Page 156

‘No minimum sentence’: Do child sexual exploitation prison terms reflect the severity of the crime?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pixabay/shafin_protic

An advocacy organisation says it receives calls from people covertly asking for help to avoid offending – but despite evidence that programmes work, resources to help are thin.

When The Detail ran a podcast episode about how Customs tries to stop child sexual exploitation material at our borders, our listeners wanted to know what happens to the perpetrators.

In today’s episode, The Detail talks to two experts about the next steps, after the material is found, and what needs to change in New Zealand’s approach to handling the crisis.

Tim Houston is manager of the digital child exploitation team at the Department of Internal Affairs. He says that when he and his team are searching through evidence of child sexual exploitation, they aren’t just looking to support the prosecution of an offender – they’re also looking for material featuring unknown victims.

“It’s not safe to assume that offenders are only looking at material – we go into all of our investigations with the front-of-mind thought that there is also a chance that they are physically offending against a child,” he says.

Houston says people charged with possessing child sexual abuse material face up to a decade behind bars, while those found guilty of creating or distributing the material face up to fourteen years.

There’s no minimum sentence for either charge and many feel the terms of imprisonment don’t reflect the severity of the crime, or the lasting harm they cause.

Eleanor Parkes is the national director for ECPAT NZ, an organisation that works to end child sexual exploitation. She says that while she agrees sentences should reflect the severity of the crime, we need a broader approach to fixing the problem – not just prison time.

“If we’re going to look at what the evidence says around this problem we really need to rewind and we need to be looking much earlier than just at convictions,” she says.

Parkes can understand why people feel that sentencing is too light.

“The harm that these crimes cause is profound, and it is lasting, but we also have to be honest about what keeps children safe, we can’t just be looking to sentencing to make ourselves feel better or feel we’re keeping the community safe.”

In today’s episode, The Detail speaks to Parkes about what needs to change in the way we approach perpetrators of child exploitation, as well as to Tim Houston, who explains what happens once his team has been alerted to an offence.

“As an example, we conduct a search warrant, we seize a phone as part of that search warrant, that phone goes back to our forensic lab where it is analysed using specialised digital forensic tools,” he says.

When asked whether offenders have a chance of full rehabilitation, Houston says it’s a sliding scale.

“We have encountered people where when they’ve been interviewed it evokes that kind of ‘hairs on the back of the neck stand up’ and we’ve also encountered people that have been incredibly remorseful, [they] genuinely want to understand the reasons why they’ve offended and genuinely get help.

“We need to approach every investigation with an open mind about who we’re dealing with.”

But Parkes says a lack of resources means accessing help is difficult, especially for people who haven’t offended (or haven’t been caught offending) as support programs are often filled by court-mandated participants.

She says ECPAT is frequently contacted by people concerned about the direction their sexual preferences are headed.

“They call and they say they’ve ‘accidentally’ stumbled across some content online … and that they’re just wanting to report it and in fact they’re trying to establish to what extent what they’re experiencing is normal or really abnormal, they want to know how much trouble they might get in if they try and seek help for it, they might be trying to figure out where they can safely seek help for it,” she says.

Parks says the programs are effective and people who seek help before they’ve offended have a much higher rehabilitation rate, and there should be more investment into preventing offending in the first place.

“That means creating accessible specialist services where people who are at risk of offending can safely seek help before further harm occurs.

“It means properly funding treatment programs in prisons and in the community that are proven to reduce reoffending, and ensuring that when people are released that they are supported and monitored to integrate safely.”

Where to get help

[www.stop.org.nz Stop]: South Island – Email info@stop.org.nz or call 03 353 0257

[www.wellstop.org.nz WellStop]: Lower North Island – Email info@wellstop.org.nz or call 04 566 4745

[www.safenetwork.org.nz Safe Network]: Northern North Island – Email info@safenetwork.org.nz or call 09 377 9898

Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here.

You can also stay up-to-date by liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter.

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

This widely used chart makes the clean energy switch seem much harder than it actually is

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Asma Aziz, Senior Lecturer in Power Engineering, Edith Cowan University

Unsplash/The Conversation, CC BY-SA

If you follow news about climate change, you’ve probably seen the term “primary energy”.

This phrase refers to the raw energy in fuels and natural resources – the energy content of oil in a barrel, gas in a pipeline, or sunlight hitting a solar panel.

Primary energy is often used to show how much energy humanity uses. The numbers are staggering — billions of tonnes of coal, oil and gas. When graphed, zero-emission options such as renewables and nuclear seem tiny and the sheer bulk of fossil fuels too huge to ever shift. Australia still gets more than 90% of its primary energy from fossil fuels.

But this is misleading. The reason is that truly enormous amounts of energy contained in fossil fuels go to waste. As the world goes electric, it will need much less primary energy for the same result.

From orange to orange juice

To make a glass of orange juice, you start with a whole orange. That’s primary energy. But after peeling, squeezing and straining, the bit we want – the juice – ends up in the glass. This is known as useful energy.

What we actually care about isn’t primary energy – it’s useful energy, the chunk of primary energy that actually powers our appliances, heats our buildings or turns our wheels.

Primary energy and useful energy are often very different. To get energy to our homes, cars or factories, it must first be converted, transported and delivered. Along the way, a surprisingly large fraction is lost – especially from fossil fuels.

