Page 13

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for March 27, 2026

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on March 27, 2026.

Homebodies: bold TV about a trans man, his mother and the conversations they never had
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Damien O’Meara, Lecturer, School of Media and Communication, RMIT University When Nora (Claudia Karvan) breaks her leg, her son Darcy (Luke Wiltshire) – a trans man – returns home to see her for the first time since he came out. It doesn’t take long before Darcy realises

‘Drive-off’ fuel thefts cost $80 million even before the war – and they’re heading up
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Terry Goldsworthy, Associate Professor in Criminal Justice and Criminology, Bond University With petrol and diesel prices soaring, we’re hearing more reports of alleged fuel thefts from petrol stations, farms, trucks and even parked cars. Australasian Convenience and Petroleum Marketers Association’s chief executive officer Rowan Lee told AAP

Is dark chocolate healthier than milk chocolate? 2 dietitians explain
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lauren Ball, Professor of Community Health and Wellbeing, The University of Queensland Easter chocolate is all over supermarket shelves. Some people reach straight for milk chocolate eggs while others pause at the darker varieties, assuming they’re healthier. Dark chocolate has gained a reputation as the “better” choice

Cyclone Narelle is now larger and ‘more severe’ as it crosses the Western Australian coast
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Steve Turton, Adjunct Professor of Environmental Geography, CQUniversity Australia Severe Tropical Cyclone Narelle continues to amaze us with its long journey across northern Australia. This cyclone began life near the Solomon Islands on March 16, when moist air rose rapidly and created a low-pressure zone. Narelle crossed

Closing the Afghan embassy in Canberra would put many vulnerable Afghans at significant risk
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Susan Hutchinson, PhD Candidate, International Relations, Australian National University Since the Taliban took control of Kabul in August 2021, Afghanistan’s ambassador to Australia, Wahidullah Waissi, and his staff have continued to represent the people of Afghanistan under the most trying circumstances. They have continued to provide diplomatic

Will a new border deal with the US open a backdoor into Kiwis’ personal data?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gehan Gunasekara, Professor of Commercial Law, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau Anyone who has recently travelled to the United States will be familiar with biometric checks – facial and fingerprint scans – used at the border. It is the same technology platform that is used in

Iran was always going to close the Strait of Hormuz
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jonathan Este, Senior International Affairs Editor, Associate Editor, The Conversation This is the text from The Conversation UK’s World Affairs Briefing email. Sign up here to receive weekly analysis of the latest developments in international relations, direct to your inbox. The five-day deadline to open the Strait

The Swedish concept of ‘döstädning’ or death cleaning is about more than just getting rid of things
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lynn Akesson, Professor Emerita of Ethnology in the Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Lund University The Swedish painter Margareta Magnusson died on March 12 aged 92. She became famous in 2017 for coining the smart and humorous concept of döstädning in a book known in English

Distant conflict, local crisis: is this oil shock the wake-up call NZ needed?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Murat Ungor, Senior Lecturer in Economics, University of Otago In recent years, there has been no shortage of warnings about the fragility of New Zealand’s largely imported fuel supply. Now, motorists are seeing the cost of that vulnerability at the pump. Across the country, petrol has surpassed

Are you worried about your preschoolers’ anxiety? Here’s how to help
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alison Fogarty, Psychologist and Research Fellow in the Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development, Deakin University New research on a group of Australian preschoolers suggests more than 40% are dealing with an anxiety disorder. The study, led by Monash University and published in the journal of

Compulsory super is higher than ever at 12%. But cutting it would hurt low-paid workers most
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mark Melatos, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Sydney A central element of Australia’s superannuation system is the superannuation guarantee (SG). This is the compulsory 12% of an employee’s earnings that an employer must pay into the employee’s nominated superannuation fund. The compulsory contribution rate has risen

Nvidia’s new AI tool is giving female game characters a makeover – and gamers are pushing back
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sian Tomkinson, Media and Communication Scholar, Edith Cowan University Last week leading chipmaker Nvidia announced DLSS-5 (Deep Learning Super Sampling), a new artificial intelligence (AI) rendering tool it describes as a “breakthrough in visual fidelity for games”. The software takes low-resolution images and uses AI to upscale

IBS diets don’t work for everyone. New research shows why – and it’s not just about the food
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jessica Biesiekierski, Associate Professor of Human Nutrition, The University of Melbourne If you’ve ever tried a diet to fix gut symptoms, you’ll know it can be hit or miss. One person swears it changed their life. Another follows it carefully and feels no better. This is especially

What is consciousness? Michael Pollan spent 4 years looking for the answer
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nick Haslam, Professor of Psychology, The University of Melbourne Psychology, it’s said, has a long past but a short history. A popular version lists three stages. First, around the turn of the 20th century, psychologists tried to capture the stream of conscious experience in the net of

Share prices, sports results … CO₂ levels? The case for reporting climate stats every day
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elspeth Tilley, Professor of Creative Communication, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University In today’s CO₂ news, global atmospheric carbon is at 429.46 parts per million. That’s one point lower than yesterday and 79 above the recommended planetary boundary. That’s not something we hear routinely in news

A Bible Belt track without a pulse – it’s no surprise fans hate the 2026 FIFA World Cup song Lighter
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brent Keogh, Lecturer in the School of Communications, University of Technology Sydney The release of the first FIFA World Cup 2026 song Lighter by American country artist Jelly Roll, Mexican singer Carín León and Canadian producer Cirkut, has left an odd taste in the mouth of fans,

Could this energy crisis be worse for the global economy than COVID?
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adi Imsirovic, Lecturer in Energy Systems, University of Oxford Despite reports of negotiations between the US and the Iranian regime, the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to most oil tankers, with only a small number of vessels being allowed to pass. The result is a loss

‘I didn’t come here to get rich’: new research on the lives of Ukrainian women in Georgia’s surrogacy boom
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Olga Oleinikova, Associate Professor and Director of the SITADHub (Social Impact Technologies and Democracy Research Hub) in the School of Communication, University of Technology Sydney “I didn’t come here to get rich. I came because I had no other way to keep my son safe and care

Corruption reporting project mourns the loss of Dan McGarry, pioneering Pacific editor and investigative journalist
Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – OBITUARY: By Aubrey Belford, Australia and South Pacific regional editor of OCCRP The Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) is deeply saddened to announce the passing of Dan McGarry, the organisation’s Pacific editor, who died yesterday in Brisbane, Australia, at the age of 62. A

Grattan on Friday: Albanese government struggles under the ‘stress test’ posed by Middle East war
Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Crises “stress test” governments and countries. Memories remain vivid of COVID, which put immense pressures on the Australian economy, the federation and Commonwealth and state budgets. The domestic crisis triggered by the Middle East war is well short of –

Woolworths fined $33,000 over rat infestation at South Dunedin supermarket

Source: Radio New Zealand

South Dunedin Countdown temporarily closed after rats were trapped in February, 2024. RNZ / Tess Brunton

Woolworths New Zealand has been fined $33,000 for failing to properly deal with a rat infestation at its South Dunedin supermarket.

The store was closed for almost three weeks in February 2024 to eliminate the pests with more than 20 rats caught and old nests found in the walls.

The company pleaded guilty in December last year to breaching the Food Act after a lengthy investigation by the Ministry for Primary Industries.

Judge David Robinson imposed the fine in the Dunedin District Court on Friday.

Woolworths’ failure to act quickly had the potential to expose customers and staff to illness over about four months, Robinson said.

The company failed to escalate the issue to its food safety team with staff treating the infestation as a maintenance issue instead of a food safety matter until a rat chewed through the wires of a forklift, he said.

The company had a pest management plan in place with more than 110 rat sightings in the company’s register between October and December with 10 caught during a similar period, Robinson said.

There was a lack of understanding among staff about who should escalate the issue and he said the company was responsible for ensuring its staff knew what to do.

Woolworths’ lawyer Joe Edwards acknowledged the company made an error in not escalating the problem earlier and accepted there were systemic issues, saying it was not seeking to pass the blame onto staff.

The company apologised and had taken steps to analyse its policies and procedures to reach a “gold standard” for preventing and responding to future pest problems, he said.

Rats were first detected in the Andersons Bay Road store in late 2023 and a photo of a rat perched among bacon products went viral in November that year.

One customer told RNZ she saw a huge rat “living its best life in there”, running through the wine bottles while she was shopping with her children.

Ministry for Primary Industries confirmed an investigation was launched in January 2024 after receiving complaints.

Woolworths New Zealand responded saying it had a comprehensive pest management plan in place and was ramping up cleaning procedures, adding more bait stations and getting daily visits from a pest control contractor.

The company confirmed it would close the store for 48 hours the following month so pest controllers could tackle the furry problem. Woolworths claimed it was told rodents were not nesting in the store.

Pest controllers caught 13 rats over the weekend and the closure was extended with reopening subsequently pushed back several times.

New Zealand Food Safety then confirmed Woolworths had uncovered evidence of rats nesting.

The store finally reopened 19 days later after no rat activity was found for 72 hours. But there were mixed reviews from customers with some planning to stay away and others happy to keep shopping there.

Two more rats were found at the supermarket by April 2024 but New Zealand Food Safety said it was satisfied Woolworths was focused on pest management.

The food safety regulator charged Woolworths New Zealand for breaches of the Food Act last September and the company pleaded guilty in December.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Ten tarāpuka / black-billed gulls poisoned in Te Anau

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Department of Conservation is investigating the poisoning of ten black-billed gulls in Te Anau. Supplied / Department of Conservation

The Department of Conservation is investigating the poisoning of 10 black-billed gulls in Te Anau.

Five of the native birds were found sick on the foreshore in January and were euthanised. Another five had already died.

Department of Conservation Te Anau operations manager John Lucas said testing later revealed the black-billed gulls/tarāpuka had ingested alphachloralose, a toxic chemical used for bird control.

The department was appealing to members of the public and local businesses for information about the use of alphachloralose, or products containing the chemical, in the Te Anau area in mid-January.

The deaths were a disappointing blow for the Te Anau population of an often unfairly maligned species, Lucas said.

“Tarāpuka are New Zealand’s only endemic gull and their numbers are in rapid decline, especially in Southland,” he said.

“People may be used to seeing colonies ranging in the hundreds and thousands but with introduced predators, habitat loss and changes in land use these avian fixtures of the south are in serious trouble with some studies estimating up to 80 percent decline in Southland over the past 30 years.”

Black-billed gulls were a protected species under the Wildlife Act and it was an offence to hunt, kill or catch them without authorisation, he said.

“Like kiwi and kākā, tarāpuka are only found in New Zealand and are part of what makes New Zealand special. If you saw or heard anything while out naturing on the Te Anau waterfront this summer that may help us get to the bottom of this please get in touch,” Lucas said.

People could report any information to 0800 DOC HOT, using the case reference CLE-11463. Information could be offered anonymously.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Households closing their wallets as consumer confidence falls

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

  • Consumer Confidence falls to 91.3 points from 100.1 in February
  • A net negative 14 percent of households think it is a good time to make a major purchase
  • A net 10 percent expect to be better off this time next year, down from last month’s net 20 percent
  • A net negative 20 percent of consumers fell worse off now, down from last months minus 16 percent
  • Consumers believe inflation will rise to 5.7 percent in the next two years

The Middle East conflict has torpedoed consumer confidence in March, and early evidence suggests households are closing their wallets.

March’s ANZ-Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence index fell sharply into negative territory at 91.3 points, well below last month’s 101.1 points.

Any score under 100 indicates pessimism.

The impact of the Middle Eastern conflict on consumers was immediate, with every metric in the latest survey turning negative.

ANZ said the conflict created significant uncertainty for the economic outlook and was already hitting people in the back pocket.

It said the hit to confidence would likely be negative for growth and it was reasonable to believe that both firms and households would think twice about making making spending decisions, in case things went from bad to worse.

Consumers were caught in a perfect storm in March, hit by higher fuel prices and rising mortgage rates.

Chief economist Sharon Zollner said the data was even worse in real time than the headline suggested.

“It’s not the full story because we can actually look at it as the month evolved, and in the last week of sampling it was (consumer confidence) under 80,” she said.

Zollner said the same pattern had repeated across the Tasman where Australian consumer confidence had “dropped like a stone”.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Homebodies: bold TV about a trans man, his mother and the conversations they never had

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Damien O’Meara, Lecturer, School of Media and Communication, RMIT University

When Nora (Claudia Karvan) breaks her leg, her son Darcy (Luke Wiltshire) – a trans man – returns home to see her for the first time since he came out. It doesn’t take long before Darcy realises there’s another presence in his childhood home: a ghost of his younger pre-transition self, Dee (Jazi Hall).

Homebodies examines the rift between a trans man and his mother through a haunting that confronts them with the conversations they never had.

The series is created by AP Pobjoy, a transmasculine writer and director, as part of the SBS Digital Originals initiative, which seeks to support risk-taking, short-form projects and emerging talent both on- and off-screen.

Homebodies contributes a complex story rarely seen on our screens. It addresses one of the major gaps in LGBTQ+ stories in Australian television: representations of trans men. In a study I conducted with Whitney Monaghan, we identified just three representations of trans men in Australian television drama between 2000 and 2019.

The trans homecoming narrative

Darcy’s return home drops audiences into a story in which many questions seek to be answered. The themes of “journey” and “homecoming” are major features of the transition narrative. They provide the arc through which trans characters affirm identity and their sense of belonging.

Such narratives are seen in films such as Close to You (2023), starring Elliot Page, in which he portrays a trans man returning home to a family gathering. Ultimately, in this film a homecoming is found in the life he has made for himself.

Narratives of self-acceptance can disrupt the traditional ideas of homecoming. Homebodies explores elements of the literal returning home. But Darcy’s acceptance of himself is settled.

The story gives space for an exploration of the challenging, interpersonal relationship between him and his mother through the haunting of an unresolved rift.

Refreshingly, this is done without Darcy ever doubting his understanding and acceptance of himself.

Hauntings as catharsis

Homebodies takes on aspects of a specific mode of Australian gothic cinema, and takes on the gothic genre’s engagement with hauntology – the ways the past can haunt the present – as pivotal for this trans homecoming narrative.

Dee is a haunting of something left behind. This includes some obvious aspects: she uses Darcy’s deadname and she/her pronouns. But also, Dee represents a version of Darcy in which his existence was not yet a consideration. In the moments when he clashes with Nora, it seems Dee is a manifestation of what his mother wants him to be.

In some ways that feels true, but Dee is also part of a past Darcy is not acknowledging.

Production image: Dee and Darcy sit in a grassy field.

Dee is not just a dramatic foil to allow for the exposition of how Darcy came to this place in his life. Julian Tynan/SBS

Such a story could feel too literal: having a trans man confront his pre-transition self. But Dee is not just a dramatic foil to allow for the exposition of how he came to this place in his life. Rather, he is sharing that journey with who he was before it started.

The value of such conversations stems from the authenticity behind the story. Pobjoy creates a story that is specific. While gender and sexually diverse stories continuously run the gamut of having to be representative to those who are underrepresented and seeking to see themselves onscreen, they can also end up being didactic by the nature of reaching beyond that community.

The value is that such stories create understanding – the risk is they lose their specificity if they try to serve too many interests.

Homebodies strikes an effective balance in its specificity, while feeling like a story audiences will be able to connect with in big or small ways.

One factor that might contribute to this success is that this short series is a product of SBS’s Digital Originals initiative.

Digital first for new and emerging voices

Homebodies is the latest example of the impact of digital-first initiatives for Australian television, following shows such as Latecomers (2023), a rom-com featuring two disabled leads, and Iggy & Ace (2021), which explores drug and alcohol addiction and mental health in queer communities.

These emerging talent programs have become a key site for screen industry development in Australia, and often tell complex stories about underrepresented communities.

Short episodes and online distribution are lower-risk investments for traditional broadcasters, and here underrepresented voices are getting opportunities not previously seen on Australian television.

Through such short series, public-service broadcasters are foregrounding centrally queer stories, investing in local content during the ongoing disruption of streaming.

Homebodies is a prime example of the value of such initiatives. An emerging original voice – in Pobjoy as creator – given the space to dive into a narrative rarely seen on Australian television. And Homebodies won’t just be online: it is also screening on SBS television.

But there are questions about where investment might scale. With the recent loss of Matchbox Pictures and Tony Ayres Productions, there are concerns about the challenges faced by other production houses, and the future of specific local stories in Australian television drama.


Read more: Why one of Australia’s most successful TV production companies is being shut down


While streaming quotas seem to promise new opportunities in the future, the reality of their impact remains theoretical. The number of hours, the variety of genres, the prominence of our local stories all remain unknowns.

Homebodies is a promising example of what is possible, when given the chance.

Homebodies is on SBS and SBS On Demand from Saturday.

ref. Homebodies: bold TV about a trans man, his mother and the conversations they never had – https://theconversation.com/homebodies-bold-tv-about-a-trans-man-his-mother-and-the-conversations-they-never-had-277500

Synlait juggles high milk price risk with retaining farmer-suppliers

Source: Radio New Zealand

A Synlait milk truck. Synlait/supplied

Paying dairy farmers a premium for their white gold could come at a cost to Synlait Milk, according to an agribusiness expert.

The Dunsandel-based processor and exporter increased its farmgate milk price this week to up to $9.90 per kilogram of milk solids for the financial year, 20 cents higher than competitor Fonterra’s new current season midpoint.

But it also released what bosses labelled a “frustratingly disappointing” half-year financial result, due to manufacturing challenges and inventory kerfuffles between raw and powdered milk through 2025.

It reported a $80.6 million loss in the six months to late January, while debts soared to $472.1m.

Lincoln University senior lecturer in agribusiness Dr Nic Lees said the company was under significant financial stress, which could affect farmer confidence.

“Farmers do have options. I suspect this result’s not going to add confidence amongst farmers that there isn’t a financial risk for them supplying Synlait.”

Lees said the company’s sales were no longer covering the direct cost of making and processing its products. He said paying farmers the higher milk price added to the pressure, increasing raw material costs, but he could understand the strategy.

