New Zealand has formed a new government after weeks of negotiations, with the three-party ruling coalition favouring a revival of the energy sector.
The National party will enter government with its leader Christopher Luxon, a former chief executive of state-controlled airline Air New Zealand as prime minister. But despite earlier predictions after the 14 October election that National would govern alone with the free market ACT party, Luxon has also required the support of the protectionist NZ First party.
NZ First ran on a platform of creating a ministry of energy. It supports reopening the former 135,000 b/d Marsden Point refinery, which closed in 2022, to improve fuel security by upgrading it to process domestic oil.
NZ First's leader Winston Peters also wants a national audit of natural resources including coal mine waste gases, precious metals, rare earths and naturally-occurring hydrogen. NZ First opposes emissions pricing for agriculture unless it is also adopted by trading partners such as the EU.
Agriculture and energy are the nation's two largest emitters, accounting for 37.8mn t of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e), or 49pc of the total and 31.2mn t of CO2e or 41pc respectively in 2021, New Zealand's Greenhouse Gas Inventory 1990-21 report said.
NZ First, ACT and National all support repealing a ban on new offshore oil and gas exploration permits introduced by the previous Labour administration.
There will be 122 seats in New Zealand's mixed member proportional parliament, of which National will control 48, down from 50 on election night, while the Maori and Green party saw their seat count rise to six and 15 respectively. Labour leads the opposition with 34 seats. ACT took 11 seats, while NZ First has eight seats. Peters will be foreign and deputy prime minister when the cabinet is sworn in on 27 November, although ACT leader David Seymour will take over as deputy for the second half of the three-year term.