Coal power stations burn coal to produce steam to spin turbines to make electricity. Energy is lost every step of the way. As a result, only 35–41% of the energy in coal ends up converted into electricity.

Burning fossil fuels is inherently wasteful. It’s like carrying water in a bucket full of holes — you start with a lot, but by the time it reaches your glass, most has leaked away.

Coal is energy-dense, but most of its energy isn’t actually put to use.
mikulas1/Getty

Primary energy has a counting problem

Global energy statistics make renewables look smaller than they really are, not because they produce less electricity, but because of the way primary energy is counted.

Measuring primary energy involves complex assumptions and calculation methods that can lead to unwarranted conclusions.

Take a simple example. Coal, nuclear and solar can all deliver the same 100 units of electricity. But in statistics compiled by the International Energy Agency or European Union, coal and nuclear each show up as 303 units of “primary energy”, while solar shows only 100 units.

This is because the wasted heat from coal and nuclear is counted, but the free fuel of sunlight and wind isn’t.

The result? On paper, renewables look substantially smaller than they really are.

Efficiency, efficiency, efficiency

When we compare energy sources, looking at raw numbers only tells part of the story. For coal, gas, nuclear and biomass power stations, the amount of primary energy used depends on how much potential heat is in the fuel and how efficiently the plant converts this heat into electricity.

When coal is measured on fuel density and conversion, it does well. But by the time coal is dug up, transported, refined, burned and electricity produced and transmitted, much of this potential is lost as waste heat. Older coal power plants are particularly inefficient.

At first glance, solar panels look weak by comparison. They only convert about 20% of sunlight into electricity, while wind turbines seem about as strong as coal, converting about 40% of the energy in wind into electricity.

But solar and wind generate electricity directly. There’s no need to supply fuel, so we avoid the massive conversion losses of thermal power plants or internal combustion engines.

This means that while solar and wind “efficiency” numbers look lower, these energy sources often deliver more usable energy per unit of primary energy than coal does.

In Australia, the economics are now firmly with solar and wind. Even without subsidies, they’re the cheapest way to build new electricity generation, beating coal and gas.

Electrification plugs the leaky bucket

There’s even better news. Across heating, transport and industry, switching from fossil fuels to electric options gives a major boost to energy efficiency, slashing how much energy we need for the same outcome.

Petrol cars convert just 16–25% of the energy in the fuel into actual motion. The rest is wasted — mostly as heat from the engine or as power is transferred to the wheels.

Electric vehicles are much more efficient, using 87–91% of energy supplied by the battery and regenerative braking to move.

Hot water heat pumps are vastly more efficient than gas hot water. For every unit of electricity used, heat pumps deliver 3–5 units of heat. That is, they’re 300–500% efficient. By contrast, gas heaters can have efficiencies between 30% and 80%.

Electricity is a much more efficient way to heat air than gas. Modern gas heaters still waste 10–40% of the heat they generate. Reverse-cycle air conditioners are much more efficient and are the cheapest way to heat a space.

Electricity is also a more efficient way to cook. Induction cooktops transfer 84% of the energy to the pan, compared with 71% for electric coils and just 40% for gas burners.

Going electric is like swapping a leaky bucket for a shiny new one with no holes. Most of the energy you put in is energy you can actually use.

Useful energy, not primary energy

Graphs of primary energy make it seem almost impossible to end our long reliance on fossil fuels.

But primary energy doesn’t really matter. If we focus instead on useful energy, the task ahead is much more doable. Instead of asking how we can replace all of today’s primary energy, the real question is how much useful energy we need, and how clean electricity can provide it more efficiently. Clean, efficient electric options make it possible to double global GDP by 2050 – while using 36% less primary energy.

Renewables, storage and electrification make it possible to deliver energy much more efficiently. This means renewables don’t have to replace every joule of potential fossil fuel energy – just the part we actually use, with far less waste and far fewer emissions.

Asma Aziz does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. This widely used chart makes the clean energy switch seem much harder than it actually is – https://theconversation.com/this-widely-used-chart-makes-the-clean-energy-switch-seem-much-harder-than-it-actually-is-264322

Everything feels better in sets of three. Three’s also my prison.

Source: Radio New Zealand

My favourite number has always been three.

In my mind, three is a waltz moving in circles, graceful and hypnotic. It plays brightly in a major key, hauntingly beautiful in minor. It’s a deep midnight blue fading into royal purple, like an acrylic painting of the setting sun.

In a numerical sequence, it dances between odd and even, fitting whatever my brain decides it needs that day. If three pumps of shampoo doesn’t feel right, six is an even number and I still get to count the pumps in threes.

Three has always been Georgie’s favourite number.

RNZ

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

Osaka pulls out of ASB Classic, Svitolina and Navarro signed up

Source: Radio New Zealand

Naomi Osaka at the US Open tennis tournament on 28 August. AFP / Timothy A Clary

Former world women’s tennis number one Naomi Osaka has withdrawn from this summer’s ASB Classic in Auckland.

Osaka cited a change of schedule for her withdrawal.

The Japanese player reached the final of the 2025 tournament, but was forced to retire, handing the title to Denmark’s Clara Tauson.

“We are disappointed with Naomi Osaka’s decision but hope to welcome her back in the near-future,” tournament director Nicolas Lamperin said.

