
Money raised from the new ‘green fee' will go exclusively to environmental projects
According to a recent assessment led by Jack Kittinger, senior vice-president for Conservation International's Centre for Regenerative Economies, that leaves the state short by about US$560m per year.
'The deficit that we have in conservation financing is why our environmental quality continues to decline,' he says.
According to Green, it was the Maui fires that inspired the state legislature to act. The Governor had repeatedly proposed such legislation in prior years without success.
'Those fires profoundly awakened our state to the reality that we have to have a mechanism to mitigate risk and prepare for future potential disasters,' Green says.
The bill goes into effect on January 1, 2026.
It's already adding to a conversation about sustainable tourism management that's spreading both across the US and, more broadly, around the world.
As part of President Donald Trump's signature bill passed on July 4, national parks too will begin charging tourism fees - albeit only for foreign visitors - to fund conservation initiatives no longer covered by federal budgets.
And in destinations as disparate as Venice and Bhutan, new rules either introduce or raise the cost of tourism taxes.
The aim is to turn tourism spending into a tool for conservation, despite its own environmental cost.
'As time goes by,' Green says, 'people will appreciate how well we're able to maintain Hawaii's beaches and natural wonders. We want to protect those for future generations.'
First on the Agenda
Ten million tourists visit Hawaii each year, putting a tremendous burden on the state's ecosystem.
Trails and vegetation become more trampled, beaches become littered, and the influx of people puts a greater strain on water and sewage resources.
Even before the first green-fee tax bill is passed along to guests, Green is making a list of projects he'd like to tackle with the proceeds, such as securing roads threatened by ocean surge and fortifying crumbling bluffs.
The investments aim to preserve tourism sites and quality of life for locals while also creating jobs, with legislators from each island weighing in on the priorities. If the projects succeed, the green fee could expand; if not, it may be scrapped within the year.
Kauai, Hawaii, United States. Photo / Unsplash
On Kauai's Nepali coast, there's already an example of small changes making big impacts.
Parking was eliminated at a beach park that was once plagued by tourism impacts.
By creating a remote lot with a pay-to-ride shuttle service, once-trampled areas such as taro patches began to regrow, and the initiative created local jobs and improved satisfaction for tourists and locals alike-serving as a model for broader statewide efforts.
As a sign of how serious Green is about addressing the state's environmental problems, he's phasing out the Hawaii Tourism Authority, the agency that, since 1998, has led policy and marketing efforts.
Not long after the new green fee bill passed, Green asked for and received the resignations of the entire board of directors. In the agency's place will be the Destination Stewardship Organisation, a new non-profit managing tourism with an emphasis on community values, sustainability and control, rather than treating it as a commodity.
Not everybody is on board
Some tourists are referring to the new levy as a 'surf tax' due to the prominence of budget-conscious surfers on Hawaii's legendary breaks.
However, the overwhelming consensus is that neither tourists nor hotels are truly sweating on the increased fee.
'The visitor industry relies on Hawaii's natural environment, and we aren't doing enough to protect it,' says Carl Bonham, a professor of economics at the University of Hawaii.
'This bill had significant support from the hotel industry, because the money is being reinvested in something that's going to protect the tourism industry,' he adds.
The fees could add to a landscape in which tourists increasingly feel ripped off. Online message boards already show plenty of consumer frustration over untangling the fine print around the state's many required permits, reservations and fees.
Malia Hill, director of policy for the Grassroot Institute of Hawaii, warns that all this could hurt the destination's appeal and dampen visitor spending with restaurants and tour operators. 'I don't think enough thought was given to how it will affect the economy,' she says.
Green argues that locals won't be affected on a large scale. 'It'll have a very, very minimal impact on local people,' he says. 'When we had Covid, we had a period of time where we had US$120 tests per person, and people still came in very large numbers.'
A model for other states?
There's precedent for Hawaii's green fee around the world-just not in the US.
Bhutan has long charged a 'Sustainable Development Fee' of US$65 per day - and continues to attract travellers after raising it to US$200 in 2022.
