Tag Archives: Ardern Govt

New Zealand’s Refinery Destruction Was Not Policy – It Was Economic Sabotage

From Mykeljon Winckel @ elocal
via Robin Westenra @ seemorerocks substack

New Zealand today stands in the jaws of a recession deeper and more structural than anything we have seen in decades. Businesses are folding. Workers are fleeing. Families are giving up hope. And yet, somehow, among all the noise, one catastrophic act of economic vandalism continues to escape the national reckoning it deserves:


The deliberate destruction of New Zealand’s only oil refinery at Marsden Point.

Not downgraded. Not mothballed. Destroyed — with no replacement, no transition plan, and no economic modelling worthy of the name.

This was not incompetence. This was government-induced economic terrorism against the long-term interests of the New Zealand people.

And it began under Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

The Refinery That Anchored a Nation

Marsden Point wasn’t just an industrial site — it was the beating heart of New Zealand’s energy security. Built in 1964, expanded repeatedly, and modernised as recently as 2018 with a $365 million Te Mahi Hou project, the refinery produced:

  • NZ’s petrol
  • NZ’s diesel
  • NZ’s jet fuel
  • NZ’s bitumen
  • NZ’s chemical feedstocks
  • NZ’s industrial gases
  • NZ’s fertiliser inputs

It reduced emissions. It added resilience. It protected our sovereignty.

And then, with ideological zeal dressed up as climate virtue, Ardern’s government backed its closure. Not because it was failing — but because Wellington wanted “alignment with global decarbonisation trends,” a phrase now exposed as vacuous marketing gibberish.

The government knew — yes, knew — that New Zealand would become 100% dependent on imported refined fuels. They knew that we would lose:

  • 60 days of crude storage, replaced by just 8 days of refined fuel reserves
  • All domestic bitumen production
  • All domestic jet fuel resilience
  • All domestic ability to refine crude in an emergency

They knew a natural disaster could sever our lifeline. They knew a geopolitical conflict could choke our supply. They knew global refiners could charge whatever they wanted.

And they did it anyway.


“We now only have 8 days of fuel reserves compared to 60 days when Marsden Point was operational… New Zealand is totally reliant on imported fuels… We are without fuel security for the first time in 60 years.”


Ardern’s Legacy: Dependency and Decline

New Zealand is now one shipping delay away from grounded aircraft, immobilised logistics, and a nationwide economic choke-hold. This is not hypothetical — basic supply-chain maths confirms it.

And four years later, the current government under Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has done nothing to reverse or even question this national insanity.

Political cowardice has replaced political leadership. Corporate appeasement has replaced national resilience. And ordinary New Zealanders — the workers, the truckers, the small businesses — are paying the price.

The Economic Reality: Cheap Energy Builds Nations

Every wealthy nation has one thing in common:

Abundant, cheap, reliable domestic energy.

Not imported fragility. Not ideological wish-casting. Not the childish delusion that a country can “transition” by destroying what sustains it.

The closure of Marsden Point was not a transition. It was a surrender — a forced de-industrialisation. A deliberate kneecapping of national capability.

New Zealand now imports bitumen, jet fuel, and diesel from overseas refineries operating under far poorer environmental and labour standards — including, in some cases, the use of child labour in raw material supply chains.

This is what the so-called “clean energy transition” looks like: pollution exported, sovereignty surrendered, illusion maintained.


A nation without energy security is not a nation. It is a client state.


Karl Barkley: One Citizen Doing More Than the Entire Government

While Parliament sleeps, one man — Karl Barkley, engineer and farmer — is fighting to restore what politicians destroyed.

His letter speaks for millions:

“We now only have 8 days of fuel reserves compared to 60 days when Marsden Point was operational… New Zealand is totally reliant on imported fuels… We are without fuel security for the first time in 60 years.”

He has launched KIWI REFINING COMPANY LTD with a vision to bring the refinery back to life, under public ownership, for the public good.

A single citizen, doing the work Cabinet refuses to touch.

Because he understands what the political class either cannot — or will not — accept:

A nation without energy security is not a nation. It is a client state.

The Truth: We Are on the Brink of National Failure

New Zealand is:

  • Losing skilled workers at record rates
  • Watching businesses collapse weekly
  • Facing rising energy bills and grid instability
  • Running a government addicted to debt and slogans
  • Led by politicians who refuse to confront the damage already done

Cheap domestic energy is the foundation of economic recovery. We had it. We destroyed it. And we were told this was progress.