“They need to be able to be offering their suppliers something more than what they can get from supplying Fonterra or Open Country,” he said. “They are having to pay a risk premium to their suppliers to try and hold those.”

  • Do you supply Synlait? Let us know your thoughts monique.steele@rnz.co.nz

He said Synlait faced fixed retail pricing in “onerous” customer contracts, making it more vulnerable to fluctuating global prices – which differed to how Fonterra could pass on costs.

“In some ways from Fonterra’s point of view, the higher milk price is beneficial to their farmers. Whereas from Synlait’s perspective, higher milk price means higher costs for their raw materials, which potentially is difficult to directly pass on to their customers.”

Lees said Synlait was lucky to have major long-term shareholders like Bright Dairy of China that had significant financial scale, so the losses would not threaten the overall business.

But he said the results showed the challenge of going down the “value-add pathway” into retail, like into its consumer brand Dairyworks.

It came as Fonterra divested its consumer brands business under Mainland Group, for dairy products including ice creams and cheese.

This week, Fonterra announced its net profit for the six months ended January rose 3 percent on last year to $750m.

Synlait milk on the production line. Supplied/ Synlait

Poor 2025 results don’t reflect future – company

When publishing the results to the New Zealand Exchange, Synlait Milk chief executive Richard Wyeth and chairman George Adams told investors the financial result did not define the company’s future.

“Many of you, like us, will find today’s numbers frustratingly disappointing – we are all hungry for positive financial performance,” the joint statement read.

“The result reflects a period where Synlait faced multiple headwinds with little choice as to how to deal with them.”

Synlait’s “realistic” roadmap to recovery sought to position it for future growth, grow high-margin products from existing assets and accelerate growth and future growth opportunities.

Last year, the dairy company sold its North Island operations, including its Pōkeno site, for $307m to help the balance sheet.

It said on Monday the sale was on track to be completed from 1 April.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

‘Drive-off’ fuel thefts cost $80 million even before the war – and they’re heading up

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Terry Goldsworthy, Associate Professor in Criminal Justice and Criminology, Bond University

With petrol and diesel prices soaring, we’re hearing more reports of alleged fuel thefts from petrol stations, farms, trucks and even parked cars.

Australasian Convenience and Petroleum Marketers Association’s chief executive officer Rowan Lee told AAP this week that fuel theft from service stations had increased by between 8–30% nationally since the start of the Middle East war. Even before the conflict began, fuel theft was costing retailers around A$80 million a year.

Police in several states have warned they expect more thefts to come.

Here’s how past surges in fuel prices have driven up “drive-off” thefts, how common such thefts are – and what to do if you see one happening.

Predicting fuel thefts from petrol prices

There is good evidence, both from Australia and overseas, that fuel price spikes do drive up fuel thefts.

A report by the New South Wales Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research compared eight years of service station fraud – largely fuel theft – from 1998 to 2006 against the average monthly price of petrol in Sydney.

It found “a strong correlation” between higher petrol prices and the increase in petrol theft.

A chart showing how petrol prices and petrol thefts rose over eight years

The relationship between petrol theft and petrol prices, NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, September 2006.

For every 10 cent increase in the price of a litre of petrol at the time, the report estimated:

we can expect up to 120 extra reported incidents of service station fraud for that month in NSW.

The researchers also found “service station fraud in any given month can be predicted from the average price of petrol one month earlier”.

‘Significant’ links between price spikes and theft

More recent studies have been done overseas. For instance, a 2023 study of English and Welsh fuel thefts found that when petrol prices were relatively stable, fuel cost changes had little impact on petrol thefts. But sudden surges in higher fuel prices – like the kind we’re seeing now in response to the Middle East war – were found to be “significantly associated” with higher levels of the crime.

Another UK study looked at the relationship between the price of commodity goods, like fuel, and levels of related crime. It found a “positive crime-price elasticity” for fuel – meaning if the price of fuel went up, so did the theft of fuel.

Similarly, a 2015 German study found that the fuel price had a statistically significant effect in increasing fuel theft.

How common in petrol theft?

The available data on fuel drive-offs across Australia is patchy, varying state by state.

Last week, South Australian police reported a 37% jump in fuel thefts: 221 fuel thefts in the week ending March 15, up from 162 the week before. As the state’s Police Commissioner Grant Stevens said:

A substantial number of people — 97 — have done it [for] what we would describe as the first time. That’s a significant increase in the rate of first offenders.

Stevens also warned his officers may have to stop investigating drive-off thefts at service stations, unless pre-paid pumps were urgently introduced to stop the “completely preventable” crime.

The rate of fuel theft varies over time, as well as by state.

In NSW, figures provided to The Conversation by the state’s Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research show “fail-to-pay” drive-offs have risen over the past decade, up from 9,097 in 2016 to 13,423 to the end of 2025, after a peak of 15,326 in 2024.

In the 2018-19 financial year Queensland police data recorded around 27,800 fuel drive-off offences: about 76 per day.

In mid-2025, that was down to 61 thefts a day. That put the state on track to record roughly 22,300 fuel drive offs by the end of the year.

From texts to fines or even jail time

Facing tens of thousands of drive-offs, seven years ago Queensland Police came up with a novel response: texting or emailing drivers suspected of drive-off thefts. Those messages say to contact the service station and pay immediately, or face a fine and potential criminal prosecution.

When first trialled in 2019, initial reports showed that of the 4,723 messages Queensland Police sent, 2,190 drivers went back to the station to pay for their fuel.

In many states, the maximum penalty for fuel theft can be five to ten years in jail. However, someone engaging in a fuel drive-off for personal use is much more likely to be fined.

Factors such at the criminal history of the offender, how many offences were committed and the nature of the offending would also determine the outcome.

Different states prosecute the crime differently. For instance, in NSW a drive-off offence is typically prosecuted as “fraud”, not theft, because the fuel was voluntarily provided by the station – and the thief has then dishonestly taken it without paying.

How do you report petrol theft?

If you see a petrol theft happening and it could be dangerous, most police services across Australia recommend calling Triple Zero (000).

But when the offence has already happened and the thief has gone, retailers or others are encouraged to report the theft online. Police in some states, including NSW, Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia, have dedicated websites on reporting fuel drive-offs.

Given the evidence about fuel price spikes leading to more fuel drive-offs, the longer this Middle East war drags on, the more we’re likely to hear from police about the need to do more about rising theft.

ref. ‘Drive-off’ fuel thefts cost $80 million even before the war – and they’re heading up – https://theconversation.com/drive-off-fuel-thefts-cost-80million-even-before-the-war-and-theyre-heading-up-264365

The ‘McDonald’s hamburger’ of cricket bats that could hit high prices for six

Source: Radio New Zealand

123rf

George Fox didn’t set out to be a bat manufacturer – his expertise is making protective equipment for cricketers. Although even that began more by accident than design around 13 years ago.

A friend was a professional cricketer, and Fox wasn’t impressed by the standard of some of his protective gear and made a bet he could do a better job.

“I said, ‘I bet you a pint. Your thigh pad’s rubbish mate, let’s have a go.’”

It’s safe to say Fox won the bet. Through word of mouth his bespoke thighpads and protective equipment grew into a business under the Stretton Fox brand name.

Based in the English town of Market Harborough, Fox got to know bat makers and heard their complaints about the rising cost of raw materials – namely English willow.

The MCC, cricket’s law makers, even held a conference last year to address the rising costs of bats and willow.

Part of the reason is limited supply – aside from the cane handle, quality cricket bats are virtually all made from English willow. It’s light, flexible, and when prepared by a skilled batmaker acts almost like a mini trampoline, sending the ball flying to and over the boundary.

But as the name suggests, English willow grows best in England and takes upwards of 15 years to be ready for harvest. The tree is felled, cut into rounds which are then split into clefts, which are then shaped into bats.

When he found out less than half of the wood actually makes it into the finished bat, Fox started thinking, “How do you create a McDonald’s hamburger version of a cricket bat?”

The secret formula

Using his training as a material scientist, he’s worked out a method to turn the willow leftovers – including shavings and saw dust – into what he describes as a “willow porridge”. That mixture is then poured into a cricket bat-shaped mould.

“Within 10 to 15 minutes you’re pulling out a cricket bat,” Fox said.

The bat needs a week or two to fully harden, but is then ready for match play.

Fox calls his bats ‘ Re-Willow’. The exact method is a patented secret. Fox said up to 95 percent of the bat is made from willow and wood-derived resin.

“Then about 5 percent of it is very clever chemistry, which is the bit that makes it do what it does. So that’s my Coca-Cola recipe, if you like.”

Because the blade of the bat is made from wood, it complies with MCC laws. It’s still a work in progress though.

Cricket bat willow is graded mainly on looks, but also performance. Fox reckons his bats currently perform as well as grade three English willow.

“The grading’s tricky, but everyone kind of gets it in terms of the bounce and the ping. I reckon that within six to eight weeks, we’ll be at grade two/grade one.”

Currently a top-of-the-range bat can cost well over $1500. Fox says his ‘Re-Willow’ bats will retail for around $200 for an adult size.

Fox doesn’t see his bats as a replacement for English willow bats, but hopes they’ll help lessen the cost barrier of getting into the sport, particularly for kids.

Fox said he’s been contacted by cricket academies around the world who tell him, “We just can’t, for love nor money, get hold of good quality cricket bats.”

If everything goes to plan, Fox’s Re-Willow bats will be on the shelves before the end of the year.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Is dark chocolate healthier than milk chocolate? 2 dietitians explain

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lauren Ball, Professor of Community Health and Wellbeing, The University of Queensland

Easter chocolate is all over supermarket shelves. Some people reach straight for milk chocolate eggs while others pause at the darker varieties, assuming they’re healthier.

Dark chocolate has gained a reputation as the “better” choice because it usually contains more cocoa and less sugar than milk chocolate.

But is dark chocolate actually healthier?

Let’s see how the evidence stacks up.

How do they compare?

All chocolate begins with the cocoa (or cacao) bean. Cocoa beans are the seeds of the Theobroma cacao tree, a tropical plant native to Central and South America.

Processing the bean gives you cocoa solids (the bitter part) and cocoa butter (the fat part that gives chocolate its smooth texture).

Chocolate is made from cocoa solids, cocoa butter and sugar. Milk chocolate also contains milk powder or condensed milk.

Dark chocolate typically contains a much higher proportion of cocoa solids, usually 50–90%.

Milk chocolate generally contains 20–30% cocoa solids, with the remaining bulk made up of milk ingredients and sugar.

How about nutritional benefits?

Because dark chocolate contains more cocoa solids than milk chocolate, it naturally provides slightly higher amounts of certain minerals.

This table shows the differences between milk chocolate (30% cocoa) and dark chocolate (more than 60% cocoa) per 20-gram serve. That’s about one row of a Lindt chocolate block.

As you can see, dark chocolate provides more minerals such as magnesium, iron and zinc. It also contains noticeably more caffeine (but far less than in a typical cup of coffee, which would contain about 100mg).

Milk chocolate offers significantly more calcium due to its milk solids, but it generally contains more added sugar.

Cocoa is naturally rich in plant compounds called polyphenols. These act as antioxidants in the body, helping to protect the body’s cells from damage.

Because dark chocolate contains more cocoa, it naturally contains higher levels of these compounds. In fact, dark chocolate contains roughly five times more flavanols (a type of polyphenol) than milk chocolate.

Compared to other foods often praised for their antioxidant content, cocoa contains around 17 times more catechins (another type of polyphenol) per serving than black tea. It also contains around three times more than red wine.

Does dark chocolate improve your health?

Research into cocoa and dark chocolate has produced some interesting findings, particularly about heart health.

Cocoa flavanols appear to help blood vessels relax and support better blood flow. Some clinical trials have reported small reductions in blood pressure and improvements in measures of blood vessel function after consuming cocoa products.

There is also broader evidence suggesting diets rich in flavanols may be linked with a lower risk of cardiovascular disease overall.

However, these findings come with important caveats.

Many of these trials use cocoa extracts containing high levels of flavanols. Others contain specially formulated chocolate rather than the typical chocolate bars or Easter eggs you’d find in supermarkets. The doses tested are also often far larger and far more concentrated than what people normally consume.

A large umbrella review (a review of reviews) involving more than one million participants did find links between eating chocolate and lower risks of cardiovascular disease, stroke and diabetes.

But the overall quality of evidence was rated as weak or very low, largely because many of the studies were observational. Observational studies can identify patterns, but they cannot prove chocolate itself caused those benefits.

The bottom line is that cocoa does contain beneficial plant compounds but the chocolate most of us enjoy is not a health supplement.

But I thought dark chocolate has less sugar?

Choosing dark chocolate doesn’t automatically make it the healthier option, especially where sugar is concerned. Some dark chocolate contains surprisingly high amounts.

Depending on the cocoa percentage and recipe, some dark chocolate products contain 4050% sugar.

So a 150g dark chocolate Easter bunny containing 50% sugar, for example, can contain about 19 teaspoons of added sugar.

This applies to Easter eggs too. Some dark chocolate Easter eggs sold in supermarkets still list sugar as one of their first and main ingredients, ahead of cocoa butter. This means sugar makes up a significant chunk of what you’re eating.

So it’s always worth flipping the packet over and checking the ingredients list and nutritional panel to be sure.

What to choose this Easter?

Dark chocolate has a nutritional advantage over milk chocolate. But how much depends on the cocoa percentage and how it’s been made.

As a general rule, aim for 70% cocoa or more, and flip the packet over before you buy. In a higher-quality dark chocolate, cocoa should appear first in the ingredients list – not sugar.

A higher-quality dark chocolate might have its ingredients listed in this order: cocoa mass, cocoa powder, cocoa butter, sugar, vanilla.

A lower-quality dark chocolate might look like this: sugar, cocoa mass, cocoa butter, emulsifiers, flavour, milk solids.

If sugar is listed first, it’s the largest ingredient by weight.

Beyond that, choose chocolate you actually enjoy and watch your portion size. Remember that your overall diet matters far more than a few Easter eggs.

The real health benefit of Easter chocolate? The enjoyment of sharing it.

ref. Is dark chocolate healthier than milk chocolate? 2 dietitians explain – https://theconversation.com/is-dark-chocolate-healthier-than-milk-chocolate-2-dietitians-explain-278062

Cyclone Narelle is now larger and ‘more severe’ as it crosses the Western Australian coast

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Steve Turton, Adjunct Professor of Environmental Geography, CQUniversity Australia

Severe Tropical Cyclone Narelle continues to amaze us with its long journey across northern Australia.

This cyclone began life near the Solomon Islands on March 16, when moist air rose rapidly and created a low-pressure zone. Narelle crossed the Cape York Peninsula last Friday as an intense but compact category 4 system, and continued a steady westerly track across the Gulf of Carpentaria, the Northern Territory and the Kimberley region of Western Australia.

Today the cyclone crossed as a dangerous category 4 cyclone near Exmouth, in the far northwest of WA. So far, Narelle has travelled more than 5,700 kilometres since it formed as a system near the Solomons, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.

It is relatively rare for an individual tropical cyclone to affect Queensland, the NT and WA. The last time was Severe Cyclone Ingrid in 2005 and Cyclone Steve in 2000. The final path of Narelle is likely to be very similar to Steve, with its final dissipation in the Great Australian Bight.

A large and severe cyclone

Narelle is a much more severe cyclone than Steve, however. The system is now twice the size it was when it reached far north Queensland a week ago — as measured by the area of strong gales around its eye. These damaging winds now extend 200–260km from the centre, while destructive storm-force winds extend 110–210km, and the very destructive core of hurricane-force around the eye is 90–130km wide.

The cyclone’s larger core poses a significant threat to settlements in its path from both severe winds and intense rainfall. Dangerous storm surge and ocean inundation is also a high risk for exposed coastal locations along its path. There will be much greater impact if it passes by at or near high tide.

So far, wind and storm surge damage from the cyclone has been minimal, as it has tracked over more sparsely populated areas. Its worst impacts have been heavy rain and flooding across NT catchments, which were already saturated from weeks of monsoonal rain. The west of the continent is unlikely to be so lucky.

An unusually predictable path

Narelle’s track, forward speed and intensity have been remarkably predictable compared with many cyclones in the Australian region. Prevailing easterly winds under the cyclone, associated with a subtropical high pressure ridge over southern Australia, have propelled it along at 15–25km per hour over the past week.

Narelle is now being steered around the northwestern periphery of the same high-pressure system, and this is why its track is now more to the south southwest. It is expected to intensify over warm ocean waters. It will continue to move in a more southerly direction and maintain intensity as a dangerous category 4 cyclone until later today, before weakening to a still severe category 3 system near Shark Bay. The towns of Onslow and Exmouth are expecting severe impacts as the core winds pass over them, with wind gusts of up to 250km per hour. Further south, Carnarvon is expecting winds up to 200km per hour this afternoon.

Storm clouds over the coast and mountains.

Storm clouds in Port Douglas last Friday ahead of the expected arrival of Cyclone Narelle. The cyclone has since travelled 4,500 km to Western Australia. Brian Cassey/AAP

Weakening over land

The world heritage-listed Ningaloo Reef is likely to be severely affected by the cyclone as its core winds pass along its entire length. This is a double whammy for the reef, after the severe 2025 marine heatwave caused catastrophic coral bleaching and high mortality. Some areas lost up to 60–80% of coral. Coral reefs that are already stressed by coral bleaching are likely to take longer to recover, if they are struck soon after by a powerful tropical cyclone.

Narelle will still be a severe category 3 system when it tracks through Shark Bay, probably on Friday, but will begin to weaken as it moves over land south of the tourist town of Denham. An approaching upper trough from the Southern Ocean will begin to interact with the cyclone and force it to track more quickly to the south-southeast. This will see it weaken to a category 2 as it passes just inland of the major town of Geraldton. Due to forecast changes in wind speed and direction near the cyclone from the west, the strongest winds will shift to its eastern flank and the system will begin to lose its tropical cyclone characteristics.

The people of Kalbarri and Northampton, small towns north of Geraldton, will be on edge as they remember April 2021, when the towns suffered serious damage from category 3 Tropical Cyclone Seroja.

