Auckland airport must be under NZ control
6 September 2007
Goodbye Dubai, Auckland airport must be
under NZ control
The welcome demise of the Dubai
Aerospace bid for a controlling share in
Auckland's
airport, and the looming bid from the Canada Pension
Fund
both highlight the urgent need for legislation to
limit foreign
ownership of key strategic assets to only a
25 percent level, Green
Party Aviation Spokesperson Sue
Kedgley says.
"Most other countries have similar rules
on the foreign ownership of
such assets. We need to make
it clear to foreign bidders that they
cannot hope to
achieve a controlling interest in Auckland
airport.
That's why my private members Overseas
Investment ( Restriction on
Foreign Ownership) Bill puts
a 25 percent share ceiling on foreign
ownership of key
strategic assets within New Zealand," Ms Kedgley
says.
"The fact we have one of the most permissive regimes
in the world and
are one of the only countries in the
world without any rules on the
foreign ownership of key
strategic assets lies behind the intense
foreign interest
in gaining a controlling share of our airport.
"The
Overseas Investment Act specifies 25 percent ownership as
a
'controlling interest', and that is why we have set a
limit of 25 per
cent for foreign ownership in a key
strategic asset. A company with 25
percent ownership
could easily control a company, as the
Overseas
Investment Commission recognises.
"The Green
Party can see no reason why a Canadian pension fund
should
gain control of the gateway to New Zealand, any
more than Dubai
Aerospace. The 49 percent shareholding
the Canada Pension Fund is
reportedly seeking would be a
controlling stake, as was the one that
Dubai Aerospace
was seeking.
"New Zealand cannot afford the economic,
environmental and security
risks of letting control of
our main aviation gateway pass into foreign
hands. If my
private members bill was supported in Parliament,
overseas
investors would know clearly that they could not
control more than a 25
percent shareholding in Auckland
airport," Ms Kedgley says.
ends