It was not progress. It was sabotage.

The Question for Every New Zealander

Who authorised this? Who benefits from a dependent, weakened New Zealand? Who gains when we cannot refine our own fuel, build our own roads, or power our own industries?

And why — four years later — has no government lifted a finger to fix it?

Final Word

This is not politics. This is survival.

Marsden Point must be rebuilt. Energy security must be restored. And the politicians who orchestrated or tolerated this national vandalism must be held accountable.

New Zealand cannot chart a prosperous future while running on imported fumes.

And we cannot stay silent while our leaders dismantle the economic foundations our children and grandchildren will rely on.

Enough is enough.

SOURCE

Ihumātao | How Fletchers Collected a Waiver Card in ‘Neo-Feudal Monopoly – The Ihumātao New Zealand Edition’

More truth you won’t be finding in mainstream media … a long read on Ihumātao. EWR

From snoopman.net

In this exposé, The Snoopman reveals Fletcher Building Ltd was granted waivers that lay bare the institutional racism of the Crown, the Council and the Courts. Not only were ministerial waivers required for a crucial breach of the Overseas Investment Act to get the Ihumātao land deal approved before the conditional sale agreement time-window ended.

With official documents – some heavily redacted – a picture of collusion is shown to have taken place between the Auckland Council, the Overseas Investment Office, the Key Ministry Cabinet, the Environment Court and the Ardern Coalition Government. Across the governance system, a horrendous story emerges of avoidance to conduct a serious sustained investigation to establish why exactly the bona fide tangata whenua of Ihumātao were stonewalled in their attempts to assert customary rights, while the ‘master plan’ of transnational bank-owned Fletcher Building was fast-tracked.

The contrived ignorance posturing extends to three Māori Labour Caucus members of the Ardern Coalition Government whom knew at least as far back as September 2015 that the Ihumātao Peninsula was never Te Kawerau ā Maki iwi’s traditional ancestral lands. This means the Ardern Coalition Government enjoined itself in the contrived ignorance game of the Auckland Council, the Courts and other Crown agencies whom pretended that Te Warena Taua represented the local iwi of Ihumātao.

Fletchers Collected a Waiver Card in Neo-Feudal Monopoly game

Fletcher Building has maintained throughout the Ihumātao land dispute that every move it made was within the law. It would be more accurate to say the law had their back.

To get the Ōruarangi housing development at Ihumātao through a significant regulatory hoop, a joint waiver was required by two Key Ministry Crown Ministers in early September 2014 to over-ride breaches to the Overseas Investment Act of 2005.

This special treatment reflects the institutional racism endemic in the Crown, the Auckland Council and the Courts since all forums have overlooked the downplaying, dismissal and denigration of local iwi and hapū interests in the land – as The Snoopman showed in his exposé “Te Warena Taua – The mandated kaumātua who authored his own use-by-date?”

People Power: Fletcher Building’s plans to develop the historic Ōruarangi Block for residential housing next to the mini-volcano, Puketāpapatanga-a-Hape, at the edge of the Ōtuataua Stonefields Historic Reserve on the Ihumātao Peninsula – faltered when SOUL’s supporters converged following the 150-strong Police operation of July 23 2019 to evict 10 ‘squatters’.

The Wallace-Blackwell Family company, Gavin H Wallace Limited, owner of ‘the Wallace Block’ – as the highly contested land at Ihumātao is locally known – failed to advertise the farm land on the open market prior to sale to the transnational construction company, Fletcher Building.

The Overseas Investment Office required a waiver because the Overseas Investment Act was breached since sales of rural properties located adjacent to ‘sensitive land’ such as historic reserves are meant to be advertised for sale in the 12-month period preceding an application to approve a purchase by an overseas buyer.

FletcherOIOWaiver3Sept2014-1

Breach of Overseas Investment Act Approved: Two Crown Ministers waivered the requirement in section 16 of the Overseas Investment Act 2005, that farm land be advertised for sale on the open market in the 12 month period prior to sale to an overseas buyer.

READ MORE

https://snoopman.net.nz/2020/02/01/ihumatao-how-fletchers-collected-a-waiver-card-in-neo-feudal-monopoly-the-ihumatao-new-zealand-edition/?fbclid=IwAR3EQVwDfjsOGiYZXg0Kbgf34I3YOclgKT2HHodThaqGF2MmlYLgP3UOgOU