Osaka’s departure has been offset by the tournament signing Elina Svitolina and Emma Navarro who head back to ASB Classic.

World number 14 Elina Svitolina from Ukraine and number 15 Emma Navarro from USA are the highest ranked players to contest the 2026 tournament which starts on 5 January.

Thirty-two-year-old Svitolina last played in Auckland in 2024, when she lost to Coco Gauff in the final.

Svitolina made a successful return to the game in mid-2023 following the birth of daughter Skai with husband Gael Monfils, who has already confirmed his appearance in Auckland to begin his final year on the Tour.

This year Svitolina won her 18th Tour title in Rouen.

Navarro was the most improved female player on the Tour last year, beginning with the semi-finals in Auckland. She rose 30 spots to finish 2024 at number 8.

The 24-year-old American enjoyed a win in Hobart, along with the semi-finals in nine tournaments including the US Open, Monterrey, Toronto, Bad Homburg, and San Diego. She also made the quarterfinals at Wimbledon and Indian Wells to complete a meteoric 2024 season.

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

Triathlon: Hayden Wilde puts chaotic race behind him

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand triathlete Hayden Wilde. Alan Lee / www.photosport.nz

New Zealand triathlete Hayden Wilde is sure there will be more robust technical involvement in future T100 events following a farcical finish to the latest round in Dubai.

Wilde and a number of other athletes rode an extra lap on the bike leg of the Dubai race last weekend which resulted in him slipping from the lead and finishing eighth.

“They call themselves a professional race organisation,” Wilde said at the time.

The result ended Wilde’s winning streak on the T100 world circuit, after he unknowingly added eight kilometres to the cycle section.

The 28-year-old knew he must have been nearing the end of the bike leg but said there was confusion with no official call for them to go into the transition area.

He said the crowd encouraged them that they still had one lap to go.

Later on in the run leg, Wilde and others were told by officials to pull into the finish despite still having a lap to go. Because of the error on the bike leg, officials decided to finish the race a lap earlier on the run leg.

“It’s frustrating, but as athletes we know, [so] I take accountability for doing an extra lap,” Wilde told RNZ.

“On the athletics track there is always a lap counter and in other cycling events you have the bell lap and a lap counter but unfortunately in our sport we don’t have that.”

However, Wilde, an Olympic silver and bronze medallist, is sure it won’t happen again.

“I think from now on there will be a lap counter at races,” Wilde said.

“These are relatively new courses and courses where they’re quite technical where you do lose track of time and places.”

Wilde said the frustrating thing was that there was a technical official with them on a motorbike the whole last lap, but he didn’t say anything.

“Hopefully we can work together and do better next time,” Wilde said.

The result didn’t affect his overall standing as he heads into the season finale in Doha next month.

“The body is performing at such a late part of the season and I’m really happy with the position I’m in.”

A top-four finish in the grand final will confirm the title for Wilde.

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

‘Portals to the past’: Indigenous educators reconnect with Pacific wayfinding

Source: Radio New Zealand

Indigenous educators from across the world reconnected with the knowledge of their tūpuna at WIPCE 2025 – guided by Māori kaihautū and two of the original Hōkūleʻa navigators whose first voyage helped revitalise Pacific wayfinding. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

‘If you’re on a canoe, you’re in the same space your ancestors were – just a different time.”

Those are the words of Billy Richards, an “OG sailor”, one of the original Hōkūleʻa navigators whose 1976 voyage helped reignite Pacific wayfinding.

On Monday, his presence – alongside fellow original navigator John Kruse – gave added weight to over a dozen Indigenous educators who stepped aboard Haunui, a double-hulled waka carrying the legacy of their tūpuna.

Guided by kaihautū from Te Toki Voyaging Trust, manuhiri (visitors) from Indigenous nations around the world spent the morning learning the whakapapa of waka hourua and the mātauranga that carried their tūpuna across the Pacific.

Hoturoa Barclay-Kerr (Tainui) founded Te Toki Voyaging over 30 years ago. He now trains navigators, maintains a fleet of waka hourua and paddling canoes, and runs environmental, leadership, and education programmes for rangatahi across the motu. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

The excursion is one of many offered at the World Indigenous Peoples’ Conference on Education (WIPCE), which has returned to Aotearoa for the first time in 20 years.

Leading the voyage was Kaihautū Hoturoa Barclay-Kerr (Tainui), who said the aim was not just to sail, but to reconnect with the knowledge of their tūpuna.

“Here we are today on board Haunui as part of the WIPCE conference,” he said, welcoming delegates.

“A living, breathing example of the kind of waka that our tūpuna sailed from Hawaiki to Aotearoa.”

He said it was important for not only Māori, but other nations to “recover, relearn and relive the wisdom of our ancestors”.

“That knowledge got them through centuries and it can guide us today, for people, for the planet … for all our resources.”

Haunui, a double-hulled voyaging canoe carrying the mana of Kāwhia Moana and the Tainui people, was restored in Aotearoa and blessed for open-ocean voyaging. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

Haunui carries the mana of Kāwhia Moana and the people of Tainui. The waka began its life as Va’atele, built under Te Mana o te Moana, a project to grow ocean literacy and revive Polynesian wayfinding.