The WA capital Perth is likely to avoid the core of the cyclone as it undergoes extra-tropical transition. This is when a cyclone loses its tropical warm core and becomes more extra-tropical in structure, meaning its strong winds and heavy rain can be expected to spread out from the centre over a wide area of the greater southwest during Saturday.

On the positive side, widespread rainfalls are forecast for most of the WA Wheatbelt. This will be welcomed by farmers as they typically sow their winter wheat crops between late April and June.

Tropical cyclones becoming more intense

It’s too early to draw a link between Cyclone Narelle and background global heating of the oceans and atmosphere, largely driven by rising greenhouse gases from the combustion of fossil fuels. This will require detailed attribution studies, which factor in natural variations in the climate system with those being driven by human-driven climate change.

Numerous studies now confirm globally tropical cyclones are becoming more intense and delivering higher short-term and daily rainfall than in the past. In the Australian region, there has been a decline in overall cyclone frequency in recent decades, but the ones we’re getting now are more intense and producing more rainfall. This trend is expected to continue under future global heating.

ref. Cyclone Narelle is now larger and ‘more severe’ as it crosses the Western Australian coast – https://theconversation.com/cyclone-narelle-is-now-larger-and-more-severe-as-it-crosses-the-western-australian-coast-279322

All set for another star-studded, high finance Indian Premier League

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kyle Jamieson of Punjab Kings celebrates a wicket, 2025. ARJUN SINGH / PHOTOSPORT

The Indian Premier League heads into its 19th season this weekend with the best short-format players from around the globe playing for big money.

Here is everything you need to know about the 2026 IPL.

Money

  • The IPL is the richest franchise T20 competition in the world with an estimated value of $30 billion.
  • The most valuable franchise is Royal Challengers Bengaluru at an estimated $3b.
  • The League generates around $2.3b annually, primarily from broadcast rights.
  • The 10 franchises had a combined total of $50 million to spend on the player auction in December.
  • Kokata paid $4.78m for Australian all-rounder Cameron Green.
  • The IPL winners will collect $5m.

Owners

  • The IPL is owned and run by the Board of Control for Cricket in India, while the individual franchises are owned by various multi-national companies, celebrities, individuals and private equity groups.
  • In March Royal Challengers Bengaluru was sold by the Indian arm of UK-based drinks giant Diageo to a group headed by Aditya Birla Group which specialises in cement, fashion, metals and chemicals.
  • Bollywood is heavily involved including actor Shah Rukh Khan who is a part owner of the Kolkata franchise and Preity Zinta who is with the Punjab Kings.
  • Many of the celebrities attend matches to add some extra sparkle and increase the fan-base for their teams.

History

  • The first tournament was played in 2008.
  • Most wins; Five, Mumbai Indians (2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2020) and Chennai Super Kings (2010, 2011, 2018, 2021, 2023)
  • Current champions; Royal Challengers Bengaluru.

Rachin Ravindra of Chennai Super Kings. © R Param / Sportzpics for IPL 2025 / PHOTOSPORT

New Zealand involvement

Twelve New Zealanders are taking part in the 2026 competition with eight of those picked up in the auction.

  • Chennai Super Kings; Matt Henry, Zak Foulkes. Coach Stephen Fleming.
  • Delhi Capitals; Kyle Jamieson.
  • Gujurat Titans; Glenn Phillips.
  • Kolkata Knight Riders; Tim Seifert, Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra.
  • Mumbai Indians; Mitchell Santner, Trent Boult.
  • Punjab Kings; Lockie Ferguson.
  • Rajasthan Royals; Adam Milne.
  • Royal Challengers Bengaluru; Jacob Duffy.
  • Sunrisers Hyderabad; Coach Daniel Vettori.

Virat Kohli of Royal Challengers Bengaluru celebrates their IPL win, 2025. ARJUN SINGH / PHOTOSPORT

Records

  • Highest innings score, 287/3 by Sunrisers Hyderbad against Royal Challengers Bengaluru in 2024
  • Highest score, 175* Chris Gayle. Also has most sixes 357.
  • Most total runs, 8,661 Virat Kohli (2008-present)
  • Most wickets, 221 Yuzvendra Chahal (2011-present)
  • Best bowling figures, 6/12 Alzarri Joseph for Mumbai Indians against Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2019.
  • Most appearances, MS Donhi 278 (2008-present)

Format

  • Double round-robin before the top four teams meet in the play-offs.
  • Competition runs from 28 March to 31 May.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

NZ netball franchises rule out Australian Super Netball expansion bid

Source: Radio New Zealand

ANZ Premiership players are taking a pay cut this year. Photosport

Several New Zealand netball franchises explored joining Australia’s expanding Super Netball competition, but have ruled it out as financially unviable.

Australia’s governing body confirmed last year it was considering adding two new teams to the Suncorp Super Netball (SSN) from 2027, and was open to expressions of interest from New Zealand.

While neither Netball New Zealand nor Netball Australia would confirm whether a formal bid was submitted before last month’s deadline, RNZ understands investigations were carried out by both the national body and local franchises.

Magic team relationship manager Gary Dawson said the opportunity generated interest, but the costs involved made it unrealistic.

“I know that some zones had a look at it and thought ‘no we can’t it’s not viable for us’.”

Netball Australia invited expressions of interest from parties interested in acquiring a new licence, including private-ownership groups, existing SSN licence-holders, and entities affiliated with other codes.

“That’s been something that I know that not only has Netball NZ looked at but I think there have been interested parties in New Zealand outside of Netball NZ who have looked at that and I’m not sure where that stands.

“My understanding is that yes Netball NZ has certainly looked at it but my understanding is it’s not necessarily part of their plans at the moment.”

Dawson said some of the zones, who generally own and operate their ANZ Premiership teams, quickly realised it wasn’t feasible.

“Just about all of us sort of had a look at it but when you do the numbers you have to be pretty ambitious if you’re a zone to even look at it I would have thought. My understanding is none of them have put a bid in, some may have, I’m not sure.

“For Magic it was just out of the question anyway because we’ve got to get our own house in order before we even think about Australia.

“Our focus really at the moment has been on getting this year up and running and making it a great competition but also working with Netball NZ to make sure we’ve got plans in place for next year and beyond.”

The Tactix were crowned maiden title winners last year but lost seven players soon after. Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

Dawson, a former Waikato Rugby and Chiefs chief executive, said just pursuing an SSN licence would take a lot of time and resource.

“Then you would have to pay a licence fee to join, you’ve got a whole bunch of costs like who pays for trans-Tasman travel, player remuneration is another kettle of fish, you would have to meet whatever their salary cap requirements are and all that sort of stuff so it’s a whole new ball game when you look at that competition so you would have to have pretty strong financial backing from sponsors or private equity to be able to put in a bid I would imagine.

“It’s really up to Netball NZ to decide when they look at the different financial models and so on what they can afford or not.

“Personally I don’t think it’s a big deal, I think all the focus is really going on the ANZ Premiership and making sure that it’s a great competition this year and we come out of it strong with a good product that we can go into following years with.”

Dawson said it was still possible that a private consortium in New Zealand could have put together some sort of bid.

“There could be private interests who said ‘let’s create a team to enter in the Australian league’, a bit like the Warriors or Auckland FC – that’s certainly a possibility, other organisations have done that, but I don’t know.”

NNZ exploring 2027 options

The six franchises are about to enter another ANZ Premiership season under a cloud of uncertainty as to where its future lies, with no broadcast deal in place yet from 2027.

The ANZ Premiership was launched in 2017 after the demise of the former trans-Tasman league. PHOTOSPORT

Dawson said Netball NZ had been working with the franchises and other key stakeholders over the future of the domestic competition, which starts on 11 April.

“To figure out what 2027 and even 2028 could possibly look like. They’ve come to us with a timeline and the different pieces of work that need to be done to come to decisions about next year and the year after.

“I would hope that by the end of April, early May at the very latest, that we have an indication from Netball NZ as to what 2027 will look like. Just from a practical point of view, we have to book venues, we have to start talking to potential sponsors and all those sorts of things.”

The look and feel of the ANZ Premiership has not materially changed since its inaugural season in 2017 and Dawson said the national body was exploring all sorts of options.

“I’m not across all of them but looking at a number of options as to how we could have different leagues or a league running next year and until all that work’s done and they’ve made their decision, it’s just speculation at the moment but I do know they are looking at a variety of options for what will I think ultimately be the best outcome given the circumstances.”

Dawson said everyone had to be adaptable when there was less money in the system.

“The players have taken a 20 percent pay cut this year but the quid pro quo there is that they are also not expected to train as much as they have in the past so while they’re earning less they are doing less work technically.”

He said they have had to tighten their spending across the board.

“That’s been a fact of life for just about all franchises for the last four or five years that we run on a pretty tight budget, the revenue from sponsorship gets harder and harder and obviously through Netball NZ with the broadcast rights, that revenue has reduced so it is a difficult environment financially.”

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Closing the Afghan embassy in Canberra would put many vulnerable Afghans at significant risk

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Susan Hutchinson, PhD Candidate, International Relations, Australian National University

Since the Taliban took control of Kabul in August 2021, Afghanistan’s ambassador to Australia, Wahidullah Waissi, and his staff have continued to represent the people of Afghanistan under the most trying circumstances.

They have continued to provide diplomatic and consular services in Canberra. This includes issuing passports and verifying Afghan drivers’ licences for those who have fled the Taliban to live in Australia.

In 2024, however, the Taliban government in Kabul wrote to the Australian government to request the embassy be closed.

The embassy does not represent the Taliban; it has stood firmly against their authority to run the country. It continues to strongly defend the human rights of all Afghans, with a particular focus on women and girls.

Last September, the Australian government asked the Afghan embassy to stop offering consular services. Now, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has advised the Afghan embassy in Canberra to close completely in June.

Notably, the Australian government doesn’t recognise the Taliban and is unlikely to accept a Taliban ambassador. So it’s not as though the de facto Afghanistan government can just send a new ambassador to Canberra.

However, closing this embassy would put many vulnerable Afghans – including women and girls fleeing the Taliban – at significant risk.

The embassy represents the state, not the Taliban

If the embassy were controlled by the Taliban, we would not want them here. But there is no requirement under diplomatic law for an embassy to have a connection to a government.

As Afghanistan expert William Maley has argued, Australia has had a policy since 1988 of “recognising states, not governments in our diplomatic relations”.

Not only are the legal arguments provided for the closure spurious, he argues, but closing this embassy is an insult to Australian personnel who fought the Taliban for 20 years. It would be a gift to the Taliban.

Azadah Raz Mohammad, an Afghan lawyer at Melbourne University and legal advisor for the End Gender Apartheid campaign, told me the closure of the embassy is “deeply concerning”. She said:

The absence of formal diplomatic representation risks further isolating an already vulnerable diaspora community, undermining access to documentation, rights, and essential consular support.

For example, one Afghan woman who is an Australian permanent resident was recently threatened with deportation to Afghanistan when visiting her husband in China. Her supporters told me she had been a member of the Afghan National Police in the past, so would be at high risk of Taliban violence should she be returned. She had travelled to China on her Afghan passport.

But by the time she tried to return to Australia, she only had five months left on the passport, which is why Chinese customs threatened to deport her.

Without consular support in Australia, she had not been able to renew her passport, or receive consular assistance. More cases like this will arise when the embassy closes.

Issuing passports

For some time after the Taliban retook control of Kabul, the embassy was able to issue a small number of Afghan passports.

These were of great value to those who received them. In some cases, these passports saved lives, allowing people wanted by the Taliban for their work with the previous government to escape. This included policewomen or women’s rights supporters.

Recently, the Taliban ceased recognising such passports. But this only means they can’t be used by people needing to leave or enter Afghanistan, or other countries aligned with the Taliban. Afghans in Australia can still use them to visit family in other countries.

The Afghan embassy was, until recently, able to renew passports that were nearing expiry for people who weren’t eligible for Australian travel documents. Fees charged for this service were an especially important revenue stream for the embassy given it was without funding from Kabul.

The embassy also had to cease verifying other official Afghanistan documents, such as drivers’ licences. These are important for Afghans trying to rebuild their lives in exile; they can help with getting an Australian drivers’ licence.

Policy trend

Australia’s Department of Home Affairs recently changed the priority processing criteria for humanitarian visas for Afghans.

This meant removing any priority based on categories of specific vulnerability such as ethnicity, sex or LGBTQI status.

Instead, processing is now prioritised based on the relationship of the applicant with the proposer of the visa. For example, a mother sponsoring her son to come to Australia, or a husband sponsoring his wife to come here.

My forthcoming research for paper for the Australian Journal of International Affairs shows how problematic it is to ignore the most at-risk Afghans in visa applications.

Future diplomatic need

It’s possible great change is unfolding in the region. In Iran, on Afghanistan’s western border, the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in recent US and Israeli airstrikes, along with other senior officials.

To Afghanistan’s south, Pakistan’s defence minister has declared his country is in open war with the Taliban. Experts fear an ongoing conflict, and many organisations have called for de-escalation.

If the Taliban are to ever be removed from power in Afghanistan, Australia needs an Afghan ambassador in Canberra to support communication and diplomacy during such a change.

ref. Closing the Afghan embassy in Canberra would put many vulnerable Afghans at significant risk – https://theconversation.com/closing-the-afghan-embassy-in-canberra-would-put-many-vulnerable-afghans-at-significant-risk-276855

Will a new border deal with the US open a backdoor into Kiwis’ personal data?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Gehan Gunasekara, Professor of Commercial Law, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

Anyone who has recently travelled to the United States will be familiar with biometric checks – facial and fingerprint scans – used at the border.

It is the same technology platform that is used in airports elsewhere in the world. New Zealand’s passports, for instance, are among those that now carry encrypted biometric information, matched to a traveller’s face as they pass through border smart gates.

Because the data is used for a specific purpose and remains tightly controlled by the countries that hold it, these advanced systems have been relatively uncontroversial.

But that could change. The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is now requiring countries including New Zealand to enter a new arrangement – known as an Enhanced Border Security Partnership – as a condition of keeping visa-free travel to America.

Countries that do not sign on risk losing that access, placing them under pressure to agree despite unresolved questions.

Documents released by the DHS suggest the arrangement could involve direct access to other countries’ government databases, including law enforcement and biometric data – raising serious privacy concerns.

Biometric data is especially sensitive: if compromised, it cannot be replaced like a credit card. Around the world, it is regulated through bespoke rules such as New Zealand’s recently adopted Biometric Processing Privacy Code.

However, the US proposal is largely shrouded in secrecy and may be exempt from privacy and freedom of information laws due to carve-outs in immigration legislation.

Given the stakes involved, it is clear the US proposal should be transparent, enabling countries such as New Zealand the opportunity for public debate and scrutiny before signing on.

Europe pushes back

The New Zealand government has confirmed it is in talks with the US, but has so far provided little detail on what information might be shared or what protections would be in place.

It is not alone in confronting this challenge. The European Union has been able to push back and is likely to negotiate compromises that preserve strong privacy protections aligned with European norms.

Its independent European Data Protection Supervisor recently issued an opinion statement outlining key concerns, as well as the minimum safeguards needed to protect privacy and human rights.

Earlier agreements between the two blocs show that such safeguards are possible.

One example is the Passenger Name Record (PNR) agreement established after the September 11 attacks. This requires airlines to transfer certain data before a passenger boards a flight to the United States.

Its many provisions include limiting the use of data to combating terrorism or serious transnational crime, masking identifiable personal information after six months and placing data in a dormant database with restricted access.

What’s now on the table is a very different proposition. Unlike PNR – which involves sharing a single dataset for a specific purpose – DHS documents suggest large-scale transfers of biometric and other data to the US.

In response, the European Data Protection Supervisor has demanded explicit authorisation and access logging requirements, rather than granting automatic access. It has also stressed the need for strict necessity.

What cards can NZ play?

For New Zealand, the US proposal is troubling because it could potentially enable access to law enforcement data currently governed by the Privacy Act, with strict rules on transparency and who can access it.

There is a risk this could extend to police vetting data, which includes not only criminal convictions but also information on potential suspects, such as intelligence photos of individuals. If so, this could undermine the presumption of innocence where no charges have been laid.

What can New Zealand do? It might turn to protections that were set out in a Ministerial Policy Statement governing cooperation between domestic intelligence agencies and their overseas counterparts.

Following a critical 2019 report by the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security – which highlighted risks of shared information being used in ways that could contribute to human rights abuses – this statement was strengthened with tighter safeguards.

But for now it is unclear what steps New Zealand will take – or how the US will respond to any issues it raises. It is also concerning that, compared with the much larger European Union, the country is in a weak position to negotiate how this new partnership is applied.

One can only hope it does not prove to be a Trojan horse for New Zealanders’ data privacy.

ref. Will a new border deal with the US open a backdoor into Kiwis’ personal data? – https://theconversation.com/will-a-new-border-deal-with-the-us-open-a-backdoor-into-kiwis-personal-data-278416

Government reveals details of fuel crisis rationing plan – and who will be prioritised

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government has fleshed out its National Fuel Plan, outlining rationing measures that would be taken if supplies start running dry.

Resembling the Covid alert levels, the plan has four ‘phases’. New Zealand is at phase one.

Phase 2 would see homes, businesses and the public sector encouraged to conserve fuel.

The higher phases are still under consultation.

Phase 3 would see fuel prioritised for life-preserving services and phase 4 would see stricter intervention in fuel distribution.

Moving up or down levels is decided by a ministerial oversight group based on fuel stocks, restrictions and supply chain data.

“While there is currently no need for fuel restrictions, the public can be assured that the government is planning carefully, acting early and making sure New Zealand is well positioned to respond, whatever the global environment brings,” Finance Minister Nicola Willis said.

“Ensuring New Zealand has the fuel we need to protect jobs, livelihoods and the wider economy is our first priority in managing the impact of global fuel disruption.

“The updates released today give practical effect to the National Fuel Plan established in 2024 and reflect the specific potential risks New Zealand could face as a result of major fuel disruption driven by the conflict in the Middle East.”

