breeding success.
  Meanwhile, back on the public estate, failure has
become a relative term broken only by the rare glimmer of success. By comparison with the
dodo, we have been relatively successful. In the interests of balance during this presentation,
I was hoping to inform you of real successes of government in this area.
  I can't at this time.
  Successive governments, alarmed by their inability to
save any species, have turned their attention to privately owned habitat and issued directives
that farmers must not destroy any indigenous vegetation. Sadly, they have overlooked
issuing such directives at feral cats, dogs and stoats. The result – feral animals thousands,
indigenous species nil.
  The inevitable result of this "enlightened" policy is that
no farmer seeks to grow indigenous vegetation, let alone encourages wildlife to establish
itself on any commercial property.
  My colleague, Stephen Franks, received a letter
informing him of an "extinct" bird living on private land.
 The landowner fearing sanitisation by DOC has remained silent, as the Minister
would give no assuredness as to the future consequences of the discovery on the farming
operation. No assurance no information. The Americans call it "Shoot, shovel and shut up".
  It gets worse. The native bat a rare and endangered
species -- was offered sponsorship by way of research funding. Government refused the
help. Why?
  The company who generously offered to help fund
research made coffins. It was all a bit much for the sensitive souls in DOC, who also turned
down $4,000 for a kiwi given to an American zoo – on the grounds that to accept a dollar sum
would be to commercially value our native bird. This was unacceptable to the commissars in
DOC and the Government.
  However, progress is being made into the realisation
that commerce is wildlife¹s only hope.
  A survey during the 1990s showed that about 75,000
kiwis were still alive in New Zealand – down from estimates of 5,000,000 not so long ago. It is
believed that by 2020, no kiwi will exist in the mainland, despite all the best efforts of the
Crown¹s monopoly.
  It is interesting to compare the ostrich, a new and
farmed bird, has gone from nil to 10,000 in ten years. Why do we worry about the extinction
of animals we don’t eat, rarely see and that don’t impact on our lives, but never worry about
beef, lamb, duck, salmon or ostrich?
  We do, of course, have a thriving trade in native
plants. We propagate and sell for profit we export them. More people are recognizing the
worth of indigenous vegetation¹s aesthetic appeal. One major exception. The Government
won't allow the natural harvest of native timber for milling and therefore for profit. You can
fell them for firewood, but not for furniture.
  The natural consequence? No harvest, no planting.
No blocks of native beech, for example, which has similar maturity to Douglas fir. No selective
breeding of Rimu or Kauri to enhance growth rates.
  Government is yet again denying sanity and commerce. Conservation
Minister Chris Carter, in his criticism of me, stated that there are things more important than money.
  He had just received $300 million of taxpayers' money
to run his department. I really didn't know how to respond without resorting to ridicule.
There are compelling reasons why private conservation must be embraced, and DOC is one of
them!
  The unstable nature of the environment is another.
Example: heavy fruiting or masting of Rimu trees promotes an explosion in rat numbers
which, in turn, leads to a similar effect on stoat numbers. Native birds then become
their target. Climatic conditions vary from year to year which impacts on breeding potential.
  Disease can often require removal from existing
habitat -- the Archies frog was all but wiped out due to a fungal disease.
  Supplementary feeding can be essential in some
difficult seasons to ensure survival. Again, all part of farming for success.
  All need management and private stewardship to
spread the risk if we truly believe retention of our wildlife is desirable. Just two weeks ago,
three kakapo died due to bacterial infection. Had they been spread between public
and private ownership, then maybe those kakapo may not have died.
  I would suggest therefore, that this recent experience
with the kakapo illustrates that government control and ownership does not guarantee
survival – possibly quite the opposite.
  In the United States, the Environmental Protection
Agency recently announced the removal of 10 species from the critically endangered list – no
drums or fanfare. The 10 had become extinct, despite the resources of the wealthiest
nation on earth.
  I would further suggest that the politics of the
environment matters more to some people than the environment itself. Julian Simon, at the
Earth Day Conference, said that he "hoped intellectual error accounted for the politics of the
environmental establishment". He would no longer accept such excuses. These people, he
concluded, "were the enemy of humanity".
  Such people seem to adhere to the socialist ideal of:
better dead than privately bred.
  Never mind our lack of achievement – look at our
motives!
  A few words on the Convention on International Trade
in Endangered Species (CITES).
  CITES’s mission is to reduce or eliminate the
exploitation of endangered species. I suspect the real problem is that we don't exploit them
enough!
  I, as a farmer, constantly exploit the breeding potential of my sheep
and cattle.
  The Government constantly seeks to exploit the
international trade and sale of my sheep and cattle to encourage greater production and
greater returns for New Zealand. To my certain knowledge, no one has ever suggested that
international trade does anything other than increase the numbers of a desired species
worldwide. Yet CITES seeks to halt trade in species we supposedly value the most. Show a
farmer a dollar and he’ll find a way of doubling it and the species involved.
  Wildlife management by private stewardship offers
wonderful opportunities to both the farmer and the farmed.