Gifted to American Samoa, Va’atele returned to Aotearoa for repair after the 2009 tsunami.

That return allowed a new vision: a double-hulled canoe capable of open-ocean voyaging. It was restored and renamed Haunui, in honour of Barclay-Kerr’s uncle – tohunga Hone Haunui.

The vessel now sailed under Te Toki Voyaging Trust (TTVT), which was founded more than 30 years ago by Barclay-Kerr. Built around the values of aroha, whanaungatanga, manaakitanga and kaitiakitanga, the Trust trained navigators, maintained a fleet of waka hourua and paddling canoes, and ran environmental, leadership, and education programmes for rangatahi across the motu.

At WIPCE 2025, Indigenous educators were offered the opportunity to reconnect with their ancestors alongside OG Hōkūleʻa navigators Billy Richards and John Kruse aboard Haunui waka. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

For many on board, the biggest surprise was seeing Billy Richards and John Kruse – known as ‘Uncle Billy’ and ‘Uncle John’ – also on board the waka.

Known as kaitiaki in the voyaging world, the pair were part of the first Hōkūleʻa voyage in 1976, the journey widely credited with sparking a Pacific-wide cultural renaissance in ocean navigation.

“The only reason I’m standing here on this waka, and we can sail around on the waka, is because of things they did in the early 1970s,” Barclay-Kerr told RNZ.

“These are the original OG sailors of waka who revitalised and rejuvenated this whole thing in 1975 and 76.”

The Hawaiian waka Hōkūleʻa is returning to Aotearoa, 40 years after its maiden visit. Polynesian Voyaging Society

Barclay-Kerr said when Hōkūleʻa was built, it was the first canoe for over 600 years that could carry people and journey across vast distances without instruments.

“Uncle John and Uncle Billy helped build that waka, sailed it to Tahiti … and here we are 50 years later and they’re sitting here with us.”

He said, with only a few original crew members alive, their presence was “a great gift from our ancestors”.

“I can’t be more happy than that.”

Billy Richards (Oʻahu) is an original member of Hōkūleʻa, the Polynesian canoe whose voyage from Honolua Bay to Tahiti marked the first deep-sea journey of its kind in over 600 years. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

‘One foot in the present and one foot in the past’

Richards, now 77, first stepped onto Hōkūleʻa in 1975.

“I’ve been a voyager for … well, let’s put it this way,” he said.

“I first stepped aboard when I was 27. You can do the math.”

Half a century later, he describes voyaging as living with “one foot in the present and one foot in the past”.

“I like to think of our canoes as portals to the past,” he told RNZ.

“When you’re on a canoe and you’re sailing, you’re in the same space, doing the same thing as your ancestors … just a different time.”

Richards said the voyaging community had grown from one waka to 27 across the Pacific.

“We call ourselves the ‘ohana wa’a, the family of the canoe. At one time there was just Hōkūleʻa, but now there are 27 voyaging canoes in the ocean,” he said.

“It’s an extension of everything that happened the first time.”

Teaching the next generation was central to that growth.

“It’s okay that we move on, because you make room for the young to come up. Otherwise we might lose it again,” he said.

“A lot of what we do is, when the canoe is coming out to be fixed, you come down and volunteer. If you put your energy into the canoe, we have an obligation to invite you aboard.”

April Iwalani-Harris (left) travelled to Aotearoa from Hawai‘i and says she feels blessed to “learn from all nations about how we better support our keiki, our children.” RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

That intergenerational thread is part of what drew WIPCE delegate April Iwalani-Harris (Moku o Keawe – Hawai’i Island) onto the waka.

“What brings me here? My DNA brings me here,” she told RNZ.

“I’ve worked in education for 35 years, and I was blessed with the opportunity to come and learn from all nations about how we better support our keiki, our children.”

She said stepping onto Haunui felt like reconnecting with something familiar.

“Everyone said it was like coming home. It was connecting with family members you have yet to meet.”

That feeling deepened when she recognised a cousin, a crew member from Makali’i and supporter of Hōkūleʻa, standing across the deck from her.

“My kūpuna (ancestors) say there are no coincidences.

“Being able to spend this time with him and with everyone else we were introduced to… that was really special.”

Iwalani-Harris hoped to take back to Hawai’i lessons on how to be a better ancestor.

“Oceans separate us, but there’s so much commonality,” she said.

“Where we come from, there’s a saying, nō nā keiki maua mau. It’s forever the children. We keep our eyes on them.

“So coming here and understanding strategies, understanding the journeys others have taken… it helps us be better stewards of our keiki, our aina, our oceans.”

Indigenous educators from across the world reconnect with the knowledge of their tūpuna at WIPCE 2025 – guided by Māori kaihautū and two of the original Hōkūleʻa navigators whose first voyage helped revitalise Pacific wayfinding. RNZ / Layla Bailey-McDowell

Barclay-Kerr said this was exactly what voyaging offered.

“When you bring young people on a waka like this, they’re learning stuff by default.

“On the waka, they’re doing maths and science without knowing that’s what they’re doing.

“The great thing about waka is that it becomes a secret agency to educate people. People come on board for fun, but they get off having had fun and being a bit enlightened as well.

“Ancient wisdom can’t be relegated to a museum or a textbook,” he said.

“It needs to be lived.”

