Tongariro Alpine Crossing

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Italy

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy

seen from Brazil

seen from Italy
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Italy
seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Italy
Tongariro Alpine Crossing
Tongariro (aka “Mordor”) on the North Island of Aotearoa. December of 2011.
Not to sound like a manipulative TV ad or something, but
There’s a bill about to pass in New Zealand that seriously threatens all national parks and nature reserves.
The bill itself states its purpose is to “loosen existing constraints on exchanging and disposing of Crown-owned conservation land.” If the bill passes, it won’t just allow a few extra resorts to be built. Pay attention to the word “disposing;” this means the sale of land to private buyers, for farmland, mining, or basically whatever they want. It would no longer be protected for conservation, or available as a park to visit. The bill puts the power of sale into the hands of only one person, the Minister, who will be allowed to dispose of the conservation land if:
The land is not important for the conservation of threatened species or threatened ecosystems, and
The vegetation or habitat is not the best, or one of the best examples, of its type within that ecological district's legally protected land.
You would think that would protect everything important, but it doesn’t. That leaves up to 60% of all conservation land in the whole country to be developed. Look at this map:
Nothing is green because literally all of it is up for grabs. The orange just means it’s not able to be outright sold. It can still be developed.
There is no benefit for anyone except those officials at the top who sell the land. NZ residents (and tourists) would no longer be able to access these places without paying, or at all.
If it passes, in the areas not available for sale, the Department of Conservation will also be forced to prioritise economic development over anything else. Which is directly against anything a conservation department should be doing.
Please sign the petition.
You don’t have to be from New Zealand to sign. Time for comments (and listening to petitions) closes ridiculously soon, on 2 July.
The PM is trying to open the door to selling off conservation land. If the wild places of NZ were mined, logged or sold off, we can’t get th
More info for Kiwis [below]:
Waikato Falls
Live: Nearly 3000 hectares of national park lost to huge fire
Mt Ngāuruhoe [IMG_2390] by Kesara Rathnayake Via Flickr: Mt Ruapehu, Tongariro National Park, Aotearoa New Zealand.