Feedback helping to inform direction of National Infrastructure Plan
PUBLISHED 4 APRIL 2025
We have published feedback we received on a discussion document we shared last year. The document, Testing our thinking, provided stakeholders an early opportunity to engage and shape the development of the Plan, identify additional challenges and opportunities, and build a shared understanding of priorities and trade-offs.
The feedback period ran from 5 November to 10 December 2024. During this time, we received over 100 responses from a broad range of stakeholders, including central government, local government, private sector, peak bodies, NGOs, research organisations and others.
While responses reflected a range of perspectives, several key themes emerged as systemic challenges across infrastructure planning, funding and financing, delivery, and governance.
Key themes
- Strategic infrastructure planning. A recurring theme with respondents was the need to reduce the impact of short-term political cycles on infrastructure decision-making to ensure long-term, strategic, and effective infrastructure planning.
- Resilience and adapting to climate change. Some of the feedback received called for a focus on preparing infrastructure to better adapt to climate risks and ensure greater resilience.
- Workforce and capability. Some respondents stated that there is a need to address the ongoing, long-term concern regarding the availability of the right skills and capability to deliver infrastructure projects, particularly in engineering, construction, and digital infrastructure.
- Funding and financing. There were calls for stable, long-term funding and financing mechanisms, including alternative funding/financing models.
- Asset management. Some of the feedback focused on prioritising better use and maintenance of existing infrastructure before committing to new developments.
- Transparency and accountability. Some respondents called for clearer governance structures and more transparent decision-making processes.
- Regulatory and institutional frameworks. Some respondents highlighted the need to reform complex regulatory processes, such as those under the Resource Management Act (RMA), to streamline project delivery.
- Data, technology, and innovation. Some of the feedback received called for improving infrastructure planning through better use of digital tools, data collection, and standardisation.
- Collaboration and coordination. Some respondents stated the need for stronger integration across central and local government, iwi, and private sector stakeholders.
In mid-2025 a draft National Infrastructure Plan will be presented to the Minister for Infrastructure and published on our website. We will be asking for feedback on the draft Plan at that time. A final National Infrastructure Plan will be delivered to the Government in December 2025.