Minister Shane Jones, responsible for fuel security, said the updates were developed alongside the fuel industry.

“This is critical because the plan relies on fuel companies cooperating and working constructively with government,” he said.

“My expectation is that we continue to work together as the situation evolves. The industry will play a key role in providing advice to the Ministerial Oversight Group if and when we are required to consider a move between phases.

“New Zealand has sufficient fuel stocks, but we are planning for potential scenarios where obtaining future supply could become increasingly difficult.”

The criteria for changing phases were:

“The plan is designed to keep fuel flowing where it matters most, relying on market settings wherever possible, and only stepping in further if supply is genuinely at risk,” Willis said.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Live: Restrict, ration or advise? Nicola Willis to outline national fuel plan details

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow live updates in our blog above.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis and Associate Energy Minister Shane Jones are set to explain the triggers that would prompt fuel restrictions, rationing or guidance.

Willis assured voters in her answers to questions in the House on Thursday that “we will not be changing the fuel response overnight”.

She and Jones are due to hold a media conference at midday.

“We will also provide more information about the criteria we will use to assess when a change in the response phase is required,” Willis said.

“This would include changes like the amount of fuel in the country,” she said.

Willis also told MPs in the House that the government’s goal was to “avoid ever getting to response phase three or four”.

“These are envisaged in the national fuel plan as the point at which prioritisation of fuel would be required.

“Our goal is to be doing enough to source the supply of fuel internationally that that does not become necessary, and by taking sufficient actions in response phases one and two, that we wouldn’t reach phase three and four,” she said.

Willis also doesn’t expect the government would need to be “skipping through the response phases” of the alert level framework.

Petrol, diesel, and jet fuel would be able to be treated at different alert levels under the framework.

Follow the livestream and updates in our blog at the top of this page.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Government may pause fuel taxes increases

Source: Radio New Zealand

Transport Minister Chris Bishop speaking at the Automobile Association’s annual conference on Friday. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The government may put on hold its plans to raise fuel taxes next year, as it deals with how to respond to the fuel crisis.

National campaigned on not lifting fuel taxes at all in its first term, which Transport Minister Chris Bishop maintains was “the right thing to do” in a cost of living crisis.

Instead, the government plans to bring in a 12 cents per litre increase from January 2027, followed by a 6 cents per litre rise in 2028, and 4 cents per litre in subsequent years.

Fuel taxes are set at a flat rate per litre, meaning they do not go up or down as the price of fuel does.

The government has been resistant to cutting the fuel tax in the crisis, wary that doing so would subsidise demand.

The transport system is supposed to be user-pays, but Bishop said increasingly it was coming from general taxation.

Speaking to the Automobile Association’s annual conference on Friday morning, Bishop admitted that not raising fuel excise duty had deferred the issue of how the government funds transport infrastructure until later.

Chris Bishop says Kiwis’ transport habits are changing during the current Middle East crisis. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

But he hinted the government may defer the anticipated rise further.

“I have to be honest with you, the idea that we would raise fuel tax during a fuel crisis doesn’t seem like a starter to me. So we’re thinking hard about these funding challenges. They are real, and they do exist.”

The government’s intention is to replace all fuel excise duty with road user charges, which diesel and electric vehicles already pay.

Bishop also said people’s transport habits were changing in response to the conflict.

Comparing the two weeks pre-conflict in mid-February with seven-day rolling averages in the subsequent weeks, Bishop said there had been a reduction of approximately 20 percent in vehicle kilometres travelled by car.

“This is not necessarily surprising when petrol prices are up about 30 percent. Also not surprising is that people are responding in a predictable way, they’re using public transport more.”

Public transport boardings were up more than 10 percent in Auckland and Wellington.

Last week also saw the highest number of electric vehicles registered since the end of 2023, around the time the new government abolished the Clean Car Discount scheme.

Year-do-date EV registrations were nearly 2000 higher than this time last year.

But Bishop was adamant the government would not bring back the discount, saying people who did not have the ability to make the transition to EVs were having to pay more, to give money to people who could make the transition.

“It was a regressive wealth transfer policy, and so we will not be bringing back the Clean Car Discount.”

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Woman missing in Auckland found after police appeal

Source: Radio New Zealand

Supplied / NZ police

A 50-year-old woman who was reported missing from the Birkenhead area in Auckland has been found on Friday morning.

Earlier today, police had appealed for sightings of Jacqueline who was last seen near Fernglen Gardens on Kauri Road at around 12.30pm on Thursday.

Police and Jacqueline’s family had been concerned for her wellbeing and wanted her to return home.

In a statement, police thanked members of the public who shared the appeal and the information provided to them as a result.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Farms running dry of fuel as rural distributors struggle with allocation

Source: Radio New Zealand

Caroline Kirk of Mahana Farm at Raukawa south of Hastings, that’s home to hundreds of bulls and up to 10,000 lambs at peak. SUPPLIED/CAROLINE KIRK

Farms that rely on fuel are running dry as rural distributors face new limits due to spiking demand.

In Central Hawke’s Bay, the Kirk family’s large dry stock farm at Ruakawa has run out of fuel.

The farm, a half-hour’s drive south of Hastings, usually received a monthly delivery of bulk fuel for the 600-hectare site, home to up to 700 bulls and 10,000 lambs at peak.

But co-owner Caroline Kirk said the usual order expected 10 days ago never came.

She said the biggest concern was that the reticulated drinking water system for livestock ran on fuel.

“We ran out of diesel last week and we’ve just run out of unleaded this week,” she said.

“We’re totally reliant on reticulated water from tanks that we pump water to, so there is no back-up really, if we can’t run our pumps, there’s no water.”

Kirk said they were in contact with their rural fuel distributor Fern Energy, which was facing fuel allocation limits from its importers.

Fortunately, they were not feeding out a lot at the moment, she said.

“So yeah, we just have to keep going into town getting 20-litre containers. It seems a bit crazy to be going and burning fuel to go and get more fuel.”

Kirk said she believed primary production would be prioritised, as farming was vital to the economy.

“It would be nice just to know when the fuel truck is arriving and if they could please allocate our rural tankers some fuel so that they can get it delivered to farms, because we need it, yeah, to keep the country going.”

Fuel-hungry farmers being prioritised

Distributor Fern Energy said it was doing its best to prioritise fuel deliveries based on need.

The Ōtautahi-based fuel distributor and storage firm picked up fuel allocated by importers at 11 ports nationwide for its approximately 10,000 primary industry customers nationwide.

Chief executive Chris Gourley said its fuel allocation had been affected by “artificial demand”, driven by panic-buying and stockpiling of fuel as prices soared.

He said it was a complex and challenging situation, as it tried to meet its orders.

“For farmers, if they’ve got no fuel, they can’t work, so it’s really urgent,” Gourley said.

“We have to make decisions around who we think needs that fuel the most. But it’s the same for all distributors.”

Gourley said its teams understood the frequency of farmers’ fuel orders and usage, and assured they were working hard to get to all their primary sector customers.

“We’re looking at which customers are getting close to running out or are dry, and we’re focusing on them first, and we’re working our way through it as best we can.

“Looking at our information around how much fuel that farmer’s used in the past, what time of the season we’re in, and we’re working towards getting to them.”

He said hotspots where allocations were tight included in Hawke’s Bay, but also Nelson, Southland and Christchurch.

“The Hawke’s Bay around Napier has been a real hot spot for us in regards to access to fuel out of out of that port.

“You’ve got Nelson and Southland, in particular… Christchurch is also quite challenged at the moment. It’s moving, it’s dynamic.

“For example, last week, early in the week, Nelson wasn’t too much of an issue, and now it is.”

He recognised it was difficult for farmers in need of fuel, and said while it was not ideal, those in need may have to seek out their own supply from the truck stop or from other distributors.

“Farmers that are in arable or farmers that are harvesting or cutting grass, they need fuel. So they’re the ones that are really starting to use that fuel quite quickly.

“If you’re in that situation where you’ve got no fuel, look for opportunities to potentially fill up the jerry can at the truck stop.”

Some of the residents of the Mahana Farm at Raukawa near Hastings in central Hawkes Bay, where fuel has run out. SUPPLIED/CAROLINE KIRK

Panic-buying affecting country’s supply

Gourley urged the public not to panic-buy petrol, as it was having flow-on effects for the rural sector.

“If you don’t need fuel, don’t enter that market and try stockpile fuel., because it just really does generate problems for everybody.

“We’re really trying to all of us, the importers, the distributors, everybody’s trying to balance that fuel.

“We have good supplies coming in, but it’s those spikes when demand lifts, particularly artificial demand, which puts pressure on the network.”

He said calls via Fern’s hotline increased four-fold in the weeks after the war began.

The cost of Brent crude oil rose six percent to US$108.50per barrel overnight, up more than 6 percent.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Xero signs deal with AI giant Anthropic

Source: Radio New Zealand

Xero will integrate Anthropic’s Claude AI system directly into its platform.

Accounting software company Xero and artificial intelligence firm Anthropic have announced a multi-year deal to add AI tools to the accounting softward giant’s tools.

Under the deal, Xero will integrate Anthropic’s Claude AI system directly into its platform – and allow Xero customers to use their financial data inside Claude’s interface.

The companies say the aim is to give small businesses and their accountants real-time financial insights they can act on immediately.

Xero chief product and technology officer Diya Jolly said small business owners routinely grappled with questions about tight cashflow and overdue invoices, and the integration with Anthropic was designed to help answer those in seconds.

“To run their business efficiently, small business owners and their accountants and bookkeepers need to be able to answer these questions and act on them in real time, whether using Xero or Claude,” she said.

Xero said the AI tools would reduce the time businesses spend chasing invoices, manually compiling reports, or trying to forecast cashflow, with Claude proactively surfacing insights and recommended actions.

The company also emphasised that the partnership fits within its responsible data-use commitments – with financial information shared between platforms used only for a customer’s session and not used to train Claude’s AI models.

Jolly said integrating Claude moves Xero further into “agentic workflows”, with its AI assistant JAX (Just Ask Xero) helping predict cashflow gaps and carry out more complex financial tasks on behalf of users.

Anthropic managing director for international Chris Ciauri said the tools would give small businesses access to the kind of financial intelligence that previously would have required a dedicated analyst or chief financial officer.

“Instead of spending hours making sense of their financials on top of everything else it takes to run a business, customers get clear answers and recommended actions in real time,” he said.

Xero and Anthropic expect to roll out the new Claude features in the coming months.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

In pictures: Aftermath of the storm in the upper North Island

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kāeo Church surrounded by floodwaters. Supplied / Christopher Maca

Northland Civil Defence teams are assessing the damage after the latest storm with the Far North and Whangārei set to remain under a state of emergency for another six days.

Hundreds of people were evacuated in Kaitaia on Thursday night and more than 400 households and businesses were still without power on Friday morning after the heavy rain.

Damage has again been done to the roading network in the upper North Island with roads and state highways closed and drivers urged to take care due to surface flooding and slippery conditions.

Thursday night’s flooding has caused serious damage to the road surface on Whakapara Bridge, on State Highway 1 north of Whangārei. RNZ / Nick Monro

Flood damage on Whakapara Bridge, north of Whangārei. NZTA

Flood damage on Whakapara Bridge, north of Whangārei. RNZ / Nick Monro

A road closure due to flood damage on Whakapara Bridge, on State Highway 1 north of Whangārei. RNZ / Nick Monro

State Highway 25 just north of Whangamata, crews clear a fallen tree. RNZ / Yiting Lin

The main road in Kawakawa on Friday morning after the Northland heavy rain. RNZ / Nick Monro

The World War I Memorial Forest in Whangamata is under water on Friday with the Waikiekie Stream fast flowing and brown after heavy rain in Northland. RNZ / Yiting Lin

Flooding at the World War I Memorial Forest in Whangamata on Friday. RNZ / Yiting Lin

Fog in the Bay of Islands the day after Thursday’s storm. RNZ / Nick Monro

The water is receding and the sun is out in Kāeo, in Northland, on Friday morning. State Highway 10 has reopened just north of the town, restoring road access to Kaitāia and the top of the Far North. Supplied / Christopher Maca

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Lake Onslow pumped hydro scheme considered for fast-track by government

Source: Radio New Zealand

Lake Onslow.

A prominent backer of the Lake Onslow pumped hydro scheme says he’s already fielding interest from international investors.

It is a project that has been around for years, picked up by the last Labour government, but then scrapped after the election amid strong criticism from National.

Now it is being backed by a private-sector firm, The Clutha Pumped Hydro Consortium, and the government has agreed to refer the scheme for possible fast-tracking.

Consortium member and also former Meridian Energy chief executive and Transpower chairperson Keith Turner told Morning Report the large infrastructure project was perfect for fast-track consideration.

He said the group was pleased to finally see some momentum and others were taking an interest.

“Projects like this have got real appeal to big international investors that want long-dated revenues.

“I’ve been working in Australia with the New South Wales government doing big renewable energy zones. Global companies from all around the world have turned up for that and they’ve all been whispering in my ear that they’d love to do business in New Zealand.

“So we’ve already got interest from some pretty big companies from overseas and believe it or not a lot of support in New Zealand too.”

He said the group had been in regular communication with local iwi and would be happy to have them on board.

Turner estimated the build would cost around $8-10 billion and if successful, could be up-and-running by 2035.

He said the project was similar in scale to the Manapōuri Power Station and could generate a lot of power for a relatively small lake.

“It can store about 5000 gigawatt-hours and that’s enough to cover a dry year-and-a-half so it’s a very important feature for the future.”

One gigawatt-hour can power roughly 10,000 homes for a year.

Turner said the plant could work as a battery – water could be pumped back into the lake during periods of low energy demand.

“When the prices are low it usually means there’s a lot of spare power … so we would pump the water up to Lake Onslow.

“It can do several things. It can deal with these dry years because it stores a lot, but it can also do this on a daily cycle. So it could generate when every body gets up for breakfast and it can pump overnight when the prices are low and there’s not much demand.”

Turner rejected concerns that the project would undermine energy companies’ long-term planning.

“When you build wind farms they don’t match up to the demand profile. You need something else to help when there’s no wind. A project like this actually provides a floor in the price because it’s going to be buying power to pump and it will provide intermittency support for wind.”

He believed the project would “unlock some very big wind development in Southland”.

A spokesperson for the Ministry for the Environment said the Minister for Infrastructure had issued a decision to refer the project to the Fast-track approvals process.

“It is eligible to lodge a substantive application to be considered by an expert panel.

“Information on the referral decision is available on the Fast-track projects website here: Clutha Pumped Hydro.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Iran was always going to close the Strait of Hormuz

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jonathan Este, Senior International Affairs Editor, Associate Editor, The Conversation

This is the text from The Conversation UK’s World Affairs Briefing email. Sign up here to receive weekly analysis of the latest developments in international relations, direct to your inbox.


The five-day deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz handed to Iran by Donald Trump on Monday expires some time tomorrow and the Islamic Republic needs to “get serious before it is too late” – or so the US president has announced on his TruthSocial platform.

You’ll recall that this deadline replaced another deadline which was due to expire on Monday night, after which the US and Israel would obliterate Iran’s power plants and plunge the country into darkness. Happily Trump pulled back from this plan, reporting that talks were progressing very well, so he would extend the deadline until March 27.

For their part, Iranian officials denied that negotiations were even underway, while US officials said contacts were at a very early stage. This has prompted speculation that the US president was seizing even the most informal of contacts as an “off ramp” to save face over not following through with his threat.

Certainly Trump’s oft-repeated assurance that the war in Iran has been won and that Iran’s senior officials (whoever remains after Israel’s highly successful campaign of assassinations) are “begging” the US to make a deal looks a rather optimistic assessment from the US president.

Far from collapsing in a heap after the death of the former supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, the regime is showing its resilience. Its targeting of US installations in the region are hurting the Gulf states and there are signs that Israel’s Iron Dome is fracturing in parts under the volume of Iranian missile attacks (this reportedly also happened during the 12-day war last year). Conservative estimates are that the war is costing the US and Israel more than US$1 billion £740 million) a day.

TruthSocial

But it has been Iran’s ability to shut down traffic through the Strait of Hormuz that has arguably turned this into a world war, despite the unwillingness of many of America’s allies, particularly in Europe, to get involved. An estimated 20% of the world’s gas and oil transit the strait each day along with other vital supplies. Or at least it did before the end of February. Now very little is getting through and the consequences are being felt globally.

It’s not as if the US and Israel couldn’t anticipate that Iran would react to their attacks by closing down the strait. Arshin Adib-Moghaddam, an expert in Iranian history at the SOAS, University of London, walks us through nearly five decades in which Iran responded to every crisis by threatening to close the strait. Is is, he argues, a key plan in Iran’s security policy.


Read more: Iran has been threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz for years – it’s a key part of Tehran’s defence strategy


Meanwhile, it appears that the US is dusting off a 15-point peace plan it developed in May last year and which has already been rejected by Iran.

Critics say the chances of Iran acquiescing to the plan were negligible then and remain so now. It calls for Iran to give up all its uranium and agree to hand control of its civil nuclear programme to an outside panel. And, controversially, it seeks to control what Iran spends the money it gains if sanctions are relaxed.

This has prompted analysts to ask whether this plan was simply produced to give the US an explanation as to why it changed its mind over hitting Iran’s power plants. Bamo Nouri and Inderjeet Parmar, experts in international politics at City St George’s, University of London, think it the resurfacing of this plan is the strongest indication yet that Washington is beginning to fear that it has become embroiled in an unwinnable war.


Read more: ‘Girl math’ may not be smart financial advice, but it could help women feel more empowered with money


Certainly this conflict has not gone the way Trump and his Israeli counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu might have wanted. But – as with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, this should have been predictable. Jason Reifler, a political scientist at the University of Southampton, asserts that the US in particular, has embarked on this conflict with no clear goals or thought-through strategy.

Map of Straits of Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most important waterways, with 20% of the global trade in oil flowing through a narrow maritime channel. Wikimedia Commons

Failing to ask for authorisation via the United Nations (and for America, the the US congress) was a bad start, meaning the war had a legitimacy deficit from the word go. The reason for launching the conflict has veered from halting Iran’s nuclear programme to regime change and back again. And the strategy of assassinating Iran’s leadership has produced a rally-round-the-flag effect that few had anticipated.

Add to that the devastatingly effective use of drones by Iran (which the war planners in the US and Israel must surely have picked up on from the experience in Ukraine), means that the two countries are often forced to counter munitions worth US$20,000 with missiles worth millions of dollars. Meanwhile, the pain from Iran’s closure of the closing the strait will only get worse.


Read more: Iran war lacks strategy, goals, legitimacy and support – in the US and around the world


Holy war?

The US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, held a religious service at the Pentagon yesterday, at which he called on god to “grant this task force clear and righteous targets for violence”. Hegseth appears to see this as a holy war in which he has clearly cast himself as a crusader, even sporting a tattoo reading, “Daus vult” (god wills it) – reportedly the rallying cry for the attempt to “liberate the Holy Land” in the 11th century.

Toby Matthiesen, senior lecturer in global religious studies at the University of Bristol observes here the way in which all parties to this conflict have used religion to garner support. Of course, claiming the approval of one’s chosen deity is a time-honoured tactic that even Nazi Germany tried. But it feels a little incongruous in the 21st century.

US president Donald Trump at the centre of a huddle of people who are touching him.
The US president, Donald Trump, receives the prayers of evangelical Christian ministers in the Oval Office, March 5. Image courtesy of the White House.

You could be forgiven for thinking that the sight of Donald Trump in the middle of a prayer huddle in the Oval Office was an amusing oddity. But Benjamin Netanyahu’s reference to the Old Testament story of the Amalekites, whom god told the children of Israel to annihilate, “men and women, children and infants, cattle and sheep, camels and donkeys” is frankly chilling. Parts of the Islamic world has flocked to Iran’s defence (although not with particular enthusiasm in the Sunni countries of the Gulf, which Iran is bombarding with ballistic missiles).


Read more: God on their side: how the US, Israel and Iran are all using religion to garner support


Trang Chu and Tim Morris, meanwhile, believe that this conflict has been nearly five decades in the making. Just as Iran has always denied the right of Israel to exist as a Jewish state, many people in the US and Israel have long been committed to the destruction of Iran as a theocracy. Accordingly the way the two sides talk about each other has hardened over the years. Language on each side no longer reflects a criticism of their adversary’s behaviours, it has become a verdict on their moral character.

So to Iranians, the US is the “Great Satan”, while Iran is described in America as part of an “axis of evil”. Our experts believe that, this language “not only describes the enemy, but actively participates in creating it”. The observe that once you start to think these sorts of things about your adversaries, the idea of engaging in negotiation tends to become secondary to the desire to simply defeat or destroy them. Which is terribly dangerous, as we’re seeing.


Read more: How the words that Iran and America use about each other paved the way for conflict



Sign up to receive our weekly World Affairs Briefing newsletter from The Conversation UK. Every Thursday we’ll bring you expert analysis of the big stories in international relations.


ref. Iran was always going to close the Strait of Hormuz – https://theconversation.com/iran-was-always-going-to-close-the-strait-of-hormuz-279371

The Swedish concept of ‘döstädning’ or death cleaning is about more than just getting rid of things

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lynn Akesson, Professor Emerita of Ethnology in the Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Lund University

The Swedish painter Margareta Magnusson died on March 12 aged 92. She became famous in 2017 for coining the smart and humorous concept of döstädning in a book known in English as The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning. The book was rapidly translated into an impressive number of languages, exporting the notion of death cleaning internationally.

Death cleaning is a decluttering practice where you go through what you own and get rid of things so that, when you die, the process of sorting your affairs is easier on your loved ones.

The year the book was published, the concept found its way into the Swedish Language Council’s annual list of new words. These annual lists feature new expressions that, the council hopes, say “something about today’s society and the year that has passed”. This undoubtedly holds true for death cleaning.

While döstädning quickly became part of everyday Swedish language, the habit of cleaning out belongings before dying was not entirely new. It is, however, no coincidence that the concept appeared when it did rather than, say, in the 1950s when ordinary homes were not yet so crowded with things. The increasing need for death cleaning has to do with living in a consumer society amid an accelerating overflow of possessions.

Two people looking at an ipad surrounded by boxes.
What you leave behind has always told a story about who you were in life. PeopleImages/Shutterstock

In earlier times, the importance of setting matters right before death was more concerned with relations: with God, relatives, friends, enemies, neighbours and so forth. In a Christian context, this last rite is known as Commendation of the Dying, known also as death bed rites.

In 1734, the establishment of an estate inventory, or bouppteckning, (a comprehensive list of a deceased person’s assets, property and debts at the time of death) became mandatory in Sweden by law. Although the law was not strictly enforced in its first decades, the inventories that do exist from this time are fascinating.

These early inventories belong to a range of people, from wealthy noblemen to widows of limited means with no more possessions than a set of clothing and few kitchen utensils. Many things listed were manufactured at home, and the few items that were purchased were highly valued. In a society like this, there was no need for death cleaning in the sense of clearing out. On the contrary, objects were passed on between generations or sold at well-attended local auctions.

Death cleaning is a form creating order and tidiness, which have often come with moral narratives closely tied with them. In this, the role of death cleaning now and in the past does have something in common.

In both cases, a person’s posthumous reputation is at stake, and leaving behind an untidy home or unsolved personal matter tells an unwanted story to the living of the person who has passed. Different stories can be crafted by getting rid of belongings or leaving them in good condition to pass on. What a person’s death cleaning looks like is a matter shaped by time and culture.

In memories collected by The Folk Life Archives at Lund University of the decades around 1900, people stress the importance of well-filled cabinets and cupboards as part of an impressive estate inventory. Such bounty was also meant to elicit admiration among visitors at the local auction. At that time, it was important to demonstrate good housekeeping by displaying your possessions, the more the better. Reading The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, talking to people engaged in death cleaning and in my general work, I have seen how, nowadays, the same effect is achieved by leaving behind a minimum of things.

This change in cultural preferences naturally reflects changes in material conditions. In societies where goods are relatively easy to acquire – both in terms of cost and availability – we all have a lot more. As such, death cleaning has become a good deed. Not burdening surviving relatives with sorting through unwanted items has become an act of love and care. However, it is worth noting that the idea of death cleaning is an ideal not everybody can live up to. Many people still find it difficult to part with their belongings.

The international fascination with the Swedish art of death cleaning invites reflection on widespread fantasies of the Nordic region. Media representations of Scandinavia frequently emphasise tropes of minimalism and emotional restraint. Such framing may contribute to the global appeal of döstädning, yet risks obscuring the more complex and culturally grounded logic underpinning the practice.

Positioned within Swedish everyday life, death cleaning is less an exotic cultural curiosity and more a meaningful negotiation of material abundance, kinship responsibilities and existential reflection.

ref. The Swedish concept of ‘döstädning’ or death cleaning is about more than just getting rid of things – https://theconversation.com/the-swedish-concept-of-dostadning-or-death-cleaning-is-about-more-than-just-getting-rid-of-things-279030

Distant conflict, local crisis: is this oil shock the wake-up call NZ needed?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Murat Ungor, Senior Lecturer in Economics, University of Otago

In recent years, there has been no shortage of warnings about the fragility of New Zealand’s largely imported fuel supply.

Now, motorists are seeing the cost of that vulnerability at the pump. Across the country, petrol has surpassed $3.30 a litre on average. On Auckland’s Waiheke Island, locals protested after prices at a local station exceeded $4 a litre.

The catalyst, of course, is the US and Israel’s ongoing war on Iran. It has disrupted key supply chains and pushed Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices, over $100 a barrel.

There is no sign yet of Iran ending its effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman through which roughly 20% of all the world’s oil shipments flow.

New Zealand prime minister Christopher Luxon has called the crisis “one of the most significant oil shocks we’ve had in history”.

For his government, this moment should surely have prompted a hard look at the country’s deep dependence on imported fuels – and what sustainable alternatives there are to reduce it.

A small country, far from fuel

New Zealand is an island economy heavily dependent on imported fuel, and any sustained disruption ripples quickly through everyday costs.

The reason lies in both geography and infrastructure. Until 2022, the Marsden Point refinery supplied around 70% of the country’s refined fuel. Its closure meant New Zealand now relies entirely on imported petrol, diesel and jet fuel, sourced mainly from refineries in Singapore, South Korea and China.

Those refineries, in turn, depend on crude oil that travels through the Strait of Hormuz. In effect, New Zealand faces a double exposure: higher global prices and the risk of delayed supply.

The government says New Zealand currently holds around seven weeks of supply, in storage and on ships already bound for our shores.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis has acknowledged that buffer relies on “ships like this continuing to turn up.” It was designed to smooth over short disruptions, not absorb a sustained global crisis. Officials are already planning for scenarios lasting eight to twelve weeks.

Who gets hit first?

Diesel – the fuel that powers trucks, tractors, fishing boats and construction equipment – is the bigger economic problem. Its price has risen faster than petrol and its impact is wider.

As Luxon put it, diesel “powers up so much of our economy” and is “the key pacing item.” New Zealand’s economy moves on trucks. Almost everything its consumers buy at the supermarket, from the milk produced in the Waikato to the lettuce grown in Pukekohe, has been on the back of a diesel-guzzling truck.

In agriculture, the impact is a double blow: farmers need diesel to run tractors and milk tankers, and they depend heavily on fertilisers.

The Strait of Hormuz also carries significant volumes of liquefied natural gas and fertilisers. Higher fuel costs plus higher fertiliser costs squeeze farm margins from both sides.

Food prices follow. Fresh fruit and vegetables are particularly vulnerable: their short shelf life means there is no slack to absorb sudden freight cost increases. Treasury has modelled a scenario in which inflation hits 3.2% by June.

Aviation faces its own squeeze. Jet fuel is a specialised product with no domestic refining fallback. Air New Zealand has already suspended its earnings guidance and warned of fare hikes.

What can NZ actually do?

Price changes affect rich and poor differently. The government has targeted relief at those who need it most: around 143,000 working families with children will receive a $50-per-week boost through the in-work tax credit for as long as petrol stays above $3 a litre, at a total cost of up to $373 million.

Willis has explicitly ruled out broader handouts, warning of a vicious spiral of inflation. Luxon has drawn the same lesson from the pandemic, cautioning against too much spending. The government has also widened the pool of fuel suppliers by accepting imports meeting Australian specifications.

But this crisis also exposes a longer structural problem. New Zealand has one of the highest car ownership rates in the world – 815 light vehicles per 1,000 people in 2024.

Road transport consumes nearly 40% of all the energy used in the country, yet electricity accounts for less than 1% of transport energy use. That gap is the problem, but also the opportunity.

Electric vehicles, electric buses and electrified freight all reduce exposure to the next oil shock. As fuel prices rose, Auckland recorded 2.25 million public transport trips in a single week: a seven-year high. People make rational choices when price signals are strong enough.

But transition at scale takes time.

Electric vehicles make up roughly 3% of the light vehicle fleet, and electric heavy trucks remain a niche technology. Farming, fishing and air travel have no quick electric alternative. Even an accelerated shift would leave most of New Zealand dependent on petrol and diesel for many years.

Ultimately, New Zealand cannot control what happens in the Strait of Hormuz. But it can control how much we depend on it. The question is whether it starts now – or waits to find itself just as exposed when the next crisis hits.

ref. Distant conflict, local crisis: is this oil shock the wake-up call NZ needed? – https://theconversation.com/distant-conflict-local-crisis-is-this-oil-shock-the-wake-up-call-nz-needed-278983

Dame Lydia Ko goes close to joining sub-60 club as she lights up latest LPGA event

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand golfer Dame Lydia Ko. Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire / PHOTOSPORT

Dame Lydia Ko has shot her best ever round on the LPGA tour.

The 28-year-old New Zealander has grabbed the club house lead during the first round of the Ford Championship in Arizona, coming close to one of the greatest feats in golf.

One of the early starters at the Whirlwind Golf Club just outside Phoenix, Dame Lydia fired a blistering 12 under par 60, just shy of joining the magical 59 club.

It is her best single round score since joining the LPGA Tour as a professional in 2014, with her previous best a 10-under par 62.

She currently has a one-shot lead over her playing partner, the in-form South Korean Hyo Joo Kim, with the majority of the field to complete their rounds.

Starting on the tenth, Ko birdied her first four holes and then another two before the turn. She then added another six birdies on her finishing nine.

Ko has two top ten finishes so far this year.

Her last win was at the HSBC Women’s World Championship in March 2025.

The first major of the year, the Chevron Championship, is next month.

Just one woman has broken 60 on the LPGA Tour, Annika Sorenstam recorded a 13-under par 59 in 2001.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Warehouse Group half-year net profit up a third to $15.7 million

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Warehouse says its net profit for the six months ended 1 February rose by third on the year earlier, though revenue was little changed. SUPPLIED

Retailer The Warehouse has reported an improved first half net profit despite tough trading conditions.

The retailer, which operated Red Sheds, Noel Leeming and Stationery, said net profit for the six months ended 1 February rose by third on the year earlier, though revenue was little changed.

Chair John Journee said there was clear evidence the group was on the right path, though trading conditions were challenging.

“There is still more to do to restore sustainable returns, and this will take time,” he said, adding work was underway to reinstate dividend payouts to shareholders.

Key numbers for the six months ended 1 February compared with a year ago:

  • Net profit $15.7m $11.8m
  • Revenue $1.612b vs $1.61b
  • Underlying profit $26.9 vs $19.5m
  • Gross margin 32.3 percent vs 32.5 percent
  • Interim dividend NIL vs NIL

Chief executive Mark Stirton said were encouraging signs improvements were resonating with customers.

“We are seeing customers respond as we get the basics right and deliver clearer value through better ranges and a stronger experience in stores,” Stirton said.

“Our Black Friday, Christmas and Back to School events performed well across the half, while severe weather events in January impacted retail spending overall and affected summer seasonal and outdoor categories at The Warehouse.”

Warehouse Stationery and Noel Leeming saw improved gross profit margins, while the Red Sheds continued to face margin pressure.

“Group gross profit margin declined in the first quarter, driven largely by The Warehouse, where we deliberately cleared aged and seasonal stock, saw softer sales in higher-margin categories, and faced freight pressures. Positively, gross profit margin momentum grew in the second quarter, up 30 basis points, and the quality of sales improved,” Stirton said.

Brand sales for the six months ended 1 February

  • Red Shed sales up 0.5 percent to $949.5m – same store sales up 1.2 percent
  • Stationery sales up 5.7 percent to $116.1m – same store sales up 1.8 percent
  • Noel Leeming sales down 1.2 percent to $542.2m – same store sales down 1.3 percent

The company’s recent changes to operations were aimed at cutting the cost of doing business to less than 31 percent of sales, though would see about 270 head office jobs disappear.

Stirton said disciplined cost control was a key driver of the improved result, with operating profit increasing 38 percent.

Expansion

He said the Group will open new The Warehouse and Noel Leeming stores in Mangawhai in mid-2027 – the first new The Warehouse store since 2023.

“Mangawhai has evolved from a seasonal holiday destination into a growing year-round community. Opening new stores allows us to employ locally and better serve a community that is expanding.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Are you worried about your preschoolers’ anxiety? Here’s how to help

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alison Fogarty, Psychologist and Research Fellow in the Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development, Deakin University

New research on a group of Australian preschoolers suggests more than 40% are dealing with an anxiety disorder.

The study, led by Monash University and published in the journal of Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, was based on interviews with the mothers of 545 three- and four-year-olds.

It found 48% of the group met criteria for a mental health disorder, with 43% meeting the criteria for an anxiety disorder. This included separation anxiety, social phobia, specific phobias (for example, fear of the dark) and generalised anxiety disorder.

While these results seem shocking, the researchers note they should be “treated as preliminary and with caution”.

Other research tells us it’s quite normal for young children to experience some level of anxiety.

How can parents protect their children from anxiety? And how can you tell if they – and you – need more help to manage their mental health?

Some worries are normal

Anxiety is a natural response to a perceived threat, uncertainty or stress. It typically involves feelings of worry, nervousness or unease, along with body reactions such as increased heart rate, muscle tension and stomach issues.

Some degree of anxiety and worry is completely expected in preschool-aged children. Research tells us mild anxiety can even play a protective role — it helps us learn to identify and respond to potential threats.

Common worries and anxieties experienced at this developmental stage include fear of separation from caregivers, new people or situations, loud noises, the dark or nightmares and transitions (for example, going from home to daycare).

In the new Australian study, which we weren’t involved with, the most common form of anxiety for preschoolers was “specific phobias” – 31% of children met criteria for specific phobias. As the researchers note in their paper:

fear responses to scenarios such as the dark, storms, dentists and doctors may be considered normal in preschoolers at low frequencies […] these may be relatively transient compared to other disorders.

This suggests some preschoolers will grow out of some of their childhood worries with time.

What can parents do to help?

There are lots of things parents can do, both proactively and in the moment, when anxiety and worry show up for children.

Talk openly about emotions

Especially when things are calm. This might include reading books and chatting about what anxiety feels like in our body, when it might show up, and what can help. Doing this before your child is overwhelmed helps normalise these feelings, so when anxiety does arise, they have the language and context for it.

Great examples include the books The Huge Bag of Worries by Virginia Ironside, Hey Warrior by Karen Young, and The Feelings Series by Tracey Moroney.

Validate concerns

When you notice your child is worried, gently name what might be going on for them.

Resist the urge to immediately reassure them (for example, saying “you’ll be fine”). Instead, acknowledge and validate the feeling. This helps your child feel understood and shows them their emotions are manageable with your support.

For example, you might say:

It sounds like you might be feeling nervous about going to swimming today. That makes sense, it’s OK to feel worried about new or tricky things.

Practise regulation strategies when times are calm

Strategies such as slowing down our breathing, spending time outdoors, or patting a pet can help manage anxiety.

Try and practise them before anxiety peaks. Make them part of your everyday routine and model them yourself. When children see adults using these tools, it reinforces that everyone has big feelings and there are positive ways to handle them.

Support brave behaviour

Anxiety commonly leads to avoidance. While avoidance can see anxiety symptoms reduce very quickly in the moment, it tends to make anxiety worse over time.

Try and gently encourage your child to engage in the things they feel anxious about. It is often beneficial to start with situations your child feels less anxious about to build their confidence.

For example, if they are anxious about swimming lessons, encourage them to sit by the edge of the pool to start. This doesn’t mean pushing your child. Instead, give your child time and space and stay alongside them as they take small steps. For example, you might say:

I can see this feels hard. How about we try joining in just for the first activity — I’ll stay right here with you.

Let your child know you are proud of them when they do things even when they are feeling anxious.

Signs you might need more help

While anxiety and worry are emotions that all children experience, some of the signs your child might benefit from some additional support include:

  • anxiety is stopping your child from attending or enjoying kinder, preschool, daycare or other social situations

  • anxiety is impacting every day life, including your child’s sleep or eating

  • anxiety is causing significant and ongoing distress and emotional overwhelm for your child or the family more broadly

  • anxiety is frequently showing up for your child and lasts for more than a few weeks.

Where can you get support?

Making an appointment with your child’s GP is a great first step. They can provide support and referrals to a paediatrician, psychologist or other type of therapist, such as a play therapist or occupational therapist.

You can also talk to your local maternal child health nurse. They can help you understand whether your child would benefit from additional support, and discuss referral options with you.

Free resources are also available for parents on the Raising Children Network (the federal government’s parenting website) and Emerging Minds, a site dedicated to children’s mental health.

ref. Are you worried about your preschoolers’ anxiety? Here’s how to help – https://theconversation.com/are-you-worried-about-your-preschoolers-anxiety-heres-how-to-help-279320

Compulsory super is higher than ever at 12%. But cutting it would hurt low-paid workers most

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Mark Melatos, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Sydney

A central element of Australia’s superannuation system is the superannuation guarantee (SG). This is the compulsory 12% of an employee’s earnings that an employer must pay into the employee’s nominated superannuation fund.

The compulsory contribution rate has risen steadily from 3% when it was introduced in 1992 to 12% since July 1, 2025. Since July 2022, employers must pay the super guarantee to all employees, even the lowest-paid.

The expanded coverage of the superannuation guarantee, as well as the rise in the rate, has coincided with increased HECS/HELP debts for university graduates, reduced housing affordability and a post-pandemic cost-of-living crisis that has reduced real wages.

This has led to concerns that the current 12% rate might be too high, especially for the young and those on lower incomes.


CC BY-NC

It’s easy to put off thinking about superannuation when retirement is years away. In this five-part series, we ask top experts to explain how to sort your super in a few simple steps, avoid greenwashing, and set goals for retirement.


A reality check

Australia’s retirement savings system is based on three pillars:

  • compulsory superannuation
  • the age pension, and
  • voluntary retirement savings, which includes, notably for many Australians, the family home and additional superannuation contributions above the mandated minimum.

Australia’s total superannuation assets – which include both compulsory and voluntary contributions – were worth A$4.5 trillion in December 2025, while housing assets have been valued at $11.9 trillion.

For comparison, government assistance for seniors, such as the age pension, totals about $100 billion every year.

Hence, contrary to the media attention it receives, superannuation plays an important – but not dominant – role in retirement savings.

More specifically, arguments that a lower compulsory super rate would help younger people save to buy a house are not realistic for two reasons.

First, even reducing the 12% rate by half – an extreme measure – would only add approximately $4,500 a year to take-home pay for someone on the average ordinary time annual income of $106,600.

While such a small amount is a drop in the housing affordability bucket, the power of compounding ensures that it adds significantly to one’s superannuation balance at retirement.

Moreover, just as with government support for first home-owners, any addition to take-home pay will likely simply inflate house prices for first-home buyers, while also leaving them with less superannuation than otherwise.

In short, reducing the superannuation guarantee rate will not improve housing affordability.

Trade offs to consider

Determining whether the 12% rate is too high or too low is a thankless task.

The most pertinent question is how individual workers wish to trade off their current spending against their desired living standard in retirement.

The answer varies hugely from person to person. It depends, among other things, on:

  • their personal preferences
  • the standard of living they experience during their working life
  • their life expectancy
  • how long they plan to work, and
  • the long-term performance of financial markets and the global economy.

The superannuation system, let alone the compulsory contribution, is not designed to address this trade-off, certainly not on its own.

Many Australians save too much for retirement

According to the Productivity Commission, the original objectives of the super guarantee were to provide an adequate (not desired) level of retirement income, relieve pressure on the age pension, and increase national savings.

However, Treasury’s Retirement Income Review found that members of a large super fund who died “left 90% of the balance they had at retirement”. Another study found that “at death, age pensioners leave around 90% of the assessable assets they had at the point of retirement”.

The Grattan Institute argues such households:

will have a higher living standard in retirement than they enjoy in their working lives. That is, the rate of compulsory super contributions is higher than it should be, making Australians poorer during their working lives when they are typically under higher rates of financial stress.

To blame an excessive super rate for over-saving is curious.

Superannuation only accounts for 21% of Australia’s wealth, and much of this is voluntary contributions above the compulsory rate taking advantage of concessional taxation treatment. Property ownership accounts for 51% of wealth holdings, and business and financial assets a further 20%.

The super guarantee is little more than a bit player.

a person stacking coins on top of a table

Retirement budgets vary hugely from person to person. Towfiqu Barbhuiya/Unsplash

If one wishes to apportion blame for retirement over-saving, the favourable tax treatment of super, property and shares are more likely candidates. Moreover, the super guarantee does not seem to significantly crowd out household saving outside the super system.

Most low-income earners are likely to rely substantially on government support – mainly the age pension – to guarantee an adequate standard of living in retirement.

Moreover, such households are likely save little outside super; for example, they are unlikely to own property or shares. So while a 12% rate may not be individually optimal, even for less wealthy households, it potentially plays an important role in topping up their retirement savings.

The real issue is inequity

Perhaps the real concern about the 12% rate relates to its economic incidence – who, ultimately, bears the cost.

While mixed, there is evidence that employers pass on the costs of compulsory super by paying their workers lower wages, forcing them to trade off lower spending now for higher retirement savings. But it does not necessarily follow that employers would pay higher wages if the rate were reduced.

Lower-paid, lower-skilled workers are more likely to be affected this way, since they face stiffer competition for their jobs and have less bargaining power with their employers.

While the rate is almost certainly too high for some workers and too low for others, it is just one plank of a very complex savings system.

ref. Compulsory super is higher than ever at 12%. But cutting it would hurt low-paid workers most – https://theconversation.com/compulsory-super-is-higher-than-ever-at-12-but-cutting-it-would-hurt-low-paid-workers-most-276378

Nvidia’s new AI tool is giving female game characters a makeover – and gamers are pushing back

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sian Tomkinson, Media and Communication Scholar, Edith Cowan University

Last week leading chipmaker Nvidia announced DLSS-5 (Deep Learning Super Sampling), a new artificial intelligence (AI) rendering tool it describes as a “breakthrough in visual fidelity for games”. The software takes low-resolution images and uses AI to upscale them, adding what Nvidia calls “photoreal lighting and materials”.

The tool is designed to make video games look more photorealistic, but the examples Nvidia chose to show off the technology revealed something unexpected: the AI doesn’t just makes images sharper and glossier, it also makes characters significantly more conventionally attractive.

The growing backlash is about more than makeup. It points to a broader anxiety about what happens when AI is given control over creative decisions – and whose idea of “better” gets encoded in the algorithms.

A ‘beauty filter’ for games?

Nvidia showcased the technology using Grace Ashcroft, the protagonist of the recently released Resident Evil Requiem.

Before-and-after comparisons showed the software changing her hair colour, adding defined eyebrows, lip tint, and facial contouring. Some gamers quickly labelled it a “beauty filter”, criticising the way it applies what looks like heavy makeup and reshapes her face to be more conventionally attractive.

Two versions of an image of a woman in a video game - one with more detail and more conventionally attractive.

Resident Evil Requiem’s Grace, without DLSS-5 (left) and with (right). Nvidia / Capcom

The choice of Grace to showcase the technology is worth examining. Resident Evil Requiem features all kinds of monsters and gritty characters, and Nvidia could have used any of them.

The decision to highlight a young, conventionally attractive female character and then make her more glamorous feels pointed. Representation of women in games has been a flashpoint issue for years.

Female characters in games are poorly treated

Historically, female characters in games were depicted as either helpless and weak, or as sexualised objects secondary to a male lead.

The 2000s brought more varied female characters, but attempts at greater diversity triggered a fierce backlash in 2014 during the Gamergate harassment campaign. Women and minorities in and around gaming were targeted with abuse, doxxing, and threats of rape and death.

The debate has continued since. Some players were furious at the muscular depiction of Abby Anderson in The Last of Us: Part 2, claiming her physique was unrealistic and demanding she be made more conventionally attractive.

DLSS-5 adds a new dimension to this debate. Rather than designers making deliberate choices about how characters look, an algorithm can quietly override those choices in a particular direction.

Looksmaxxing game characters

The specific changes DLSS-5 made to Grace’s face also echo the manosphere’s looksmaxxing trend.

Originating in incel communities, looksmaxxing is built on the idea that certain facial features are biologically more sexually desirable to women, prompting some men to pursue techniques that alter their own faces to increase their “sexual market value”. Seeing a piece of software automatically apply similar logic to a female game character raises uncomfortable questions.

At left an image of a bald, bearded man labelled DLSS-5 OFF. At right the same man wearing makeup and pouting, labelled DLSS-5 ON.

A satirical image showing the hypothetical effect of applying the ‘beauty filter’ of DLSS-5 to the warrior Kratos from the game God of War. PurpleDurian7220 / Reddit

Gamers have noticed, and many are responding with humour. The software has been mocked as “yassifying” characters, with one widely shared meme applying the same treatment to God of War’s hulking protagonist Kratos, complete with blue eyeshadow, pink blush, and plump lips. The joke lands because it makes the gendered absurdity obvious.

This reaction mirrors how some gamers once responded to criticism of Aloy, the protagonist of 2017’s Horizon Zero Dawn. After complaints that Aloy was “woke” for not wearing heavy makeup or conforming to conventional beauty standards, some gamers sarcastically created “unwokified” versions of the character to make the same point in reverse.

Bad news for game designers, too

A second, distinct complaint about DLSS-5 is that it undermines the artistic choices of developers.

Rather than simply sharpening what is already there, the software uses algorithms to alter textures and lighting. The results can have that familiar AI aesthetic: glossy, smooth, bright and generic.

A dark, gritty game like Resident Evil Requiem can end up looking like a luxury skincare ad. In at least one case, in EA Sports FC, the filter changed a real-life player’s likeness so dramatically they became completely unrecognisable.

The future of game visuals – and who controls it

It is worth noting that DLSS-5 can genuinely improve visual quality in many games, enriching environments and bringing older character models to life.

Nvidia has also pushed back against critics, with chief executive Jensen Huang insisting DLSS-5 is not a filter and that developers retain control over how it is applied.

But the backlash reveals a real tension. Many players objected to Nvidia selecting a young female character and using AI to make her more conventionally attractive and sexualised. Many others objected to AI overriding the deliberate creative choices of game developers.

Both concerns push against the same force: tech companies’ drive to deploy AI as broadly as possible, and to define “better” visuals on their own terms.

ref. Nvidia’s new AI tool is giving female game characters a makeover – and gamers are pushing back – https://theconversation.com/nvidias-new-ai-tool-is-giving-female-game-characters-a-makeover-and-gamers-are-pushing-back-279244

IBS diets don’t work for everyone. New research shows why – and it’s not just about the food

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jessica Biesiekierski, Associate Professor of Human Nutrition, The University of Melbourne

If you’ve ever tried a diet to fix gut symptoms, you’ll know it can be hit or miss. One person swears it changed their life. Another follows it carefully and feels no better.

This is especially true for irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS. It’s a common condition that causes stomach pain, bloating and changes in bowel habits.

Many people with IBS are told to try the low-FODMAP diet. This reduces certain carbohydrates (known as FODMAPs) that the gut absorbs poorly. These are fermented by gut bacteria, producing gas and drawing water into the bowel, which can trigger symptoms.

Reducing FODMAPs – found in foods such as onions, garlic, apples, wheat and some dairy products – can help ease symptoms. The diet usually involves restricting these foods for a short period, then slowly reintroducing them to identify which ones trigger symptoms in each person.

For many people, it works. But for many others, it doesn’t. Our new research helps explain why.

We found the effectiveness of a low-FODMAP diet for IBS doesn’t come down to food alone, but also how the gut and brain work together.

Different levels of gut sensitivity

IBS affects how the brain and gut communicate. Signals travel between them, shaping how sensitive the gut is and how strongly symptoms are felt.

A simple way to think about it is as a volume dial. For some people, the gut is turned up, so even normal digestion can feel uncomfortable or painful. For others, the dial is lower.

Food matters, but it is only part of the picture. The brain can also turn symptoms up or down, influenced by stress, anxiety about gut symptoms, and expectations about how the body will respond.

To understand this, we studied 112 adults with IBS over six months as they completed the three phases of the low-FODMAP diet. Participants worked with a dietitian through restriction, reintroduction and personalisation, allowing us to track how symptoms changed as foods were removed and then reintroduced.

We measured symptoms, quality of life and psychological factors such as anxiety and expectations. We used statistical modelling to identify response patterns and what predicted improvement.

Man holds bok choy in front of an open fridge door while looking at his phone
The brain can turn symptoms up or down. Oscar Wong/Getty Images

What we found

Some people improved quickly and stayed better. Others improved only slightly, or not at all, even after completing all phases of the diet. We found psychological factors played a major role in whether the diet worked.

Importantly, the difference was not just what people ate, but how they thought and felt about their symptoms and treatment.

People who believed the diet would help were more likely to improve. This is called “treatment expectancy” and is seen across health care.

People with high gut-focused anxiety were less likely to improve. This means they were very worried about their gut and more sensitive to normal sensations, like gas or movement in the bowel.

People who felt more in control of their symptoms also tended to do better.

These factors often changed before symptoms improved. This suggests the brain may help drive changes in symptoms.

This doesn’t mean IBS is “all in your head”. The symptoms are real and can have a big impact on daily life.

The gut and brain are closely linked. Stress and anxiety can change how sensitive the gut feels and how strongly symptoms are experienced – for example, many people notice “butterflies” in their stomach during stress.

What does this mean?

Right now, IBS treatment is often trial and error, with diet changes commonly tried first, followed by psychological therapies if needed.

Our findings suggest we may need to rethink this approach.

Some people may benefit more from psychological approaches, such as stress-reduction or cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). These can help people reframe unhelpful thoughts about their gut, reduce anxiety, and gradually face foods or situations they fear may trigger symptoms.

Others may respond well to diet alone. And many may need both.

If we can identify these differences earlier, for example by assessing anxiety or expectations, we could better match people to the right treatment.

This research marks a shift in how we understand IBS. It’s not just a food problem. It’s shaped by the interaction between diet, the gut and the brain.

For people living with IBS, this could mean fewer restrictive diets, less frustration and faster access to treatments that work.

For clinicians, it opens the door to more personalised care, where treatment is tailored to how a person’s gut-brain system is working.

In the end, improving IBS care may not be about finding the perfect diet. It may be more about understanding how the gut and brain work together, and using that to guide the right treatment.

ref. IBS diets don’t work for everyone. New research shows why – and it’s not just about the food – https://theconversation.com/ibs-diets-dont-work-for-everyone-new-research-shows-why-and-its-not-just-about-the-food-278887

What is consciousness? Michael Pollan spent 4 years looking for the answer

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nick Haslam, Professor of Psychology, The University of Melbourne

Psychology, it’s said, has a long past but a short history. A popular version lists three stages.

First, around the turn of the 20th century, psychologists tried to capture the stream of conscious experience in the net of introspection. The behaviourists then declared the mind off limits, arguing that psychology should study observable behaviour rather than subjective experience. Finally, the emergence of computers spurred the cognitive revolution of the 1960s, which brought the mind back in from the cold, in a new science of information processing.

This narrative arc is appealing, but substantially wrong. Introspection was never a dominant method in psychology. Psychologists continued to study mental processes throughout the behaviourist dark age. And some argue the story leaves out a crucial fourth stage. Cognitive psychology may have made great strides in understanding the mind as computation – neuroscientists helping to figure out the brain’s hardware – but it failed to grasp something vital.


Review: A World Appears: A Journey Into Consciousness – Michael Pollan (Allen Lane)


Enter the study of consciousness – the subject of a new book by accomplished journalist and academic Michael Pollan. For the past few decades, philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have tried to redeem this once-taboo concept and uncover its secrets. That effort has been driven by the belief that mainstream cognitive science cannot solve the so-called “hard problem” of how and why subjective experience arises.

The study of consciousness has been enormously successful in attracting intellectual talent and public attention. Many specialist academic journals have been founded and blockbusters written. Distinguished scientists from other fields – Nobel Prize-winning biologist Francis Crick and physicist Roger Penrose among them – have beaten a path to this new scholarly El Dorado.

Michael Pollan: splendidly intelligent, humane and curious. Michael Pollan

All this cerebral effort has been less than enormously successful. No consensus view has formed on the nature or underpinnings of consciousness, on what kinds of entity possess it, or even on how the field’s key questions and concepts should be defined. New theories of consciousness sprout faster than they can be weeded out by evidence – and philosophers continue to hold radically different views on its metaphysics.

Pollan’s book, A World Appears, wades into this morass in search of clarity. He is the author of numerous books on the intersection of nature and culture, with special emphasis on food, plants and psychedelics. This book is the product of an extended quest to understand consciousness – he wonders if it might be “a socially (and scientifically) acceptable proxy for the search for the soul”.