Palau's US$100 'Pristine Paradise Environmental Fee' has similarly funded its protected marine areas while maintaining steady tourism since 2018.
The revenue from these fees in Bhutan and Palau also directly supports sustainability projects like tree planting, reef protection, and national park up-keep.
In Bhutan and Palau, high fees keep mass tourism from taking root in delicate places that can draw fewer but high-paying travellers.
Many more destinations have been upping their fees, or adding new ones, in recent years.
Venice, which in 2024 implemented a day-tripper tax of up to about US$12 to address overtourism, is more like Hawaii in the size and scale of its tourism industry.
A year into its programme, there's been no reported decline in visitor interest, while the fees are ensuring that local residents don't bear the full cost of tourism. The revenue is helping to fund everything from waste management to cultural programmes.
And Greece has created a similar programme too; in January 2024 the country introduced the Climate Crisis Resilience Fee to replace its old hotel tax system, which charges travellers up to €10 per night.
The Maldives, Bali, and even New Zealand have also passed legislation to introduce new climate-focused tourism levies in recent years.
Green believes that Hawaii's new green fee will serve as an example for other states -though he's less clear on what benchmarks the state must hit to prove that the new fee is making an impact.
'I have had some interest from two or three governors,' he says.
'It's probably different for everyone, but I expect other places that have challenges with the climate, especially those with long shorelines or fire hazards, to do some version of this.'
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RNZ News
4 hours ago
- RNZ News
US arms sales surge while NZ increases defence spending
Three new US-NZ forums have recently been set up. File photo. Photo: 123rf The United States has been drawing up of a list of "priority partners" for arms transfers. RNZ has asked the government if New Zealand is on that list. The list is part of a big new US push this year to streamline defence sales. This aimed to "simultaneously strengthen the security capabilities of our allies and invigorate our own defence industrial base", US President Donald Trump said. He has signed executive orders and his administration is advancing six new laws and initiatives to free up arms trading. Three new US-NZ forums have been set up and have met, while two powerful US arms-related Congressional delegations have also visited this year. New Zealand has recently joined three frameworks that have the primary aim to expand the US military-industrial base in the Indo-Pacific. Political debate has swirled around the issue, with former PM Helen Clark on Tuesday accusing the government of "cuddling right back up again to Washington DC" over its stand on Gaza, and Prime Minister Christopher Luxon denying the coalition's position has anything to do with the US . The lines are clearer on the military side - official papers show 60 percent of the $6 billion in arms the NZ Defence Force has on order is from the US; and New Zealand has been keen to register its "recent uptick in military activities in the Indo-Pacific" with its partners. The papers also show a US-NZ meeting in April about "potential opportunities for procurement from the US". Arms sales world-wide are surging as governments respond to US pressure - and the Gaza and Ukraine wars - to increase defence spending. America's two systems of sales registered increases of 45 percent and 27 percent, for a combined half a trillion dollars of sales last year. The largest single items included $32b for fighter-jets for Israel. But its arms factories cannot keep up - Ukraine has depleted its stockpile of missiles and ammunition so much it ordered a stocktake - while trade barriers are in the way elsewhere. Trump put a Republican lawmaker in charge of a new taskforce for pulling down the barriers in March. "We operate with high lethality and some of the most technologically advanced systems ever created by man," said taskforce chair Ryan Zinke . "And yet, our closest allies get the bureaucratic shaft when they try to meet their defence needs with made-in-America equipment and systems." Zinke consulted international partners before introducing six proposals last month. The first one is the 'Streamlining Foreign Military Sales Act'. New Zealand is consulting on at least three new fronts with the Americans. Officials have had "many discussions" about the issues dating back to at least mid-2023, according to papers released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade to AUT Pacific historian Dr Marco de Jong under the Official Information Act. Three new "dialogues" have been set up since mid-2024. One on space, a second on "critical and emerging technologies" - these two overlap with defence - and a third on 'Strategic and Defence Trade'. The latter dialogue took an "important first step" to "streamlining" trade at