World

Aussie nuclear subs will be banned from New Zealand waters: Ardern

No change to prohibition on such vessels made since 1985, says PM

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 16 Sep 2021 7:30PM

Aussie nuclear subs will be banned from New Zealand waters: Ardern
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says New Zealand will maintain a ban on nuclear-powered vessels that dates back to 1985, meaning Wellington will not allow the prized naval asset being developed by Australia into its waters. – AFP pic, September 16, 2021

WELLINGTON – New Zealand will not lift a decades-long ban on nuclear-powered vessels entering its waters in the wake of key ally Australia’s decision to develop a nuclear submarine fleet, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said today.

Ardern said her Australian counterpart Scott Morrison had briefed her on Canberra’s plan to develop nuclear-powered submarines with the help of the United States and Britain.

She described the deal as “primarily around technology and defence hardware”, playing down implications for the so-called “Five Eyes” partnership of the US, Britain, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand.

“This arrangement in no way changes our security and intelligence ties with these three countries, as well as Canada,” the New Zealand leader said in a statement.

But she also said New Zealand would maintain a ban on nuclear-powered vessels that dates back to 1985, meaning Wellington will not allow the prized naval asset being developed by Australia into its waters.

“New Zealand’s position in relation to the prohibition of nuclear-powered vessels in our waters remains unchanged,” Ardern said.

The ban was introduced in the wake of French nuclear testing in the Pacific and led to the US navy banning its warships from entering New Zealand ports for more than 30 years.

The destroyer USS Sampson visited in late 2016 but only after the then-prime minister John Key gave a special exemption, saying he was “100% confident” the vessel was not nuclear-powered or carrying nuclear weapons.

Official US policy is to neither confirm nor deny whether its vessels are nuclear-capable. – AFP, September 16, 2021

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