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

Three suspicious fires in Dunedin overnight

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) says it had to deal with three suspicious fires overnight in Dunedin.

At 11:30pm on Monday, four crews were called to a vacant commercial building on Harrow street in central Dunedin.

About an hour later at 12:23am, emergency services were called to a fire at an unoccupied residential property, also in central Dunedin.

A FENZ spokesperson said that blaze reached second-alarm status and saw half a dozen appliances deployed.

Following that, at about 1:20am, FENZ was alerted to a series of trees on fire outside the Otago Pistol Club.

It was understood on arrival the flames were about 20 metres high, with five trucks, two tankers and two rural crews sent to extinguish the blaze.

FENZ said investigators would be looking into the fires.

No persons were reported harmed.

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

‘Not meant to be around here’: Auckland native bird hospital seeing more sub-Antarctic species

Source: Radio New Zealand

A white-headed petrel doing a water test to check its swimming and water resistance. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

A native bird hospital is concerned about the number of sub-Antarctic seabirds landing sick or hurt in Auckland.

BirdCare Aotearoa is a charity based in West Auckland and works to rehabilitate and care for sick, injured, and orphaned birds.

It recently took in a white-headed petrel found on the West Coast beach of Muriwai with severe internal bleeding late last month.

BirdCare’s fundraising manager Dr Rashi Parker told RNZ it was very unusual to find the petrel so far north.

“When it came into care, it was in, the team call it, a guarded prognosis,” she said. “It had to immediately be put on oxygen and support to regulate its body temperature.

“It needed fluids, it needed vitamin K, because it came with very serious internal bleeding and was severely anemic.”

Parker said BirdCare had seen quite a few birds in a similar situation, describing it as “very unusual”.

“We had three blue petrels, we had two sub-Antarctic fulmars come in, and then we also had soft-plumed petrel,” she said.

“They’re not meant to be around here, they’re very sub-Antarctic birds, so something must be drawing them north.”

A little blue penguin being cared for by BirdCare Aotearoa. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

At the hospital on Monday, specialists were testing the white-headed petrel’s ability to swim, spritzing the bird to check if it would repel the water off its feathers, before potentially releasing it that evening.

It needed to confidently stay afloat for half an hour.

About 17-minutes into the test, however, the feathers on the petrel’s stomach and inner right wing became wet.

“That’s no good, because a bird that can’t be waterproof or if its feathers get wet is basically a bird that can’t swim, and a seabird that can’t swim is a giant drowning risk,” Parker said.

Despite that, they were hopeful for the petrel’s recovery.

“He has been in care for 19 days, so we want to be able to get it out as quickly as possible.”

Parker said they could only speculate on what brought the birds so far north from their habitat.

“Perhaps they’re finding it harder to hunt in the oceans, perhaps there’s not enough food, or fish, or squid from where they’re used to and so they might be coming up north, the oceans are warming up which is changing a whole bunch in terms of their typical exploratory habits.”

This white-headed petrel was found on the West Coast beach of Muriwai with severe internal bleeding late last month. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

It was also possible the birds “hitchhiked” by following lights from cruise ships, Parker said.

What was concerning was the state the deepwater seabirds were found in, she said.

“They’ve all come in with neurological symptoms and signs of internal bleeding.”

Parker said they had another rescue earlier in the year which regurgitated plastic before dying.

“We’ve had a few other Cook’s petrels also, two of them had regurgitated plastic and then carried on,” she said.

“We’ve got a freezer full of these birds that couldn’t make it, and we want to actually investigate what’s going on with their internal organs.”

Parker said the hospital was looking for corporate partners and others to conduct an investigation into the plastic consumed by the birds.

“We really want to see what the rate of plastic ingestion is in seabirds, who are a very vulnerable species, and also kind of determine what is wrong with our oceans that could be hurting these beautiful seabirds,” she said.

Meanwhile, the hospital planned to re-test the white-headed petrel’s swimming and water-resistance, potentially releasing it later in the week.

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

Kaitāia reels at violent death of ‘relentlessly optimistic’ businessman Monty Knight

Source: Radio New Zealand

Monty Knight established his own winery, Okahu Estate, just outside Kaitāia. RNZ/Carol Stiles

Kaitāia is reeling from the violent death of a man described as “an absolute legend” in business circles and as a generous, “relentlessly optimistic” advocate for his hometown by his friends.

Monty Knight, who turned 80 earlier this year, died at his home just outside Kaitāia on Sunday afternoon.

Police said they found him critically injured after responding to reports of an assault, and arrested a 57-year-old woman a short time later.

She had since been charged with murder.

Among those shocked by his death is Colin Kitchen, a Kaitāia community stalwart, former fire chief and newly elected regional councillor.

The entrances to Monty Knight’s winery, Okahu Estate, and home were cordoned off with police tape on Monday. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Kitchen said he had known Knight for more than 60 years.

“He was a go-to person, a real people’s person. He was a generous guy whose door was always open. A clever bugger too,” he said.

“He’s going to be sadly missed. I feel so stunned, shocked, sad and devastated, hearing that news. It’s very, very sad.”

Former Far North mayor John Carter, who lived just north of the town, was also struggling to come to terms with Knight’s death.

“He was a very community-minded person who’s done a tremendous amount for the community. A very successful businessman of course, which has enabled him to do so. But he’s been very generous with his time and support.”