an inaugural meeting in Washington in December. The US showed "willingness... to engage on barriers", the papers revealed. Most of the papers were blanked out for security reasons, but one question was not: "What is the strategic direction that the US is taking with regard to its export control regime?" A key party is the US Directorate of Defence Trade Controls, although commercial technology is also in the mix. The papers also showed Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) disarmament and counter-proliferation experts taking a "deeper dive" into export controls. Some controls around space technology had recently changed, they said. RNZ is asking for details. Australia already increasingly has "streamlined access into the US" under recent AUKUS-related law changes . President Joe Biden was in charge when the US instigated the three new dialogue groups with New Zealand last year. Trump has reversed many Biden initiatives, but not the Pentagon's increasing push to integrate allies. The overall goal remains the same: "To serve the interests of the American people." Trump put it this way in April , when he signed the executive order to speed up arms sales and technology sharing. The order sets up the priority partners list, a track to "consolidate parallel decision-making" with allies over who gets what US arms, and a way to lower the cost of weapons, including by "improving financing options for partners". The "priority partner" list was due to be finalised around June. The NZ government has previously played down the new US-led defence initiatives it has joined. It called a regional group to boost the US military-industrial reach a "discussion forum", while US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth praised the PIPIR group for directly supporting Trump's "peace through strength" agenda. A senior NZ Defence Force manager who is part of a dialogue group reposted a Pentagon description of PIPIR as "nothing less than the emergence of a mesh based alliance industrial base" last month. The newly released MFAT papers said being invited in by the US showed trust. "New Zealand's status as a trusted partner has been recognised by the US. In late 2022, the US added New Zealand to its National Technology Industrial Base, alongside other FVEY's [Five Eyes intelligence group] members. We have heard from the US, including at senior levels, that as a close and trusted partner there should be few impediments" to more technological cooperation. When RNZ revealed that NZ had joined the National Technology Industrial Base, the government said this was a US decision and it was "not involved". Zinke's barrier-cutting taskforce was set up a month before a US Congressional delegation met the Defence and Foreign Affairs Ministers in Auckland in April 2025. The delegation's leader was Young Kim, who is on Zinke's taskforce. It came to see how the US could strengthen its "economic and security relationships", according to a briefing released to de Jong. The talks would "highlight our excellent collaboration in critical sectors such as space and defence". The US lawmakers - from foreign affairs and defence appropriation committees - also met NZ defence officials who briefed them on Defence Minister Judith Collins' new $12b defence capability plan. "This meeting is a useful opportunity to reinforce this government's approach to defence, and to highlight potential opportunities for procurement from the US. "Rep. Young Kim has recently been named as a member of a new Foreign Arms Sales task force, which aims to make it easier for US allies and partners to procure American equipment," the papers added. Another Congressional delegation that came in February had House Armed Services Committee members on it. It discussed "New Zealand's increased commitments to security in the Indo-Pacific". Another point of intersect is what the militaries want to buy, and how they want to do that. The push is towards low-cost technology, such as drones and simpler guided missiles that can be much more rapidly produced, or on software and hardware being able to be more easily transferred between partners. The US federal defence budget of $1.5 trillion has a strong emphasis on unmanned systems, long-range munitions and rapid production capabilities. On drones, Hegseth last month announced "sweeping" changes to how the Pentagon buys and fields them, partly to make up for the depleted ability to build warships quickly enough. "A hybrid fleet would put more hulls in the water by fielding relatively inexpensive large- and medium-sized unmanned maritime systems instead of more expensive surface combatants," said commentary at the US Naval Institute . The 2025 US budget aligned "funding priorities with the industrial reforms necessary to bring allied technologies to scale", Zinke's taskforce said. Collins has spoken of New Zealand's need to get strike missiles and many more military drones. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


NZ Herald
5 hours ago
- NZ Herald
How Trump's funding cuts threaten US science and global innovation
