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Infrastructure for Business

Transport and logistics connections

New Zealand has extensive road and rail transport systems, and effective inter-island links. Our privately-run deep-water ports are served by over 30 global and regional shipping lines at internationally-competitive stevedoring costs.

International airports in seven urban centres across the country are served by most major international airlines.

Sophisticated telecommunications infrastructure

New Zealand ’s telecommunications infrastructure includes five international submarine cable systems and four onshore mobile networks. The Southern Cross cable alone delivers 240 Gbit/s of fully-protected bandwidth to the United States mainland, Hawaii, Australia and Fiji. As demand increases capacity can be doubled to 480Gbit/s.

Energy supply

New Zealand ’s overall energy self-sufficiency is around 90 percent, with coal exports balancing dependency on imported oil. Environmentally-friendly, cost-effective hydroelectricity and wind farms are increasingly supplementing natural gas for energy generation.

Our total annual energy supply is projected to grow at 1.1 percent per annum between 2000 and 2025. Growth will be dominated by a 3.5 percent per annum increase in geothermal energy generation, and a 17 percent per annum growth in wind power production.

Research and development

International investment has always underpinned New Zealand's world-leading primary production. It is now fundamental to our science and technology innovation.

Private-sector research and development accounts for nearly 40 percent of all New Zealand research and development expenditure. Venture incubators and research clusters around the country also maximise information and technology exchanges.

New Zealand also has a rich track-record of commercially successful products and solutions developed through government-funded research organisations and business / university partnerships.

Nine Crown Research Institutes (CRIs), each with several laboratory sites around the country, produce world-leading public research. CRIs also spin off viable ventures around key commercial discoveries, from small-molecule synthesis for pharmaceutical production to subsurface earthquake-monitoring systems.

New Zealand university research is strongly geared towards commercial applications. This focus has already produced a series of successful joint ventures, equity holdings in spin-off companies, and licensing of discoveries like self-regenerating carbon scrubbers for fuel cells and nuclear magnetic resonance technology

Reports & Publications

A Land of Extraordinary Opportunity Document
As Investment New Zealand's flagship publication, this document provides a succinct overview of New Zealand's compelling business advantages.

Competitiveness Benchmarking Data set
These comprehensive data sets benchmark New Zealand’s competitiveness as an investment destination against other OECD countries.

New Zealand in Profile and New Zealand Business Costs
These two data sets succinctly capture New Zealand’s national profile and business environment. Data is based on statistics sourced from government economic departments and private sector service providers.





Key infrastructure facts

A selection of New Zealand vital statistics and key facts

  • Ranked 16th most globalised country out of 72 surveyed in the AT Kearney / Foreign Policy Globalisation Index, 2007.
  • Efficient banking sector ranked 16th worldwide (World Competitiveness Yearbook, 2008).
  • Quality of air infrastructure ranked 16th worldwide, similar in ranking to Japan, Australia and Malaysia (World Competitiveness Yearbook, 2008).
  • Ranked 5th worldwide in number of internet users per capita (Global Competitiveness Report, 2007).