Title: Ngati Whakaue Tribal Lands Inc
1(No Transcript)
2Rick Vallance CEO Ngati Whakaue Tribal Lands
Inc.
- Examining new strategies for Maori organisations
a personal opinion
3Pre Modern times, changes were slow and the land,
directly for centuries
- Provided food, clothing, tools, shelter
security - Was the basis of the wealth of the tribe, the
base economic resource that sustained the people - Was the corner stone of culture, the mana of the
tribe, hugely respected - Defending that resource and managing it well
determined the success and well being of the
people - Culture, leadership and people developed to do
that well
4The journey over last 200 years
- Gigantic waves of changes, increasing wave
frequency, biggest yet to hit - Increasing impact of people, technologies coming
in from industrial Europe, America and now Asia
and Pacific - Development through forestry, farming,
aquaculture, manufacturing and high tech
industries and tourism - Development of modern cities and urban life
- The shift of the people off the land and into the
cities - Political structures and power distribution
changing
5Today, the World, the Cities modern jobs
Directly
- Provide food, clothing, tools, shelter security
- Are the immediate source of wealth for most
people - May or may not be based on or be linked to the
land - The success and wellbeing of people depends more
on their families and their own individual
ability to successfully engage in this new,
largely urban world - The personal capacities and aspirations needed
are different and the potential is far greater - The challenges are also greater and need to be
faced and overcome - There is a growing distance between many Maori
and their land assets
6Even Greater Changes Approaching
- Environmental global warming, land use and
water controls, regulation and government
responses - Huge demographic changes NZ population baby
boomers selling businesses retiring - Huge world population changes
- Huge economic changes
- Huge challenge but huge opportunity
7Role of Iwi and Hapu Organisations
- This change requires new strategies and new roles
from Iwi and Hapu organisations to survive and
prosper - Old ways change to meet new needs as they always
have done through history successful cultures
adapt to the world around them, frozen cultures
are no longer with us - The land has new roles to play in some cases as
well as keeping the old in others - flexibility - It may involve shifting some assets from land to
urban investments - Its a new ball game -the speed of change in the
rules for success is dramatic - To avoid positive response is to invite decline
8Developing a Vision to deliver on the Aspirations
of the owners
- Who is it all for?
-
- What do they really want in life?
-
- What do they need to get it in todays world?
- Personal development and capacity building to
reach full potential as individuals in the modern
ever changing world - This will take using the Iwi Hapu in more
productive ways to provide the necessary wealth
to deliver on the vision education, values,
skills, confidence, angel finance - Its about understanding the world, understanding,
leading and developing the aspirations of the
owners and their ability to achieve their
aspirations
9Complex World, rapidly changing all the time
impacts land resource owners
- The wealth generation required to deliver on the
vision is large and time matters - Standing still is to go backwards
- Simple farming or forestry may or may not be the
single best employment of resources - Environmental issues placing a cap and reducing
future without scientific solutions - May need new farming or forestry systems
- May need to leverage, change, spread risk,
relocate some assets into urban investments,
modern technologies - NWTL has 3 and one smaller one major research
programmes with CRIs to find new sustainable
land uses options
10There is more than one way to skin the cat with
land use strategies
- Farming animals new systems with reduced
nutrient impacts. - Farming Trees both production forest amenity
native bush adding landscape value - Farming People rural wilderness tourism,
selective environmentally enhancing high value
subdivision. - Farming Crops Herbs Extracts
- Farming energy bio-energy crops and thermal.
- Collaborate within Iwi and Hapu to leverage off
each other - Relocate some of the land balance sheet into high
yielding urban assets and technologies -
- the modern Mana may well be more in the modern
outcome than the original land
11Ngati Whakaue Tribal Lands Inc. Land Use
Analysis Model Researching with Scion
- There are sophisticated tools available to design
solutions to maximise wealth from sustainable
land use and land management change, including
into urban developments
12Goal Sustainable Land Use
- Reduced soil movement less P
- Reduced nitrogen loss to groundwater
- Reduce land slipping
- Sequestered carbon
- Increased biodiversity
- Increased scenic values
- Improve economics
13 Sustainable Land Use ultimate goal..
but requiring trade-offs between environment and
economic benefits, new ways of thinking, new ways
of generating wealth from land resource
- Economic benefits
- Social benefits
- Environmental benefits
14OCTOPUS Land Use Modelling System
Radiata pine
Lamb
Beef
ECONOMICS by Level
NUTRIENT flows
Dairy
BIODIVERSITY
Primary Production SIMULATIONS
WATER YIELD
Future Market scenarios
SEDIMENTS
URBANISATION
CLIMATE
ADJACENCY
TOPOGRAPHY
SOILS
Optimal Catchment Trade Offs Production, Utilities
, Services
15Collaboration Opportunities
- At the national economy level great investment
opportunities are going to come on stream from
baby-boomers opportunities for JV investments
by larger iwi organisations - At the Regional Level e.g. NWTL has been
working with Te Arawa FOMA and Rotorua-Taupo
Federated Farmers joining together to form
Rotorua Lakes and Land Trust worth millions to
land owners helping to achieve pure lakes while
defending the future for Maori and Pakeha land
owners similar baby-boomer sales to pick up - At the IWI level there are increasing
opportunities for joint investments into major
sectors of the NZ economy. Iwi level
organisations are as well placed as any to take
part with each other and with other Pakeha
players - At the Hapu level many Trusts are owned by the
same people. It would seem sensible that where
individually they are struggling, to join hands
and work together to achieve economies of size
and scale, avoid financing and cash flow risks.
The rewards can be huge
16The Value of Collaboration
- Leveraging Commercial Size at farm level, city
business level, regional and national level in
investments, financing and risk management - Accessing greater knowledge and expertise
- Bringing on Independent Directors with relevant
experience in the new investment developing
Maori commercial experience - Networking with go-ahead Maori and Pakeha
organisations and people in new fields of
interest - Increasing political clout though increased
commercial clout
17Preserving Identity and Mana
- Collaboration does not require any loss of
control or Mana - There are structures that leave participants
separate but able to work together to increase
advantage for each - Understanding the risk exposures and getting good
advice is essential - Understanding value of contribution of say land
is essential to get fair share of cake - There is an opportunity for developing
collaboration of experience in this area to
assist with the quality and integrity of projects
18e.g. Unincorporated Joint Ventures
- Each party remains separate but jointly own a
management company as their agent - Allows getting the best from a partner, bringing
in expertise and experience and linkages but
preserving separateness and identity
19Aim High
- To really make a difference, to achieve the
wealth needed to provide the cash needed to
really help develop capacity of the individual
members, the numbers are large so aim for them. - Iwi level organisations need to aim to grow into
100 -200 million plus size to deliver
substantial benefits - Hapu organisations need to aim to grow into 20
to 50 million size to deliver substantial
benefits - By aiming high, working together where sensible,
being prepared to change, its all quite
possible. - In life, we reap what we sow there are
tremendous opportunities in front of Maori
organisations
20(No Transcript)