Khvorova built her career by thinking boldly, but if slowdowns and cuts to federal science funding continue, she'll be forced to winnow her ambitions. 'What is happening right now is absolutely suicidal,' said Khvorova, speaking softly in Russian-accented English. 'I will stop making drugs. I will reduce my lab from 30 people to five. I will stop training scientists.' With stunning speed, the Trump Administration has over the past six months cut research dollars, terminated grants and hit the brakes on federal funding, destabilising an 80-year-old partnership between the government and universities that has made the United States a scientific superpower. The policy twists may sound arcane, but to researchers, everything is at stake. Day-to-day, Khvorova's lab is bright and buzzing. Scientists are trying to develop cures for Huntington's disease or halt the muscle loss that comes with ageing. Longer term? 'I have no clue,' Khvorova said. The Trump Administration portrays its changes as a targeted correction. Officials say grants are being terminated because they touch on topics with which the Administration disagrees, such as increasing diversity in science. Funding to specific universities has been frozen because they haven't protected Jewish students, according to the Administration. Fundamental research, Trump officials vow, will thrive. 'The money that goes to basic and blue-sky science must be used for that purpose, not to feed the red tape that so often goes along with funded research,' Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science Technology and Policy, said in a speech at the National Academy of Sciences in May. From left, Gregory Smith, Nathan Gioacchini and Philip Soglo synthesise strands of RNA at U-Mass Chan Medical School. Photo / Kate Wool, The Washington Post In contrast, a recent report from the American Association for the Advancement of Science found that President Donald Trump's budget request for 2026 – including a 40% cut to the National Institutes of Health – would slice the nation's basic research portfolio by about a third. A new report from the Congressional Budget Office found that a 10% cut to the NIH budget would result in two fewer drugs invented per year, a gradual decline that would go into full effect in 30 years. The Trump Administration's science agenda is getting pushback in courts, in Congress and at the state level, but the impacts are being felt in research institutions across the country. As of August 1, the Chan Medical School had a US$37 million ($62m)shortfall in funding because of long delays at the National Institutes of Health. Khvorova is no stranger to doing science under challenging conditions. She trained at Moscow State University in the waning days of the Soviet Union, when there was sometimes no hot water, no reagents for experiments, no salaries. Even that has not prepared her for the abrupt policy swings that threaten the unique American research system. 'We are working on developing cures, which are not politically oriented,' Khvorova said. 'Democrats age, and Republicans age.' Disruptions will ripple over decades, since no one can predict what science breakthroughs in the lab will turn into world-changing innovations. Khvorova's work built off years of federally funded research into soil-dwelling microscopic roundworms that revealed short strands of RNA perform like symphony conductors, controlling the activity of genes and turning their volume down. Worcester, a gritty former mill city in Central Massachusetts, is home to two Nobel laureates and an RNA Therapeutics Institute that has spawned 12 start-ups. Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, a company based on the phenomenon originally discovered in roundworms in labs at Chan Medical School and the Carnegie Institution of Washington, has discovered six drugs now approved for diseases that include rare genetic conditions and high cholesterol. The company's market capitalisation has soared to more than US$50 billion, and it has 2200 employees. Basic research 'is almost like the starter when you bake sourdough bread. You can't make the bread without it,' said John Maraganore, who led Alnylam for nearly two decades before he stepped down in 2021. 'Girls just wanna have (NIH) funding' In the labyrinthine, slightly cluttered labs at Chan Medical School, scientists tend to high-end instruments with geeky names like 'Dr Oligo', using them to synthesise strands of RNA aimed at treating fatal forms of dementia or diseases that cause muscles to waste away. Under sterile hoods, they grow millions of mouse liver cells for experiments. In a small room called the 'wormhole', decorated with colourful worms hanging from the door jamb like icicles, Victor Ambros, a Nobel Prize-winning worm biologist, zooms in on mutant roundworms wriggling across a yellowish agar gel. Unlike Harvard University, which has had billions of dollars in funding choked off by the Trump Administration, Chan hasn't been targeted. But it is not untouched. Like hundreds of other institutions across America, it has been thrown off stride day-to-day and week-to-week by the Trump Administration's unprecedented efforts to downsize and reshape the agencies that support science. Uncertainty looms over nearly every experiment and conversation. Slogans, not scientific sketches, are scrawled on the frosted glass wall of one office: 'We want scientific data, not alternative facts!' 