The Official Information Act is meant to be a solution to this. And someone has in fact asked for the list of projects. But surprise, surprise, the government is refusing to release it. Their reasoning however is a little weird:
Bishop’s response went on to explain that because decisions on the bill are yet to be made, “releasing the list of applicants at this time would impact the orderly and effective conduct of executive government”, and “result in extensive lobbying, even campaigning, both for and against applications ahead of Cabinet consideration”. Bishop explicitly feared “attempts would be made to influence Cabinet Ministers”.The problem here is that there is already "extensive lobbying". its just that its been done by corrupt companies desperate to have their projects fast-tracked (sometimes in secret dinners with corrupt Ministers). But Bishop doesn't have a problem with that. Instead, what he's worried about is "lobbying" by the public. Or, as it is normally called, public participation in government. Promoting that is one of the purposes of the OIA, not to mention an obligation of the public service. By shutting us out and cloaking its dirty dealings under a veil of secrecy, National is simply enabling its own corruption. And we should regard it and its law as permanently tainted by this.