Let The "Too Big To Fail" Smelter Fail


"Too big to fail" was the mantra of the robber banks and other transnational financial sharks during the Global Financial Crisis a decade ago. This left the victims to pay for the costs of the crime, while the corporate criminals walked away scot free and kept their loot..

In this country, Rio Tinto's Bluff smelter was decades ahead of the fashion. Every time that Rio Tinto feels that its charmed existence in New Zealand is going to become less cushy, it threatens to pull the plug, close the smelter and walk away. It does so in the knowledge that it has always been deemed "too big to fail" by the succession of Governments, both National and Labour, that it has effortlessly outmanoeuvred for nearly 50 years. It is doing so again now.

Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa (CAFCA) calls Rio Tinto's bluff (pun intended). Stop crying wolf, stop using your New Zealand workers as disposable pawns in your cynical game, stop holding Southland and the country to ransom. Go ahead and close the smelter and bugger off. See if we care, the country will be much better off without you. The smelter is the country's single biggest user of electricity, consuming nearly one sixth of the total, 24/7 for nearly 50 years. It pays a top secret super cheap price that is not available for any other user and all it does is export electricity from NZ in the form of alumina, while being subsidised by all other electricity users. The smelter is the textbook example of corporate welfare in New Zealand. It is the biggest bludger in the country.

Once again it is looking for Government "help".. Presumably, this is in addition to the massive taxpayer subsidy it has been receiving continuously for nearly 50 years, in the form of the Manapouri power station built with public money for its exclusive use (and let's never forget that men died building that); and the cheapest and most secret power price rate in the country bar none. Not good enough apparently, it still wants more.

In short, it is a liability to New Zealand, not an asset.

Indisputably, the smelter closing would have a negative impact on Invercargill and Southland.  As a plus, the city will be able to shake off its unhealthily dependent situation as a company town with its local government at the beck and call of this transnational bludger.

The tobacco industry used to employ a lot of people here, but that was deemed to be no longer in the public interest. Lacing lollywater with booze and selling it to kids supports a lot of jobs too but there's plenty of public demand to get rid of that particular industry as well. The methamphetamine industry provides an income for thousands of people too, but we don't hear any demand for that insidious trade to be kept going to keep them in a job. History is full of examples of horrible industries that kept people in jobs (such as the slave trade) but which were banned and/or abolished for the greater good.

This smelter constitutes a crime against the people of New Zealand and has done for its entire existence.
In the national interest, it must be closed and the sooner the better.

It would be a great bonus to have nearly one sixth of the country's electricity suddenly available and no longer committed to one smelter. There would no excuse for the moneygrabbing power companies not to cut their prices (we've been falsely promised lower power prices since the "electricity reforms" of the 1990s).
Memo to Jacinda -seeing that the smelter's transnational owners are threatening to go (again), hold the door open for them and help them load their suitcases into the airport shuttle. And make sure that they (those recipients of corporate welfare par excellence), and not the NZ taxpayer, foot the bill for cleaning up their mess.

That would involve Labour facing up to the 2003 and 04 indemnities signed by Michael Cullen, Labour's Minister of Finance at the time, accepting that the taxpayer, and not the smelter owners, would be liable for the cost of cleaning up toxic waste produced by the smelting process. That liability was renewed as recently as 2016, by the Key government.

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