  A large number of studies have shown that wildlife
management is the highest value use for non-arable land in South Africa.
  I'm sure that would apply to many other countries if
only governments were kept in the cage or behind wire – not the species. The Southern
African Sustainable Use Specialist Group concluded that South Africa’s State-protected areas
were failing to conserve biodiversity, financially unsustainable and irrelevant to 95 percent of
people where they were located. Sound familiar? This creation of parks and reserves is seen
as a crude attempt by governments to capture land and resources for the public good, when
neither the public, nor the good, have been defined. If biological diversity and economic
growth are the outcomes we seek, why just employ the mechanisms of the State?
  It is reported in South Africa that where full rights and
control over wildlife have been granted to landowners, biodiversity is better conserved in areas
surrounding national parks, than in the parks themselves. In other words, I am more likely to
succeed in saving the species I concentrate my resources on, than trying to save hundreds
with resources supplied by the State. Despite what we know, perverse thinking by
governments still prevails.
  Examples: The Himalayan Thar is a highly endangered
animal in its natural environment of Nepal. Its survival is assured in New Zealand, but only if
the Government agency charged with retention and advocacy of biodiversity changes its
unspoken policy of total destruction of the Himalayan Thar in our country.
  I have always failed to understand the logic of
advocating for biodiversity and the natural environment, but only in the country of origin.
  I received a letter suggesting the highly endangered
snow leopard be introduced into New Zealand.
  The snow leopard is a shy, retiring animal, which is
also highly endangered. It has been proposed that it be introduced to the South Island
high country. Worthy of consideration, I thought, but then sheep also live in the high
country. I can imagine the reaction of farmers losing prime mutton on a weekly basis to a
snow leopard, may well shorten the said leopards' life span.
  This, of course, already happens to our famous kea:
the mountain parrot. An entertaining bird, much admired for its plumage and cheeky
disposition. However, high country farmers somewhat less admire it. The kea developed a
taste for the fat surrounding the kidney of a sheep. After an attack, blood poisoning would
inevitably kill the sheep. The farmer inevitably would kill the kea, but consider this: the sheep
is worth at best $150, the kea to a bird fancier in Europe: $30,000.
  If the law allowed, farmers would be exporting keas,
not shooting them!
  In Australia, we have the ludicrous spectacle of
farmers shooting galahs and parrots to keep them of their wheat. You see a million dollars
worth of “pests” feeding on a $50,000 dollar wheat field. Yet these clowns are shooting the
million dollars and leaving it on the side of the road!
  If they were farming galahs and were able to ship a
few of these pests abroad, they could rest their farms in the droughts that prevail over a
large part of the country. If you could sell cockatoos and parrots they would never be
endangered.
  We in New Zealand should be hand-rearing keas, as I’m certain a bird fancier¹s aviary in Paris is closer to a kea’s idea of heaven, than having its
plumage parted by an irate farmer on the end of a 12-gauge shotgun.
  If people wish to rebut the belief in private
conservation as a means to ensure the survival of the species let them do so with factual and
rational arguments.
  What we are faced with is a form of socialist nonsense.
It makes no sense, and is based on prejudice and the old fashioned shibboleth that the State
knows best. I reject that prejudice and mindless pursuit of expensive failure out of hand.
  Julian Simon once said that the world remains bright
only by individuals constantly lighting and relighting the flame of truth.
  The crux of the matter is this: freedom breeds success
in every sphere.
  If you and I were free to raise wildlife in humane
conditions, then there would be no shortage of any of it. We would strive to care for our
flocks as we do our sheep. We would see they were healthy, and breeding to their
potential.
  It is the stranglehold of "big brother" or, more
currently, “big sister” who stops enterprise and initiative.
  In the preservation of wildlife, freedom matters,
because it allows the people at the coalface to devise solutions from a wider base of
information. More ideas can come to the table.
  These can be tried and, if they fail, we can learn from
those mistakes and move on as has been the case in animal husbandry for over 7000 years.
  Were we free to exercise our craft skill and
intelligence, people who love wildlife and wish to see it flourish would spend their money,
thereby creating the conditions in which it could flourish. Good intelligent ordinary Kiwis
whose goals were the preservation of wildlife could find a thousand ways to solve every
problem.
  The contrast with well-meaning Government officials
filling out monthly reports could not be starker.
  For even the most dedicated officer of the department
must ask themselves occasionally – as failure follows on failure – is there a better way?
  Ladies and gentlemen there is.
  What is needed is what I said in the beginning:
governments must set out the rules so that markets and individuals can operate freely.
  Further, governments must set rules of humane
treatment, transport and animal health remedies.
  We must also remove governments' destructive
monopoly on the care ofwildlife – where it is failing so miserably. Let every Kiwi get stuck in
and apply our energy and intelligence to wildlife husbandry not just boffins, bureaucrats and
politicians.
  I would like to conclude by sharing with you all
something I have believed all my life. For wildlife, as for everything else, nothing thrives
unless it is free.