Herald NOW speaks to Zealandia's Jo Ledington after the bodies of four weasels found inside the Wellington eco-sanctuary.
Wellington’s world-famous ecosanctuary Zealandia could soon be bordered by a minerals prospecting site, with applications being considered for gold exploration next door.
The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), which is responsible for managing permits, has received an application for gold prospecting over 1.4sq km of land in theWellington hills, including a large block directly bordering Zealandia.
The application for the operation named “Golden Hills 2.0” was submitted at the end of June and is currently under evaluation.
Urban oasis: The lower dam lake at Wellington's Zealandia. Photo / NZME
MBIE’s publicly listed permits reveal separate applications are being considered for prospecting on nearby land between Zealandia and the coast.
The station is owned by the Watson family, who would not comment on the prospecting plans when contacted by the Herald.
John Buick-Constable, MBIE national manager for petroleum, minerals and offshore renewable energy, told the Herald that the New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals (NZP&M) agency did not comment on applications under evaluation.
The agency had granted a prospecting permit to Quicksand for two years.
“A further eight applications from various applicants for Minerals Prospecting Permits also targeting gold have been received for neighbouring or nearby acreage.
“Prospecting is the very first step in exploring for mineral deposits and typically involves activities of minimal impact. These can include literature searches, geological mapping, hand sampling and/or aerial surveys.”
Permits were issued under the Crown Minerals Act (CMA), he said, which granted the permit holder “the exclusive right to prospect, explore or mine for specified minerals”.
“Before a permit can be granted, the Minister for Resources or the delegated decision-maker under the CMA must be satisfied the applicant is highly likely to be able to meet the requirements for a permit.
“This considers the applicant’s financial capability, technical capability, compliance record, and high-level capability to meet health and safety and environmental legislation.”
Neither neighbouring properties nor the environmental impact were considered in the issuing of permits, he said.
“But should the proposed activities require resource consent, those things would likely be considered during that consenting process.”
The permits do not necessarily grant access to the area of the permit. If the land is privately owned, the permit holder must independently obtain permission from the landowner to access the area for prospecting.
Zealandia is owned by Wellington City Council, which said it had been made aware of “allegations of mining activity and major earthworks” at a site, and was very concerned.
“We are investigating the matter and the enforcement options available if needed,” a spokesman said.
Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau has criticised the granting of a permit as “short-sighted”.
It was evidence of the Government prioritising business interests over the environment, she said.
“This potentially paves the way for future exploration and mining that would deal a catastrophic blow to our city’s conservation efforts, harm our city’s thriving biodiversity, and roll back decades of hard-won progress.
The conservation project, spanning 225ha surrounded by an 8.6km wire mesh fence, has reintroduced 18 species of native wildlife to the area, some of which had been absent from the mainland for more than 100 years.
It has made global headlines since opening in 2000 as the world’s first fully fenced ecosanctuary, with the ambitious goal to restore the area’s forest and freshwater ecosystems to a pre-human state by keeping out introduced predators.
UK politician Boris Johnson inspects a tuatara at Zealandia in Wellington in 2017. Photo / Marty Melville
It was the first site to establish a wild population of tuatara on the mainland after the species was driven nearly to extinction in the North and South Islands.
Wellington’s hills have been scoured for gold before, with alluvial gold first found in 1986 in the Kaiwharawhara stream, near where the Karori tunnel is now.
Prospecting continued in the area, but poor returns meant it was abandoned before long.
Zealandia would not comment on the prospecting applications.
Ethan Manera is a Wellington-based journalist covering Wellington issues, local politics and business in the capital. He can be emailed at ethan.manera@nzme.co.nz.