Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern arrives in Queenstown. Photo / James Allan
Officials are working to remove Covid-19 vaccine passports and narrow the need for vaccination mandates, says Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, as she tries to woo international visitors back to the country.
Speaking from Queenstown alongside Tourism Minister Stuart Nash, Ardern said as the Omicron outbreak plateaued, the Government was working on reshaping the protection frameworks.
However, she also warned of "future peaks" on the horizon, particularly in the winter months, and the threat of new variants.
On mandates and vaccine passes, Ardern said they were looking at when the Omicron peak would be. Auckland was currently plateauing, and modelling for the rest of the country showed it happening at the end of March.
The Omicron wave - during which many unvaccinated people have got the virus - meant the level of protection of the vaccinated plus those with immunity from catching the virus would be well above 95 per cent and further allow movement on vaccine passes, she said.
Ardern said there were was more work they could do on working holiday visas, too.
Traditionally, New Zealand had not had to market this as an option, but the Government was looking to work with Tourism NZ to promote the country to working holidaymakers.
Nash said the Government recognised tourism-dependent areas needed to build greater resilience. They were working on how to build that over time.
Queenstown would always be a global tourism area but they wanted to build on that.
A warm Kiwi welcome would go out to everyone, but the focus would be on high-value tourists, he said.
It was not about getting numbers, but delivering on people's expectations and building quality experiences.
Speaking about the death of Tā Wira Gardiner, Ardern said he was a generous person, giving a life of service to all New Zealanders.
He would leave a legacy and be deeply missed.
Ardern this morning did a promotional interview on the Australian breakfast show Sunrise.
"I cannot remember a time when we have been so excited about the prospect of seeing as many Australians as possible come and visit us," Ardern told Sunrise, speaking from Queenstown.
"You can expect to get the warmest possible welcome you can imagine."
The border was originally scheduled to reopen to tourists at the latest by July, but the Government brought forward the schedule as the country moves through the Omicron peak.
Those crossing the Tasman can arrive from 11.59pm April 12, while people from other visa waiver countries - including the United States and United Kingdom - can enter from May 2.
Self-isolation rules have also been dropped recently, reflecting the shift in risk profile from international arrivals, who now only have to return a negative pre-departure test and do rapid antigen tests on days 1 and 5 once in New Zealand.
Ardern said the outbreak was now "stabilising" allowing them to set the April 12 date to give the industry some warning.
Ardern said the border announcement had been met here with "a sense of relief, anticipation, excitement and joy".
Tourism was "hugely important" to the economy, Ardern said.
The once nearly-$42 billion industry had been decimated after the borders were shut because of the pandemic, and thousands of jobs were lost.
The border reopening for tourists has been welcomed by tourism operators and the wider industry.
It has also been accompanied by a $49 million tourism kick-start fund to help businesses in hardest-hit regions, including Fiordland, Queenstown, Wanaka, Kaikōura, Westland and the Mackenzie District.
While Queenstown was popular domestically, Australia was a "very important market", Ardern said.
About 40 per cent of tourists across the country came from Australia, she said.
But, as with Australia, tourism was about more than just money, she said.
"For us, it is about a step towards more normality. So much of who we are as a nation is defined by our tourism because we pride ourselves on welcoming people, showing off our country with amazing hospitality.
"To not have been able to do that has been a real blow for us for two years ... we are elated."
Asked about any scenarios where border movements could be tightened again - and managed isolation and quarantine re-introduced - Ardern said it would be similar worldwide.
"Covid is here. It is vastly different than those periods before when we were trying to operate that [transtasman] bubble while trying to keep Covid out.
"We are in vastly different places. We are both highly vaccinated, both have Covid here and are managing as the rest of the world is.
"The only thing I think anyone could say could cause disruption at the border in the future would be another variant, highly dangerous, where vaccines don't work.
"To be frank, that would cause the whole world to think differently."