'Girls just wanna have (NIH) funding' 'Science Not Silence!' More than a dozen NIH grants, out of several hundred, have been terminated, though they are tangled up in lawsuits challenging the Trump Administration's actions. About 200 employees have been laid off or furloughed, about 3% of the medical school's 6500 employees. A hiring freeze has been in place since March. Graduate school offers to nearly 90 young biomedical scientists were rescinded, though 13 spots were salvaged for next year's class. 'We have this feeling of extreme uncertainty, in a context where, previously, we could depend upon a robust system, a merit-based system that was predictable for the right reasons – the best science will get funded,' said Ambros, who shared the Nobel in medicine last year. Jesse Lehman, a graduate student who focuses on understanding the speed and dynamics of immune defences against pathogens, became hooked on science when he first felt the rush of discovering things no one else knew. There are no guarantees in this career – the contest for federal funding is exceptionally competitive. But what has fuelled the system is its reliability. The federal Government funds the best research, year after year, and scientists chase grants without worrying that the funder may lose interest in neuroscience or immunology and decide instead to buy a sports team. But now, federal funding may be there one moment and gone the next. 'I have this fear that the career that I've worked 10 years on developing just may not be viable,' Lehman said. The 20-year path to success Research institutions nationwide experience layoffs and uncertainty due to the funding reductions. Photo / Kate Wool, The Washington Post In textbooks, science is a steady march of progress. In the lab, it's an iterative process – filled with detours and dead ends that sometimes turn out to be surprises that push the field forward. In 2006, Chan biologist Craig Mello shared the Nobel Prize with Stanford University biologist Andrew Fire for the discovery of a phenomenon called RNA interference: short double strands of RNA could silence genes. It is a profound biological mechanism shared not just by tiny worms, but by humans. Other scientists built on the work, capturing the interest of venture capitalists and pharma companies. Many human diseases are caused by errant genes. What if, instead of treating patients' symptoms, doctors could give their patients drugs that just shut off the problematic ones? More than a billion dollars flowed into start-ups, but biology turned out to be a bit more complicated. Investor ebullience evaporated. Alnylam, an RNAi company, began trading below the amount of cash it had on hand, meaning investors thought its stock was less valuable than the money it had in the bank. Years of science – including a lot of chemistry – eventually turned a profound biological mechanism into a new class of safe effective drugs. 'Sickness doesn't have political boundaries,' said Phillip Zamore, a co-founder of Alnylam and a professor of biomedical sciences. 'Everyone deserves a better treatment for their disease, and I just want to make that possible. And I can't do that if my lab, my university, my colleagues' ability to do science is destroyed.' In the past few years, several biotech companies have spun out of Chan, including Comanche Biopharma, which is focused on a treatment for pre-eclampsia – a complication of pregnancy – and Atalanta Therapeutics, which is searching for cures for neurodegenerative diseases. Khvorova, a co-founder of both companies, came to the US with very little money in the mid-1990s, intending to check a box on her CV and stay a year or two. Instead, she became a 'typical example of the American Dream', as she puts it. She's an inventor named on nearly 250 patents. She just scooped up one of the most prestigious prizes in biomedical research, with a US$2.7m award. She should be on top of the world. But as she walked to her lab on a recent Tuesday, she gestured sadly at a collection of empty champagne bottles sitting high up above the cabinets in the lounge outside. Each bottle, she noted, is a trained graduate student – a reminder that most of next year's class was turned away.


NZ Herald
19 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Chlöe Swarbrick booted from House during Palestine speech
Green MP Chloe Swarbrick's been booted from Parliament for the rest of the week during a fiery debate over Palestine. During a speech following the Government saying it would consider the recognition of Palestine over the next month, she said Government MPs who did not want further sanctions on Israel