INTIEANew Zealand · Business Growth AgendaPolicyIn force

Business Growth Agenda

Approved by Cabinet in late 2012, the Government& Business Growth Agenda (BGA) is a programme of work that is intended to support New Zealand businesses in growing, in order to create jobs and improve New Zealanders&; standard of living. It focuses on six key “ingredients&;…

Dernière modification il y a 12 mois.

Vue extraite pour la lecture · Original pour les preuves de conformité

Cycle de vie

  1. En vigueur
  2. Dernière modification

Country / jurisdiction: New Zealand · Year: 2012 · Status: In force · Level: National · Type: Voluntary

Approved by Cabinet in late 2012, the Government& Business Growth Agenda (BGA) is a programme of work that is intended to support New Zealand businesses in growing, in order to create jobs and improve New Zealanders&; standard of living.

It focuses on six key “ingredients&; businesses need to grow:

export markets;

innovation;

infrastructure;

skilled and safe workplaces;

natural resources; and

capital.

Each of these has its own programme of work.

More recently, the Business Growth Agenda has been informed by the Government’s response to a report by the Green Growth Advisory Group. The Green Growth Advisory Group was established by the Government in January 2011 and was tasked with exploring how New Zealand can build a more productive and competitive economy, while also achieving high-quality environmental outcomes. The central conclusion of the report was that New Zealand needs a broad growth strategy where all sectors take into account their environmental performance rather than focusing on a select group of ‘green’ industries. Government agreed and in response recommendations contained in the report have been integrated into this wider Business Growth Agenda.

The Business Growth Agenda Progress Report 2013 shows the significant progress the Government has made across each of the six areas that are critical to business success and growth: Export Markets, Capital Markets, Innovation, Skilled and Safe Workplaces, Natural Resources and Infrastructure. In early 2014 the BGA developed a specific initiative - under 'natural resources' - to transition to a lower-emission economy using measures that both improve economic productivity and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The BGA is looking to do this by introducing policies that overcome barriers to the grater uptake of, amongst other things, renewable fuels.

In the second half of 2016 ‘Towards 2025’ was published. It reports on the progress made in delivering on nearly 500 specific actions across the BGA and particularly the priority actions that were set out in 2014. It also sets out the future direction of the BGA, which in 2016 will focus on investing for growth. The BGA is prioritising key areas that are seen as particularly critical to further build business confidence and to provide platform for sustained growth into the future. See http://www.mbie.govt.nz/info-services/business/business-growth-agenda/pdf-and-image-library/towards-2025/mb13078-1139-bga-report-00-intro-09sept-v9-fa-web.PDF

Official source: http://www.mbie.govt.nz/what-we-do/business-growth-agenda%20and%20http://www.mbie.govt.nz/what-we-do/business-growth-agenda/progress-report-2013%20and%20http://www.mbie

Source

https://www.iea.org/policies/5581

Document officiel chez le régulateur. Citez toujours cette URL — et non la page de détail Vantage — dans les preuves de conformité.

Connexes dans International

INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44708ActualitésIn force

Solar Is the Cheapest Power in History, But States Are Retreating From It

A high-stakes push-and-pull is taking place in the United States clean energy sector as state-level laws, federal-level policy, and that infamous invisible hand all tug in different directions. A staggering amount of different legal actions on the part of the Trump administration, the judicial system, and state politicians have created an incredibly complex landscape for clean energy adoption across the country. And while the economics of renewables are looking better than ever, the political positioning of the clean energy transition is looking…

il y a 13 heures
INTEnergy Newsrigzone:https://www.rigzone.com/news/wire/oil_rises_as_iran_talks_are_delayed-19-jun-2026-183960-article/?rss=trueActualitésIn force

Oil Rises as Iran Talks Are Delayed

Oil prices rose as delayed US-Iran negotiations and slower tanker traffic through Hormuz renewed supply concerns.

il y a 15 heures
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44706ActualitésIn force

Why Lunar Helium-3 Mining Still Can't Compete With Earth

When it comes to Helium-3, the biggest cost divide is between Earth and the Moon. Potential sources range from tritium decay and terrestrial helium wells on Earth to lunar regolith on the Moon. Today, Earth-based sources remain far easier and cheaper to access. This graphic, created by Visual Capitalist's Cody Good in partnership with Pulsar Helium, compares major potential sources of Helium-3 by cost, scalability, and accessibility. It’s part three of four in the Helium 3: From Theory to Opportunity series, delivering key He-3 insights for…

il y a 15 heures
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44704ActualitésIn force

The Real Reason BP Is Retreating From the North Sea

BP is still considering a sale of all or part of its UK upstream portfolio, which could fetch around £2 billion ($2.7 billion), though talks of a sale to Ithaca Energy fell through earlier this month, according to reports by Bloomberg and the Financial Times. We think the information is credible. A sale would fit the group’s strategic direction, and the company is an outlier in the UK, where other majors have either sold down or formed joint ventures. At the same time, BP has been pushing aggressively on the exploration front since…

il y a 16 heures
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-news-44708ActualitésIn force

Israel and Hezbollah Truce Gives Oil Markets a Reason to Pause

The Middle East's latest peace deal just got a peace deal of its own. Israel and Hezbollah agreed Friday to halt fighting in southern Lebanon after days of escalating clashes threatened to derail the fragile US-Iran peace process, reducing the risk that the first major test of the U.S.-Iran agreement would turn into its first major failure. Negotiations between Washington and Tehran are supposed to begin under a 60-day framework agreement designed to end the war, reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and eventually restore millions of barrels per day of…

il y a 17 heures