New Zealand’s parliament has unanimously voted to grant legal personhood to Taranaki Mounga — the country’s second-highest mountain — along with its companion peaks and surrounding environment. The landmark law fulfills a promise made in 2017 and marks one of the most significant steps in the long struggle by Taranaki Māori to have their ancestral relationship to the mountain formally recognized in law.
At a glance
- Legal personhood: Taranaki Mounga becomes only the third natural feature in New Zealand to gain the rights, duties, and protections of a legal person — following Te Urewera in 2014 C.E. and the Whanganui River in 2017 C.E.
- Māori name restoration: The mountain will be known solely by its Māori name, retiring the colonial designation “Mount Egmont” given by European settlers. Surrounding peaks and natural features will similarly revert to their original Māori names.
- Treaty settlement: The law is the final step of a 2016 C.E. agreement that secured reparations and a formal crown apology for the confiscation of 1.2 million acres of Taranaki land during the 19th-century Taranaki wars.
Why this moment matters
Taranaki Mounga is one of the most symmetrical volcanic cones on Earth, rising dramatically above the flat plains of New Zealand’s North Island west coast. For Taranaki Māori, it is far more than a landmark. The mountain is considered an ancestor — a living, breathing part of their identity.
For generations, that relationship had no standing in law. The crown’s confiscation of more than a million acres of Taranaki land in the 19th century displaced iwi from sites of ancestral significance and cut them off from traditional food sources and resources. The 2016 C.E. treaty settlement acknowledged those actions as “unconscionable” and began the slow work of repair.
Thursday’s vote completed it. Hundreds of Taranaki iwi members traveled to Wellington to witness the final reading of the bill, filling the public gallery. When the vote passed, they broke into waiata — song.
Putting Māori concepts into western law
The new legal entity will be named Te Kāhui Tupua. Its interests will be represented by a group of appointees drawn from both iwi and the crown — a structure designed to give the mountain a legal voice while keeping decision-making shared.
Jamie Tuuta, chief negotiator for Taranaki Mounga, described the significance of what parliament had done. “When we think about the concept of personhood, what we are doing is putting in place a very Māori Indigenous concept into western law,” he told the Guardian. The goal, he said, is ultimately behavior change — a shift in how people relate to the mountain and to significant natural features more broadly.
Guidelines will be developed for how visitors treat Taranaki and its region. But Tuuta said he hoped people would learn to respect the mountain and self-regulate. “The success of these arrangements rest not only with iwi and the government, but with the wider nation.”
A rare moment of consensus
The bill passed without opposition, with every party in parliament acknowledging the harms done to Taranaki iwi and the importance of the name restoration. Treaty negotiations minister Paul Goldsmith called it a historic day and a new beginning. “This is a special day and an opportunity to right the wrongs going back 250 years,” he said.
Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, who is from Taranaki, was more direct. She described the original taking of the mountain as one of the greatest injustices of colonization. “Today, Taranaki is freed from the shacks of injustice, ignorance and hate,” she said. “Our mountain is, and never was, a crown asset — it is our ancestor.”
Tuuta acknowledged the emotion in the room was layered. “After generations of hope being discarded and effort from those who are no longer with us … it is a sad time, but it is also a day that we can come together as iwi of Taranaki to celebrate.”
A model still being tested
New Zealand’s legal personhood framework for natural features is still relatively new, and its real-world impact depends on how well the co-governance structures function over time. The law does not return the land to Indigenous ownership — a point Ngarewa-Packer acknowledged — and translating legal status into on-the-ground protection will require ongoing commitment from both iwi and the crown. Still, as a model for rights-of-nature frameworks spreading across the world — from Ecuador to Uganda to the United States — Taranaki Mounga adds significant weight to the idea that the natural world can hold legal standing, not just legal protection.
The United Nations has increasingly recognized the connection between Indigenous land rights and environmental outcomes, noting that Indigenous-managed territories tend to show stronger biodiversity results. New Zealand’s approach puts that relationship into a legal structure that may outlast any single government or administration.
For the people of Taranaki, the mountain has never needed a law to be their ancestor. But the law means the rest of the country — and the world — must now treat it accordingly. As New Zealand’s Whanganui River legislation showed when it passed in 2017 C.E., these frameworks can shift not just legal language but public imagination — how a society understands its relationship to the land it lives on.
Taranaki Mounga has stood for hundreds of thousands of years. It now stands, too, in the eyes of the law. What happens next is up to the people who live in its shadow — and those who come to climb it.
Read more
For more on this story, see: The Guardian
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on New Zealand
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