Overview
In March 2012, the Waitangi Tribunal granted an application for an urgent hearing into two claims about Māori proprietary rights in freshwater bodies and geothermal resources:
- The Sale of Power Generating State-Owned Enterprises (Wai 2357) claim is about the Crown’s policy to privatise four state-owned enterprises (power companies) without first protecting or providing for Māori rights in the water resources used by the companies.
- The National Water and Geothermal (Wai 2358) claim is about the Crown’s resource management reforms, which the claimants said were proceeding without a plan to recognise and provide for Māori rights and interests in water.
The inquiry was divided into stages, allowing for the most urgent part of the inquiry to be heard first – Māori rights and interests in fresh water and the potential impact of the imminent sale of shares in one of the four state-owned power companies. The focus in stage two was on the Crown’s freshwater management regime and its reforms. Stage three of the inquiry will focus on Māori rights and interests in geothermal resources.
Stage 1 of the inquiry
Hearings for stage one of the inquiry were held in 2012 under urgency. The hearings dealt with Māori rights and interests in water as of 1840, and the impact of the Crown’s proposed sale of shares in state-owned power companies. The Tribunal released an interim stage one report in August 2012 and its final report for stage one in December 2012.
The Tribunal came to the view that:
‘[T]here is a nexus between the asset to be transferred (shares in the power companies) and the Māori claim (to rights in the water used by the power companies), sufficient to require a halt if the sale would put the issue of rights recognition and remedy beyond the Crown’s ability to deliver.’