It is a splendidly intelligent, humane and curious exploration of some truly confounding ideas.

The basement of consciousness

Pollan divides his book into chapters on sentience, feeling, thinking and the self. These labels struggle to contain the many overlaps and blurred boundaries between these concepts: consciousness studies is a minefield of contested definitions.

The “sentience” chapter begins by attempting to “furnish the basement of consciousness”. Here, Pollan presents some astonishing work by researchers who cheekily describe themselves as “plant neurobiologists”, knowing that plants lack nervous systems.

Some plants show evidence of goal-direction, recognition of genetic relatedness, and responses akin to pain, sleep and anaesthesia. When damaged or stressed, some produce ethylene, an anaesthetic that inhibits their movement in response to touch. Root-tips can navigate mazes in search of nutrients, like subterranean lab rats seeking cheese.

Greenery that first appears static and inert looks very different when we imagine a being with its head in the ground, operating on a different timescale, he writes. In slow motion, a vine’s growing tendril seems to manifest a sense of purpose.

Some plants show evidence of goal-direction and responses akin to pain, sleep and anaesthesia. Karola G/Pexels

What might the ethical implications of plant sentience be? Would we be obliged, as the botany professor in Samuel Butler’s 1872 satire Erewhon argues, only to eat plants that “had died a natural death, such as fruit that was lying on the ground and about to rot, or cabbage-leaves that had turned yellow in late autumn”. Must we “plant the pips of any apples or pears […] or […] come near to incurring the guilt of infanticide”?

Perhaps the implications are less extreme than Butler suggests, but the findings Pollan lays out might make us less anthropocentric – and zoocentric – in our moral concern.

Pollan’s discussion of “feeling” explores the ways consciousness is grounded in the body and tied to emotion. Challenging views that locate it in the brain’s more recently evolved cortical regions, Pollan speaks to researchers who ground it in the more “primitive” brain stem. Subjective feeling may be the body’s way of making the mind keep it alive, he writes, alerting us to departures from a desired internal state and enabling us to problem-solve our way forward.

If consciousness is embodied and affective, building a conscious machine might seem a fool’s errand. Pollan talks to scientists who aspire to do just that – and believe success is imminent. Pollan’s scepticism is undisguised. He questions the equation of consciousness with software and doubts that feeling, unlike thinking, can be simulated.

“The consciousness [AI enthusiasts] are hoping to install in computers depend on feelings that will be weightless absent the vulnerabilities of our mortal flesh.”

Mysteries of the mind

Pollan’s discussion of “thinking” explores the contents of consciousness. His doubts are again on display. Can we really “step outside the stream of consciousness in order to observe it from its banks”? And can the stream be separated into distinct elements and quantified?

Pollan compares the attempts of a psychologist to sample inner experience with those of phenomenologists – philosophers who hope to understand the structure of the subjectivity – and writers of modernist fiction. He concludes that this most basic of questions – what is on our minds? – remains a mystery.

In a final chapter, Pollan investigates our sense of self: “the crown of consciousness” to some and a seductive illusion to others, notably David Hume and the Buddha.

The self remains elusive: “to look for the subject is to treat it as an object, which is to negate it.” Pollan considers ways of escaping the self through psychedelics, hypnosis and meditation, before entertaining the possibility of pure awareness in the absence of an experiencing self.

Scientists or sages?

Pollan is an astute and amiable guide through this strange territory. He talks with many of the leading figures in the study of consciousness.

They include Australian philosopher David Chalmers, Portugese-American neuroscientist Antonio Damasio (who argues emotions are a crucial component of decision-making), and American developmental psychologist Alison Gopnik, as well as many lesser-known ones.

He engages deeply with their ideas and spares his interlocutors no hard questions. He makes it clear to them (and his reader) when he is unpersuaded, as when one psychologist informs him his inner life seems a little empty. He is knowledgeable about the science of consciousness, but also determined to give the humanities their due.

Pollan talks to leading figures in the study of consciousness, including developmental psychologist Alison Gopnik. Wikipedia

If anything, Pollan aligns himself more with the poets, Romantics and sages – and their psychedelic fellow travellers – than with the scientists and academic philosophers. One grasps the subtle truth of subjective experience, while the other is often reductive and obscure.

The book closes with a stay in a Zen retreat in search of “unthinking presence”, which reinforces the message that seeking first-person encounters with experience is more illuminating than engaging in third-person academic studies of it.

Pollan’s reservations about the academic study of consciousness are perhaps a little unfair. Is the fact that neuroscientists have proposed 22 accounts of consciousness really “a pretty good indication that the field is flailing”? Should we wring our hands and rend our garments because philosophers hold radically incompatible accounts of consciousness: an emergent property of brains, an illusion, or a fundamental attribute of the universe, like gravity?

Perhaps the question of consciousness doesn’t have a single answer. As Francis Crick found when he leapt confidently into the field of consciousness studies after co-discovering the genetic basis of life, some big, juicy questions are less scientifically tractable than others.

Consciousness studies may be expanding in a hundred directions rather than converging on a singular truth – and that may be a good thing.

The dream of a final theory

The fruitfulness of consciousness studies could be a valuable preparation for a later process of Darwinian selection. Just as neural connections proliferate in the developing brain and are then pruned back to enhance cognitive efficiency, exploring the broad field of conceptual possibilities before homing in on an integrating theory may optimise the pursuit of knowledge.

Consciousness may be like the proverbial elephant with the blind men. Alternative theories palpate different parts of the beast, perhaps enabling a better understanding of the whole to emerge.

Alternatively, there may be no elephant. Like morality or mental illness, consciousness may be an umbrella concept that refers to a multitude of different phenomena. If this is the case, we should be thankful for the findings of consciousness researchers.

These may never cohere into a unifying account of their target, but they shed new light on many other things along the way – from plant sentience to human perception, and from inner speech to artificial intelligence.

Pollan warns his readers that his book is likely to make them more confused and less sure of what they know. That’s how he felt when he finished writing it. A World Appears is a delightful read for anyone who enjoys being intelligently befuddled by a master of the craft.

ref. What is consciousness? Michael Pollan spent 4 years looking for the answer – https://theconversation.com/what-is-consciousness-michael-pollan-spent-4-years-looking-for-the-answer-278888

Share prices, sports results … CO₂ levels? The case for reporting climate stats every day

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Elspeth Tilley, Professor of Creative Communication, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University

In today’s CO₂ news, global atmospheric carbon is at 429.46 parts per million. That’s one point lower than yesterday and 79 above the recommended planetary boundary.

That’s not something we hear routinely in news bulletins, of course. But such numeric snapshots – what’s up, what’s down and overall trends – are very familiar from daily reports of everything from stock markets to sports.

Might there be an argument for applying the same format to planetary health? Some media organisations already think so, including updates on atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂) levels in their regular coverage. But the practice remains far from mainstream.

It makes sense for news outlets to report this way, however, because humans understand trends better than abstractions or hard-to-visualise phenomena.

A brief summary of share price movements, for example, may not be the full financial story. But it does provide a regular barometer of likely changes to things that affect us – like fuel prices, mortgage payments or retirement savings.

The data is often easily available to news outlets, easy to visualise graphically, simple to slot in alongside weather and sport, and audiences are used to it.

Familiarity is the key. Stocks, weather and sports scores are “ritualised media information” – habits that shape our collective awareness. They help our brains judge an issue’s importance by how often it appears in our information environment.

Media scholars have shown how an issue’s visibility influences public opinion and government attention. Numbers crystallise this “agenda-setting” process, prompting questions about why those numbers are rising or falling, which policies influence them, and who is responsible.

In other words, what gets reported and how it’s reported matter. Societies prioritise what they notice most, and they can manage what they measure.

Connecting climate to everyday life

The fact we haven’t ritualised the reporting of atmospheric carbon readings – a key measure of global warming – isn’t because we lack data.

The Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii has tracked atmospheric CO₂ since 1958. The Stockholm Resilience Centre provides measures of CO₂ as well as forest cover, ocean acidification and Arctic ice.

It might be argued such numbers aren’t as relevant to people’s everyday lives as interest rates and stock markets. But that’s increasingly not the case. Environmental statistics help track changes that do and will affect us.

Links between climate change and extreme weather, rising insurance costs, transport disruptions and food prices are intricate and changeable. Daily atmospheric CO₂ reports compress the complexity of a multifaceted problem into something we can grasp more readily.

Of course, there’s a risk the very numbers that focus our minds could narrow them. Climate communication research shows repeated negative news can cause “climate fatigue”.


Read more: Climate doomism is bad storytelling – hope is much more effective at triggering action


But it doesn’t all have to be bad news. While atmospheric carbon levels are 150 parts per million above the preindustrial average, there are also good numbers to report, such as the drop in chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) since the Montreal Protocol in 1987.

Climate fatigue is caused less by too much climate news, and more by reporting that frames climate change as an irreversible catastrophe, leaving people feeling overwhelmed and powerless.

Climate communication experts recommend pairing realistic updates with news of visible action such as policy shifts, community adaptation, technological change or Indigenous stewardship.

There is now a small but growing group of “good news” outlets doing just this: Reasons to be Cheerful (founded by artist and musician David Byrne), Positive News and Fix the News report numbers related to tangible initiatives such as new hectares of forest reserve or revived populations of threatened species.

Normalising environmental awareness

To help prevent people tuning out repetitive data that changes slowly, reporting can frame the numbers in different ways – how fast they’re moving compared with past decades, the distance from specific carbon budget goals, and whether they’re moving faster or slower than predicted.

Contextual stories can connect the data to regional consequences and human stories of local climate action success. That casts the CO₂ updates as indexes of active response rather than passive observation.

For public broadcasters with mandates or charters to provide public interest journalism, the fit is obvious.

Regular CO₂ news would also balance the default reporting of economic indicators that can be perceived as prioritising markets over ecosystems. Presenting environmental numbers in the same way helps normalise attention to ecological stability.

And by realistically connecting those numbers to hot-button issues like the cost of living and healthcare, climate awareness becomes less about ideology or “climate wars” and more about the practical challenges of maintaining a habitable planet.

ref. Share prices, sports results … CO₂ levels? The case for reporting climate stats every day – https://theconversation.com/share-prices-sports-results-co-levels-the-case-for-reporting-climate-stats-every-day-278202

A Bible Belt track without a pulse – it’s no surprise fans hate the 2026 FIFA World Cup song Lighter

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Brent Keogh, Lecturer in the School of Communications, University of Technology Sydney

The release of the first FIFA World Cup 2026 song Lighter by American country artist Jelly Roll, Mexican singer Carín León and Canadian producer Cirkut, has left an odd taste in the mouth of fans, like waking up in the back of a Chevy truck after accidentally downing a bottle of bargain-bin bourbon.

As the United States, Canada and Mexico prepare to host the World Cup in June, the change in genre from “world-infused” pop to Bible Belt-style country-rock reflects the awkwardness of the tournament being hosted in an increasingly isolationist America.

Themes of unity and diversity

Since the early 1990s, FIFA World Cup songs and anthems have usually reflected something of the local flavour of the host country while simultaneously promoting the ideals of global unity.

For example, the 2022 song Hayya Hayya promotes the ideal that “we are better together”. It vibrates with the rhythmic complexity of North African folk traditions, before moving into a more commercial reggae groove.

Jennifer Lopez and Pitbull’s 2014 song, We are One, incorporates Brazilian inflections in an otherwise characteristically in-your-face Pitbull dance track. Nevertheless, the global sentiment remains: “it’s your world, my world, our world today, and we invite the whole world, whole world to play”.

Similarly, Jason Derulo’s 2018 World Cup track Colors (also a Coca Cola promotional song), celebrates national pride – “I’m going to wave my flag” – while also declaring “there’s beauty in the unity we’ve found”.

Where is the excitement?

Though Lighter is a collaboration between the three host countries, it marks a significant musical shift from the characteristic European, Latino and “World” inflected pop of previous songs.

There have been other stylistic shifts in the past. The 2006 World Cup track was Time of Our Lives, a slow operatic pop ballad by Il Divo and Toni Braxton.

But Lighter isn’t another example of this. It isn’t a ballad – yet it still lacks the high energy buzz of fan favourites such as Shakira’s Waka Waka (2010 South Africa World Cup), Santana’s Dar Um Jeito (We Will Find a Way) (2014 Brazil World Cup) and Ricky Martin’s The Cup of Life (1998 France World Cup).

The usual rhythmic vitality of a World Cup song is stripped back to a country-rock dirge with an odd, almost tokenistic Spanish bridge – an offering that might more appropriately feature in a Trolls World Tour. Fans are not having it.

As one user in the YouTube comments asks: “La emoción, la pasión y el ritmo mundialista, dónde está todo eso?” (“The excitement, the passion and the World Cup rhythm, where is all that?”).

Roll between the Lord and the Devil

Lighter has also been criticised for its religious allusions. One listener bemoans: “It’s a football tournament, but let’s make a song about church choirs, Chevy trucks, chains and muddy boots”.

Although past World Cup songs have contained religious allusions, Lighter’s odd sense of the sacred is more like trying to pass off a Lord Elrond action figure as a statue of Saint Anthony.

The song is replete with the forced language of a sinner’s conversion (“chains don’t rattle no more”, “lay my burdens down”), as analogous to the flow-state of a footballer, free from whatever personal or collective trials that might have been holding them back.

As in many a good country song, the protagonist is involved in a cosmic battle for his soul.

Jelly Roll is “praying [his] way out of […] hell”. He even has a run in with the Devil, although he doesn’t trade his soul for musical talent. Rather, he escapes the Devil’s attempts to “catch” him as his boots have left the ground.

You could be forgiven for questioning whether this song was about football at all, or whether it is more reflective of Jelly Roll’s own personal conversion story (he has recently been open in proclaiming his faith in Jesus).

In Lighter, the collective “we” of previous World Cup songs has been replaced with the individualistic “I” – the local taking precedence over the global.

The elephant in the room

Now, to be fair, there are some aspects of Lighter that align with the values of its predecessors. One key theme of the song is the sense of the fight, of overcoming obstacles, and gaining individual freedom. This aligns with FIFA’s stated purpose of the song, which it says was “created for the most inclusive FIFA World Cup in history”.

However, with ICE agents likely to be haunting football stadiums like dementors – and strained relationships between the US and neighbours such as Venezuela, Mexico, Canada and Cuba (not to mention Iran) – it is questionable whether FIFA’s goals of inclusivity will be felt and realised.

Instead, Jelly Roll and Carín León’s country-rock tune seems to more accurately reflect the current US administration’s isolationist approach to global foreign policy: we know we’re in the world, but we’d rather not be.

Perhaps the next World Cup song in 2030 will bring back the excitement, passion and rhythm that fans love, and reiterate the globalist ideals of the game. For now, Lighter remains a missed penalty shot.

ref. A Bible Belt track without a pulse – it’s no surprise fans hate the 2026 FIFA World Cup song Lighter – https://theconversation.com/a-bible-belt-track-without-a-pulse-its-no-surprise-fans-hate-the-2026-fifa-world-cup-song-lighter-279111

Could this energy crisis be worse for the global economy than COVID?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adi Imsirovic, Lecturer in Energy Systems, University of Oxford

Despite reports of negotiations between the US and the Iranian regime, the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed to most oil tankers, with only a small number of vessels being allowed to pass. The result is a loss of roughly 11 million barrels per day (mbd) of oil and petroleum liquids to the global market. This represents just over 10% of global supply.

At first glance, a 10% disruption may not sound catastrophic. But in oil markets, even a 10% imbalance between supply and demand can have very large economic effects.

To understand the scale of the disruption, it is useful to compare it with the height of the COVID pandemic in 2020. During global lockdowns, empty roads, grounded aircraft and deserted bus and railway stations became normal as travel and economic activity collapsed. At that time, global oil demand fell by about 8mbd, the largest demand shock in history.

Today’s situation is the opposite. Instead of a collapse in demand, the world is experiencing a large supply shock. But the impact on everyday life could end up looking similar: reduced travel, higher transport costs, slower economic activity and pressure on household budgets.

The reason is that both oil supply and oil demand are very inflexible in the short term. People still need to drive to work, goods still need to be transported and aircraft still need fuel. When supply falls suddenly, prices must rise significantly to force demand down.

For now, the release of emergency oil stocks is helping to cushion the initial impact, particularly in developed economies. Members of the International Energy Agency (IEA) are required to hold emergency stocks equivalent to at least 90 days of oil consumption, and several countries also maintain strategic petroleum reserves.


Read more: These are shaky times for oil markets. An expert explains what a prolonged war will mean for prices


Countries such as the US, China and Japan can therefore offset supply disruptions for a limited period. However, these reserves are not a long-term solution. If the conflict continues for months rather than weeks, stockpiles will be depleted.

The situation is much more serious for developing countries. Many countries in Asia, Africa and South America hold very limited commercial reserves and are much more vulnerable to supply disruptions and price spikes. For these economies, elevated oil prices quickly translate into higher food prices, inflation and economic instability.

The first shortages would probably appear not in petrol, but in diesel and jet fuel. Gulf oil producers are major exporters of middle distillates, and their crude oil grades produce large quantities of diesel and jet fuel when refined.

Jet fuel could be one of the first commodities to be hit. Benjamin_Barbe/Shutterstock

Diesel is particularly important because it fuels trucks, ships, construction equipment and agricultural machinery. So a diesel shortage affects food supply, construction, mining and global trade – not just transport. Petrol shortages would follow as crude oil supply tightens further, and eventually shortages would spread across all petroleum products.

Oil is not just used for transport fuel. It is also a key input into petrochemicals for the production of plastics, fertilisers, chemicals, synthetic materials and many industrial processes. This means the effects of a major oil supply disruption spread across the entire economy.

Shortages or price increases could affect everything from food production and packaging to electronics, construction materials and clothing. The economic effects of an oil shock are therefore much broader than simply higher petrol prices.

Protectionism could make everything worse

One of the biggest risks during a supply crisis is export restrictions and protectionism. Governments often try to protect domestic consumers by freezing prices and banning exports of fuel or crude oil, but this usually makes the global shortage worse.

