"Even without the potential for rapid growth, I have found it to be not adequate."
Green groups had hoped for a moratorium on fracking until best practice laws were introduced.
Dr Wright said that this was unnecessary because Government had time to impose new rules before fracking activity increased.
At present, fracking was limited to Taranaki, where industry used "conventional" techniques to extract trapped gas.
Government and council regulations were inadequate for coping with potential industry expansion into other regions, where riskier, more unconventional techniques could be used.
Exploratory drilling had taken place in the East Coast Basin, near Gisborne and Dannevirke, where conditions were very different to Taranaki.
Dr Wright said the region was drier and more dependent on a number of key aquifers.
There were also major known earthquake faults in the region, and wells could be more vulnerable to damage from seismic activity and more likely to leak into groundwater.
The report said conditions in the East Coast were similar to mining regions in Australia and US, where authorities had struggled to keep up with a massive increase in fracking activity.
Dr Wright made a number of recommendations, including the development of a national policy statement on "unconventional" oil and gas drilling.
She said regional council plans needed to be amended to deal with oil and gas wells.
At present, most council plans did not distinguish between drilling for water and drilling for oil and gas.
Read the full report here: