Sister city relationship questioned

A sister city relationship between Invercargill and Suqian, China, has been questioned by an Invercargill city councillor wanting to know if promises of economic opportunity have been kept.

In 2013, Invercargill began a relationship with the city of 1.7 million by signing a memorandum of understanding.

It signed a second one in 2017 to develop closer ties and economic opportunities.

Delegates have travelled to the city on five occasions between 2012 and 2018, and Invercargill has also played host four times.

Cr Ian Pottinger said a memorandum was a strong document that required political accountability, and questioned what commercial opportunities had materialised seven years after the most recent signing.

"Or do we retract what we’ve put on our website, and say it didn’t happen?"

Deputy mayor Tom Campbell responded by saying it was "almost impossible" to track the tangibles of the agreement.

"The thing I would observe is over $700 million of exports through Bluff go to China.

"Thirty percent of all Southland’s exports go to China. Whether it would be 29.9% [without the agreement], you will just never know.

"To me it’s just sensible to have a sister city agreement with a country which takes 30% of our exports."

Cr Darren Ludlow agreed the relationship was worth more for the export market than what was apparent, while Mayor Nobby Clark said his views on sister cities were well known: "I don’t particularly like them".

But having the relationship meant you had to put in the work, and he feared pulling out would send the wrong message to China.

"It’s a little bit like having a family member but you never visit them."

Cr Ria Bond noted sister city relationships had not been reviewed since 2011, and asked if it would be worth doing to see if ratepayers were still happy with their money being spent that way.

Ultimately, councillors moved that a follow-up report be presented on how Invercargill could reactivate its relationship with Suqian.

Invercargill was invited to visit the city in January last year to acknowledge the 10-year anniversary of their relationship, but declined in favour of non-travel options such as exchanging letters and online meetings.

The last contact Invercargill had with Suqian was in May when Mr Clark wrote to congratulate new mayor Liu Hao on his election.

Travel restrictions caused by Covid-19 were highlighted in the council report as a "factor" in the relationship.

Invercargill also has a sister city relationship with Kumagaya, Japan, which a delegation last visited in July.

 - LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.