Government price freezes only discourage production and supply, and encourage consumers to keep burning fuel. Protectionism is even worse. There are already signs of this happening – some countries (China, for example) are restricting exports of petroleum products such as diesel and jet fuel. When countries hoard fuel, global markets become tighter and prices rise even further.

The biggest risk would be if the US restricted oil exports in order to protect domestic consumers. The US is now the world’s largest oil producer, producing more than 20mbd of oil and petroleum liquids. But it is also one of the world’s largest consumers. However, it still exports significant volumes, particularly to Europe.

The US has banned oil exports before. In 1975, following the Arab oil embargo (when in 1973 Arab states refused to supply oil to countries, including the US, that had supported Israel in the Yom Kippur war), the US banned exports of crude oil. The ban was lifted only in 2015. If such a ban were introduced today, it would be likely to cause major supply shortages and price increases, especially in Europe.

If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed for a prolonged period, or if the conflict escalates further, global losses of exports from the Persian Gulf could approach the 20mbd of oil and petroleum products.

Under these circumstances, the economic and social effects could be severe. Transport could become more expensive and less frequent, air travel would be severely curtailed, inflation would rise and economic growth would slow significantly. In extreme scenarios, the disruption to daily economic life could resemble the COVID period (and probably worse). But this time it would be caused by a shortage of energy.

For now, markets are relying on emergency stock releases and hopes of a geopolitical de-escalation. But if not, the world economy could face an unprecedented energy shock, with far-reaching and unpredictable consequences.

ref. Could this energy crisis be worse for the global economy than COVID? – https://theconversation.com/could-this-energy-crisis-be-worse-for-the-global-economy-than-covid-279284

‘I didn’t come here to get rich’: new research on the lives of Ukrainian women in Georgia’s surrogacy boom

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Olga Oleinikova, Associate Professor and Director of the SITADHub (Social Impact Technologies and Democracy Research Hub) in the School of Communication, University of Technology Sydney

“I didn’t come here to get rich. I came because I had no other way to keep my son safe and care for my displaced family”.

Anna is a 28-year-old woman from eastern Ukraine. She fled the country in 2023 after Russian troops invaded. Two years later, she agreed to become a surrogate in Georgia for wealthy foreign couples.

We met Anna, who was already pregnant, in a quiet apartment that had been rented for her by a surrogacy agency on the outskirts of the capital, Tbilisi.

Our multidisciplinary team was in Georgia to conduct a pilot research project examining the small country’s rapidly expanding surrogacy industry.

We conducted in-depth interviews with Ukrainian women to better understand their motivations for entering surrogacy arrangements, their experiences within the system, and the social, economic, and legal factors shaping their decision-making and wellbeing.

We also analysed publicly available policy and regulatory documents from the government to examine how the sector operates. We paid particular attention to emerging regulatory challenges, gaps in oversight and the state’s efforts to balance economic opportunity with ethical and human rights considerations.

The shifting geography of surrogacy

Surrogacy laws vary widely around the world. Some countries, including Australia, prohibit commercial surrogacy. Others allow it under specific conditions. These differences create cross-border markets, where intended parents travel abroad to access services that are restricted, expensive or unavailable at home.

Before Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Ukraine was one of the world’s largest commercial surrogacy hubs. Estimates suggest between 2,000 and 2,500 babies were born each year through surrogacy arrangements.

War disrupted the industry. Clinics closed or relocated. Travel became dangerous. Media outlets reported on intended parents struggling to reach newborns and surrogates displaced by fighting. Georgia became a safe alternative.

The Beta Fertility clinic run by the New Life Georgia surrogacy agency in Tbilisi in November 2023. Photo by Marie Audinet / Hans Lucas via AFP

International surrogacy has been legal in Georgia since 1997. That’s when the country adopted legislation allowing both gestational (a woman carrying an embryo not genetically related to her) and traditional surrogacy (a woman carrying an embryo for another couple using her own egg). The first children were born through gestational surrogacy around 2007.

The country’s clear legal framework – recognising intended parents as the child’s legal guardians from birth and granting no parental rights to the surrogate – has been a key factor in its appeal.

Costs are also significantly lower than in the United States. As independent international surrogacy consultant Olga Pysana told us:

In the last year, surrogacy in Georgia cost approximately US$55,000 to $85,000 (A$78,000 to A$120,000), whereas surrogacy in the United States can cost as much as US$250,000 (A$350,000).

With international demand surging in the 2010s, Georgia (a small country of 3.7 million people) quickly became unable to meet the needs of so many parents with local women alone. So clinics began recruiting potential surrogates from abroad, including from Ukraine, Central Asian countries, Russia, Belarus, Thailand and the Philippines.

Mobile surrogates

Several of the women we interviewed had previously worked with Ukrainian agencies. After the invasion, recruiters contacted them again – this time offering placements in Georgia.

Displacement has produced a new and economically vulnerable workforce. We describe these women as “mobile surrogates”: women who move across borders to provide reproductive labour in response to war, economic crises or changing surrogacy laws. “If there was no war, I would never have left,” Anna told us.

Most of the women we interviewed had lost homes, jobs or partners. Many were supporting children and extended family members across borders. Anna had worked in a shop before the war, then cleaned houses in Poland. “Surrogacy in Georgia pays in nine months what I would earn in years,” she said.

Our research found that surrogates are typically paid around US$20,000 (A$35,500) in instalments. For families displaced by war, this amount of money can cover rent, relocation costs and schooling.

A surrogate undergoes an ultrasound scan at the Beta Fertility Clinic in Tbilisi, Georgia, in November 2023. Marie Audinet/Hans Lucas/AFP/Getty images

But the arrangements come with strict contractual conditions. Women may face limits on travel, their diets and daily routines. Some live in shared apartments organised by agencies.

Independent legal advice is rare. Anna signed a contract in a language she did not fully understand, but felt she had little alternative: “I just needed something stable. I couldn’t keep moving from place to place”.

Georgia’s legal framework says little about labour standards, housing conditions or long-term health support for surrogates after birth. The result is an imbalance: strong protections for intended parents, and weaker safeguards for the women carrying babies.

A draft bill was introduced in 2023 aimed at curbing paid surrogacy for foreigners, due to growing concerns about the commercialisation of the industry and potential exploitation of surrogate mothers. However, it is still pending. As of early 2026, surrogacy remains legal in Georgia for foreign heterosexual couples.

Three trends we are seeing

First, reproductive markets are highly responsive to crises. When Ukraine’s industry became unstable, demand shifted rapidly to Georgia. Global fertility markets operate like other transnational industries: when one site contracts, another expands.

Second, economic inequality shapes who participates. Displacement and financial insecurity increase women’s willingness to enter demanding reproductive arrangements.

Third, the surrogates bear the brunt of regulatory ambiguities and associated risks and challenges. This includes dealing with contracts and medical procedures in languages they don’t understand.

Reform is needed

In Georgia, clearer labour protections are essential: minimum housing standards, transparent payment schedules, and mandatory, independent legal advice in a language surrogates understand. Health coverage for the women should also extend beyond birth.

The major markets for surrogacy services, including China, the US, Australia, Israel, Germany and others, should also review how their citizens engage in overseas surrogacy. This includes stronger regulation of agencies marketing abroad and clearer ethical guidance for intended parents.

Finally, greater international coordination is needed. Shared standards for cross-border surrogacy would improve transparency and accountability in a rapidly expanding and loosely regulated global market.

As demand grows, the central question is not whether cross-border surrogacy will continue, but whether it can be governed in ways that safeguard fairness, transparency and the rights of the women whose bodies sustain it.

ref. ‘I didn’t come here to get rich’: new research on the lives of Ukrainian women in Georgia’s surrogacy boom – https://theconversation.com/i-didnt-come-here-to-get-rich-new-research-on-the-lives-of-ukrainian-women-in-georgias-surrogacy-boom-276173

Cricket: Amelia Kerr and Jacob Duffy triumph at NZ Cricket Awards

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s Jacob Duffy Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd 2025

Amelia Kerr and Jacob Duffy have taken the top honours at the New Zealand Cricket Awards.

White Ferns captain Kerr secured an unprecedented fourth-straight Debbie Hockley Medal while Duffy claimed the Sir Richard Hadlee Medal.

Amelia Kerr of New Zealand White Ferns. www.photosport.nz

Kerr helped the Wellington Blaze to their third-straight Super Smash title, and topped the run-scoring for the White Ferns in T20 internationals with 354 runs at an average of 70.

Duffy took 25 test wickets at an average of 16, including three five-wicket hauls in just four tests.

The Southlander delivered over 150 overs in the three-test series against the West Indies, more than any other New Zealand bowler, highlighted by a marathon 43-over stint against the West Indies in the first Test at Christchurch.

Duffy also picked up the Test Player of the Year award and the Winsor Cup for men’s first-class bowling, becoming one of the few players to claim three major awards in a single evening.

Former New Zealand player, board director, board chair, and NZC chief executive Martin Snedden was recognised with the Bert Sutcliffe Medal for outstanding services to cricket.

[]h2026 New Zealand Cricket Awards Winners

  • Debbie Hockley Medal: Melie Kerr
  • Sir Richard Hadlee Medal: Jacob Duffy
  • Bert Sutcliffe Medal for Outstanding Services to Cricket: Martin Snedden
  • Test Player of the Year: Jacob Duffy
  • Men’s ODI Player of the Year: Daryl Mitchell
  • Women’s ODI Player of the Year: Brooke Halliday
  • Men’s T20I Player of the Year: Tim Seifert
  • Women’s T20I Player of the Year: Melie Kerr
  • Men’s Domestic Player of the Year: Henry Nicholls
  • Women’s Domestic Player of the Year: Jess Kerr
  • Super Smash Men’s Player of the Year: Katene Clarke
  • Super Smash Women’s Player of the Year: Jess Kerr
  • Redpath Cup (men’s first-class batting): Henry Nicholls
  • Ruth Martin Cup (women’s domestic batting): Kate Anderson
  • Winsor Cup (men’s first-class bowling): Jacob Duffy
  • Phyl Blackler Cup (women’s domestic bowling): Jess Kerr
  • Umpire of the Year: Chris Gaffaney

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

The regions next in line for flooding as heavy rain heads south

Source: Radio New Zealand

Flooding in Kiripaka, Northland. Supplied / Stella Matthews

MetService says there’s a strong likelihood of several regions being upgraded to red heavy rain warnings as a damaging storm sweeps across the country.

Northland and Whangārei are currently in a state of emergency, which will last for seven days.

Although rainfall is set to ease for both regions, others may soon be in the flood firing line.

So which regions are preparing for the worst?

Tauranga

Tauranga City Council is also warning people of landslide risks.

An orange heavy rain warning remains in place for Tauranga through to 1am on Saturday.

The warning has a high chance of being upgraded to a red warning.

Due to earlier rainfall and slips, it said there was an increased risk of new landslide occurring and more damage at sites which had already experienced slides.

“If you learn or suspect that a landslide is occurring or is about to occur in your area evacuate immediately if it is safe to do so.

“Seek higher ground outside the path of the landslide. Getting out of the path of a landslide or debris flow path is your best protection.”

Adams Avenue, between Pilot Bay and the Maunganui Rd roundabout, would be closed to vehicles from 5pm due to the heavy rain warning.

“This is a precautionary approach following geotechnical advice about the current risks on Mauao from anticipated rainfall.

“The road will not be opened until the rain event has passed and we have expert advice regarding the safety of the area.”

Bay of Plenty

Bay of Plenty Civil Defence is warning of possible land slides and for people to stay inside if possible.

Up to 180 millimetres of rain is expected, with the region’s orange warning likely to be upgraded to a red.

MetServices said surface flooding and road closures are expected.

Visit MetService, NZTA or the council website for updates, the region’s Civil Defence said.

Coromandel

Meteorologist Mmathapelo Makgabutlane said there was a high chance of the Coromandel’s orange rain warning being upgraded to red.

A heavy rain warning was in place for the area from 4pm Thursday until at least 6pm Friday.

MetService said expect up to 80 to 120mm of rain on top of what has already fallen.

It said rain up to 200mm was also possible for the Coromandel Peninsula.

Auckland

All of Auckland is now under orange rain and wind warnings, with a low chance of being upgraded to red warnings.

Auckland Civil Defence said residents should prepare for flooding and stay up-to-date via MetService and the NZTA website.

Taranaki / Central North Island

MetService says to expect 100 to 150mm of rain on Taranaki Maunga before noon Friday.

Strong winds are expected in Taupo and Taumarunui, with a heavy rain watch on the former until 10pm Friday.

Taihape, Whanganui and South and Central Taranaki can also expect strong wind through to about 9am.

East Cape

There is a heavy rain watch in place for Gisborne north of Tokomaru Bay, and Bay of Plenty north of Te Kaha, with a moderate chance of upgrading to warning status.

Nelson/Tasman

Residents in the Nelson and Tasman districts are being asked to prepare for severe weather, with up to 250 millimetres of rain expected in some areas.

An orange heavy rain warning is in effect for Tasman northwest of Motueka until 4pm Friday, with a a high chance the warning will be upgraded to red.

Nelson Tasman Civil Defence said the rain was settling in on Thursday, and people should be careful around rivers and streams, and on the roads.

Rest of South

Orange heavy rain warnings are also in place for the Richmond and Bryant ranges, as well as parts of Westland, south Canterbury, and north Otago.

MetService said up to 90mm of rain could fall in North Otago and Canterbury.

There was a minimal chance of the warning upgrading to red, it said.

Red weather warnings ‘no joke’

National Emergency Management Agency’s (NEMA) director of civil defence emergency management John Price confirmed further red warnings for parts of the country were likely.

“Red weather warnings are real and no joke, and I’m urging people not to put themselves in harm’s way, as your life safety is critical.

“MetService only issues red warnings for the most extreme weather events. Heavy rain and severe winds can cause flooding and landslides, which can kill or cause serious harm.”

Price urged people to “trust their danger sense” and not be foolish.

“If you get into trouble and need rescuing, you’ll be holding up emergency services who need to be looking after our most vulnerable.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Association mulls compulsory science for Year 11 students

Source: Radio New Zealand

AFP

The head of the science teachers association says Year 11 students could benefit from compulsory science lessons.

The government is considering making the subject mandatory, along with English and maths, when it abolishes NCEA level one in 2028.

Jayatheeswaran Vijayakumar, who is also head of science at Edgewater College, told RNZ compulsory Year 11 science could help more teens into careers in science and technology.

He said it would also ensure young people were better prepared to be science-literate citizens.

But he said there was a strong risk some students would be bored.

“If learners’ experiences are irrelevant or overtly academic, they might not necessarily engage with the learning and then we could have high levels of disengagement,” he said.

“If it’s poorly designed, it could actually reinforce some of the inequities that already exist in STEM pathways and this could really disenfranchise more learners from taking science.”

Vijayakumar said making science compulsory at Year 11 would require good teachers and resourcing.

Education Ministry figures indicated most Year 11 students already studied science.

They showed there were 69,108 Year 11 students in 2025 with 45,500 enrolled in science, 3426 in physics, 2404 in chemistry and 3507 in biology.

Vijayakumar said students had to actively opt out of the subject at his current school, but at his previous school it was optional.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

F1: Liam Lawson still having trouble with new car, but rule change could help

Source: Radio New Zealand

NZ F1 driver Liam Lawson PHOTOSPORT

Liam Lawson concedes driving remains difficult as he and the majority of the grid struggle with the new electrical element in their Formula 1 cars.

After a two-week break the championship heads to Japan for the third round, with Mercedes well clear after finishing one-two in Australia and China.

The FIA has announced that it is tweaking the energy management rules to allow drivers to push harder.

The maximum energy teams will be allowed to harvest from their hybrid power units to recharge their batteries during Saturday’s grid-deciding session will be reduced to 8 megajoules (MJ) from 9 MJ. The change means drivers will be able to push more and focus less on recovering energy.

Lawson admitted because of the new hybrid cars, driving has changed, especially in qualifying.

“There are more consequences when you get it wrong, like use too much energy, it can be quite punishing,” Lawson told F1.

NZ F1 driver Liam Lawson at the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix. ALBERTO VIMERCATI / PHOTOSPORT

“We used to go into weekends spending all of our time setting up the car and optimising the car balance, right now it is energy management and trying to get the most out of that because there is so much lap time in it.

“Last year qualifying was fun, this year it is easy to overdrive it and use too much [energy] and make a mistake because it is new it is quite different and difficult.”

The 24-year-old Racing Bulls driver is coming off a double-points haul in China (sprint and GP) and sits ninth in the standings with eight points.

Mercedes driver George Russell tops the standings with 51 points.

Meanwhile, former F1 driver Jolyn Palmer believed Lawson was benefiting from the absence of Helmut Marko in the F1 paddock.

Marko retired as Red Bull advisor following the 2025 championship and is understood to have been the leading figure in the decision to demote Lawson from Red Bull after just two rounds last season.

New Zealand Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson at the 2025 Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka. Eric Alonso / PHOTOSPORT

Palmer, who drove for Renault in the 2016 and 2017 seasons, is now an F1 broadcaster and was asked about Lawson’s start to the 2026 season without Marko involved.

“He was a big presence that could be really hard on young drivers coming through, but he was also a benefit to those who could thrive and become a world champion,” Palmer said about Marko on the F1 Nation podcast.

“Liam obviously saw the brunt of that last year. But it did remind me of the resilience that he’s got, and I think you have to say he’s a tough guy, Liam.

“We’ve seen it in his wheel-to-wheel battles; he’s not afraid to flip the bird to whoever does him wrong in a Grand Prix.

“And also, it took him a while to get up to speed with Racing Bulls last year as well. It wasn’t instantaneous, but he got there, and he had some good drives.

“The same thing in Melbourne. It would have been really easy for him to say, ‘Oh no, Lindblad’s here. He’s getting all the credit from Australia.’ But he drove really well in China, getting points in the sprint and the Grand Prix, and it will settle him down for the year as well.”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand