Auckland Council and the Government are on a collision course over rules for genetically modified crops after councillors decided to propose stricter rules on GM trials in the region - despite the environment minister warning them not to.
Auckland councillors voted to introduce new standards in the region's draft planning document which were designed to increase protection for food-producing regions and vineyards and protect local government from the potential costs of a genetically modified organism (GMO) outbreak.
In June, Environment Minister Amy Adams warned councils against setting their own rules, saying that central government's controls on GM trials and releases were strict enough. The Environment Protection Authority (EPA) is primarily responsible for regulating new organisms in New Zealand.
But an inter-council working party believed that government legislation did not adequately cover local government or primary producers in the event of a GM-related adverse event.
Auckland Council has now adopted the recommendation of the working party, which concluded that councils were entitled to set their own rules through the Resource Management Act.