Former Far North mayor John Carter. RNZ / Dan Cook

Northland Chamber of Commerce deputy chairman Tim Robinson described Knight as a tireless entrepreneur and “a larger-than-life character who lit up any room he walked into”.

“He was an absolute legend from a business perspective. He loved Kaitāia. He was so immensely proud of it as a town, and as a part of the Far North where he lived,” he said.

“The thing that always struck me about him was that he was an incredibly positive optimist and a serial entrepreneur. He was always looking for new opportunities and he always believed that Kaitāia was a town that could punch above its weight.”

Robinson said that was borne out by Knight’s stellar business career, which started with a tiny record shop on Commerce Street he called Monty’s Disc Inn.

He then expanded into electronics, appliances and beds, took over his parents’ Kaitāia jewellery store, and opened another in Kerikeri.

He also started a winery, Okahu Estate, which won awards within New Zealand and overseas.

“And all of them were very, very successful businesses. So it speaks volumes in terms of being a very smart, astute businessman, but also his relentlessly positive and optimistic attitude to everything.”

Robinson said they also bonded over things other than business.

“I knew the man for 30-plus years and I shared his great love of wine. So when he started Okahu Estate, it was kind of music to my ears.”

Northland Chamber of Commerce deputy chairman Tim Robinson. RNZ / Luka Forman

Knight somehow found time to be elected to the Far North District and Northland Regional councils, and had a couple of tilts at the Far North mayoralty.

He also contested last month’s district council election but did not win a seat.

Ian Walker, another prominent Kaitāia businessman, described him as an “iconic personality” of the Far North.

He said their paths had crossed often since he moved to Kaitāia more than 30 years ago, but he knew of Knight long before that.

Walker recalled watching Knight on national TV when he represented the Far North in the Telethon fundraising broadcasts of the 1970s and 80s.

Knight’s quirky humour plus his fondness for clowning around and funny hats made him a standout during the marathon TV shows.

A natural entertainer, Knight was also frequently on the radio around the Far North.

“It’s a real shame for somebody who’s contributed to the colour of Kaitāia for such a long time to pass the way he did. It is unfair and disappointing and saddening,” he said.

Monty Knight was of Kaitāia’s best-known characters and entrepreneurs. Supplied

In 2012, during one of Knight’s short-lived attempts at semi-retirement, Walker purchased the appliance store 100 percent Monty Knight and the local Beds R Us franchise from him.

During last month’s election campaign, Knight said he had tried retiring but found it “too boring”.

Colin Kitchen praised the emergency service personnel who tried to save Knight on Sunday.

He said every police officer, medic and volunteer firefighter called to his home would have known him personally, making a tough job even harder.

“And the scene, it wasn’t good. So I just want to shout out to them and say thank you. You guys are there doing the mahi in people’s time of need, and unfortunately, they couldn’t help Monty this time.”

Kitchen said a date had yet to be chosen for Knight’s funeral, but it was likely to be this coming weekend and certain to be huge.

The accused woman appeared in the Kaitāia District Court on Monday afternoon. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

Meanwhile, the woman accused of his murder was remanded in custody when she appeared before a Justice of the Peace in the Kaitāia District Court on Monday afternoon.

She appeared calm and was dressed in a causal jumper during the brief appearance.

Her name and all identifying details were suppressed until her next appearance, which would be in the High Court at Whangārei on 5 December.

The judge issued a non-contact order for a number of witnesses who had yet to be spoken to by police.

She did not seek bail.

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

What IKEA’s opening will mean for local homeware retailers

Source: Radio New Zealand

IKEA has released details of some of the prices it will charge in New Zealand. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

IKEA has released details of some of the prices it will charge in New Zealand – but how much of a threat will it be to other local homeware retailers?

It says it will sell a watering can for $4.99, a two-door cabinet for $179, a side table for $59.99, a storage bench for $119 and a vase for $19.99.

A yellow table lamp will sell for $229 and a blue dining chair for $119. Children’s stools will sell for $19.99 and an armchair for $199.

“I think Kiwis will for sure love the IKEA experience, the different experience that we are offering when it comes to the home furnishing market,” said IKEA Sylvia Park marketing manager Johanna Cederlof.

“IKEA is not just selling furniture and home furnishing accessories. It is a true experience itself and you get an entire atmosphere and inspiration for your home and that’s maybe what Kiwis have been missing a bit here in New Zealand.”

She said it would be interesting to see whether New Zealanders also favoured the products that were big sellers internationally. She said bed linen was likely to sell well.

A pine table with storage will sell for $449. Ikea

Retail consultant Chris Wilkinson said IKEA would ultimately benefit all New Zealand retailers.

“It will spark inspiration and some spending. Once upon a time people would buy most of their products within a category from one brand – that goes for homeware, clothing and other products – but today are much more likely to mix and blend products and price points – like having an expensive pair of designer jeans, then teaming that with a tee from Glassons.

“Same with the likes of furniture, so signature pieces – teamed with more affordable pieces. The difference though with IKEA is that typically our lower-cost homeware has not necessarily had the sustainability or durability before, so their entry into the market will add an additional dimension.”

He said most of IKEA’s early trade would come from growing the market. “But it will seriously challenge the less durable and short lifespan furnishing and homeware products.

“That would include some big-box stores as well as the plethora of direct-to-consumer wholesalers that bring in products typically from China.”

Bodo Lang, a marketing expert at Massey University said it would be a major threat to many furniture and home furnishing shops.

“IKEA’s impact will be particularly felt by retailers that are close to its Auckland store in Sylvia Park. Even consumers from further afield, say, Whangārei, Hamilton, or Tauranga will make the trip to IKEA due to the brand’s pulling power. Therefore, retailers in those areas may also see a slight sag in sales.

“Beyond that, even retailers in other parts of the country are likely to feel a slowing of sales because consumers can also shop at IKEA online, through the phone, or via the app. However, this impact is likely to be muted because furniture and home furnishings are ‘high touch’ products that consumers wish to try out in person.”

But he said it would bring people to the Sylvia Park area.

“Other retailers, particularly those who are not directly competing with IKEA, will benefit from the arrival of the global retail giant through increased foot traffic at Sylvia Park.”

IKEA will open at Sylvia Park on 4 December, with online sales to the rest of the country.

Sign up for Money with Susan Edmunds, a weekly newsletter covering all the things that affect how we make, spend and invest money.

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

Uber drivers’ Supreme Court decision could collapse gig economy, business groups say

Source: Radio New Zealand

AFP

Business groups says a Supreme Court decision that Uber drivers are employees rather than contractors could collapse the gig economy.

It comes after the Supreme Court unanimously decided to shut down Uber’s appeal against an Employment Court ruling in 2022 that drivers using the app were employees of Uber.

BusinessNZ chief executive Katherine Rich said the decision had far reaching implications for businesses that hired contractors.

“These types of businesses have become a part of our work and leisure, and are founded on a contractor model. If the employment status of platform workers becomes too rigid, then the conveniences we’ve come to enjoy could cease to be,” she said.

“Likewise if you are contracting with platforms like rideshare or delivery gigs to supplement your primary income, or working across multiple platforms, then you may be forced to re-evaluate.”

Rich said BusinessNZ had urged the government to take decisive action to give businesses more certainty.

“It’s an issue we’ve raised with the government before and if it isn’t resolved soon, it has the potential to make not just platform work unviable in New Zealand, but puts contracting employment in general at risk,” she said.

The Employers and Manufacturers Association, which is closely affiliated with BusinessNZ, said the Supreme Court’s decision showed New Zealand’s employment law needed to be updated.

“It highlights how our current legislation, and legislation around the world, is a bit out of date in terms of how we manage platform working,” head of advocacy Alan McDonald said.

“The cases that are cited in the judgement, they’re quite old. I think at least one of them maybe predates the whole platform working thing, so that’s part of the issue… We’ve got legislation that doesn’t know how to deal with this, so we’ve jammed new style working practices into old school legislation.”

He said businesses were concerned about the blurred line between contractors and employees.

“Everyone was keeping an eye on the Uber decision, but also wanted some more clarity around how you actually define what a contractor is because it’s pretty grey at the moment,” he said.

McDonald was hopeful that the Employment Relations Amendment Bill spearheaded by Workplace Relations Minister Brooke van Velden would provide that clarity.

“I think it will give the clarity employers want. You need definitions that are clear. At the moment if you start as a contractor and then, I’ll exaggerate for effect, a few weeks or a few months later you say ‘oh, I just want to be an employee’ and you kind of can,” he said.

“The new law would say if you sign up as a contractor and you sign the contract then you’re a contractor.”

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 will be ‘dumping ground’ for high emission cars, EV advocate warns

Source: Radio New Zealand

The coalition government is set to slash the Clean Car Standard. RNZ/Nicky Park

The coalition is being warned New Zealand will become a dumping ground for high-emission vehicles as it slashes the Clean Car Standard.

The standard – an effective penalty set up to incentivise the uptake of low or no emission vehicles – will drop by nearly 80 percent at the end of this week.

Importers will be charged $15 per gram of CO₂ for new imports instead of $67.50, and $7.50 per gram of CO₂ for used imports instead of $33.75.

Transport Minister Chris Bishop has made a strong case for urgent change to save consumers hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars when buying a new car.

“If we don’t act there will be $264 million in net charges that could have and likely will be passed on to New Zealanders through higher vehicle prices,” he said.

It’s come as a relief to sector groups like the Imported Motor Vehicle Industry Association, whose chair Greig Epps said importers were doing it tough.

“This is really good for for our business. We had people closing up shop this year. We’ve lost several members this year. Businesses have just decided that it’s too hard to keep going and next year the penalties would have increased, the targets tightened, so that was just not looking good for the industry.”

Imported Motor Vehicle Industry Association chair Greig Epps. Supplied

Drive Electric’s board chair Kirsten Corson described the change as “really disappointing” and “embarassing”.

“If you look at us compared to Australia, in Australia you’re paying $100 as a penalty and now we’ve just slashed that to $15 in New Zealand.

“So we are going to become a dumping ground for high emission vehicles.”

Corson also questioned Bishop’s statement that “the impact is so negligible this didn’t get a climate impact assessment”.

“I’m not sure which data he’s looking at but it’s far from negligible when you think our transport emissions [are] our best hope of hitting our Paris Agreement targets,” Corson said.

“We keep our vehicles on our road for two decades. The average car is 15 years old in New Zealand so the decisions they’re making today is going to impact our transport emissions for the next three decades.”

Labour leader Chris Hipkins said the coalition was responding to a problem of its own making, having scrapped the Clean Car Discount.

“It was ironic to see Chris Bishop and the Prime Minister complaining that there aren’t enough electric vehicles and hybrid vehicles on the used car market.

“That’s because they collapsed the importation of electric vehicles when they canceled the Clean Car Discount.

“They made it much more expensive for New Zealanders to buy electric vehicles and to buy low emissions hybrid vehicles and now they’re complaining there aren’t enough used versions of those on the market.”

The government is reviewing the Clean Car Standard with a plan to report recommendations back to Cabinet in June next year.

The ACT party is already advocating – as it has for some time – for the entire scheme to be scrapped.

The slashed standard will be passed into law by the end of the week.

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

Blue light discos, books, boats and UFOs: The swirly world of Andrew Fagan

Source: Radio New Zealand

Most New Zealand music fans of a certain age (ie, 50+) will remember Andrew Fagan as the frontman for legendary 1980s punky popsters The Mockers.

Back then, he was a wiry whirl of gravity-defying hair, leopard-print leggings, fingerless lace gloves, black nail polish and eye makeup, and dazzling frock coats – a sartorial cross between The Cure’s Robert Smith and early 80s Madonna.

By his Bandcamp description, he’s a “poet singer songwriter sailor writer show-off”.

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

Jaeyoung Jang accused of murdering father and son in Bucklands Beach house fire

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police guard at the scene of the Bucklands beach double homicide fire. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

The man accused of murdering a father and son who died in an Auckland house fire can now be named.

He is Jaeyoung Jang, from Sunnyhills in East Auckland.

The 38-year-old first appeared in the Manukau District Court on 24 October where he was granted name suppression.

An order was then made at a later High Court appearance on 12 November for the suppression to lapse late on Monday night, at 11.59pm.

On 2 October, emergency services rushed to the fully engulfed home on Murvale Drive at Bucklands Beach.

The bodies of 36-year-old Jung Sup Lee, and his 11-year-old son Ha-il Lee were found inside.

A homicide investigation was launched after police said the fire was deliberately lit with an accelerant.

Jaeyoung Jang has pleaded not guilty to murdering the pair.

Their family on Monday spoke out for the first time to RNZ National Crime Correspondent Sam Sherwood about what happened, revealing heroic actions of a father who died trying to save his youngest son.

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

Firefighter unions head to Employment Relations Authority over restructure

Source: Radio New Zealand

PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons says a major restructure of Fire and Emergency “must be put on hold before lasting damage is done”. RNZ

Two unions are going to the Employment Relations Authority to try to stop a major restructure of Fire and Emergency (FENZ).

Staff were told last week of sweeping changes designed to slash $50 million from FENZ’s annual costs.

Over 140 roles could be cut if the changes go through.

The PSA and Professional Firefighters’ Union (NZPFU) filed an urgent application with the authority, arguing FENZ had breached the collective agreement by failing to consult before announcing the proposed job cuts.

PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons said the changes “must be put on hold before lasting damage is done to FENZ’s ability to respond to emergencies”.

“These proposed cuts pose a serious threat to public safety at a time of escalating climate-driven emergencies. We are aiming to stop these dangerous job losses,” Fitzsimons said.

She said Fire and Emergency was shutting the unions out of meaningful consultation over the cuts.

“FENZ has clear obligations in the collective agreements to consult both the PSA and NZPFU about proposed changes that impact its members – not just their consequences. FENZ only provided an embargoed copy of its proposal to the PSA the day before announcing it to staff.

“The PSA made several attempts between being advised about the restructure on 29 October and 12 November to be consulted, it’s simply not good enough,” Fitzsimons said.

NZPFU national secretary Wattie Watson said the workers caught up in the cuts were “critical” to ensuring firefighters on the ground were properly trained and resourced.

“We are deeply concerned about the impacts on our members that are evident in the proposal but also the unseen implications which we believe may be an attack on the necessary increase in career firefighters.

“FENZ is unilaterally deciding to reverse parts of a restructure in 2020 that put community resilience and risk reduction roles in place without first engaging with those that do the work to see if any changes need to be made,” Watson said.

Fire and Emergency said it was committed to consulting with its workforce about the proposed restructure.

However, FENZ chief executive Kerry Gregory said the employer was encouraging the unions and the wider workforce to have a say on the plan.

“The PSA, NZPFU and all our people, have been encouraged to engage in the consultation process, so that their views on whether or not the change should take place, the reasons behind the proposed change, and on the proposed changes themselves can be heard, considered and responded to.

“We have postponed planned activities to ensure our unions, associations, and personnel have the time and capacity to engage fully with the proposal and prepare their submissions.”

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 fuel of ‘last resort’: How imported gas became New Zealand’s first choice

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

For a government facing blackouts and business closures in an election year, importing gas is an attractive choice. For others, it’s the worst possible option.

When the government unveiled its long-awaited energy package earlier this year, the centrepiece was a promise to fast-track the import of overseas natural gas. Ministers said it would keep the lights on and protect industry as local gas reserves run dry.

But the response from almost every corner – other than the gas industry itself – was a collective groan. Liquified Natural Gas, or LNG, is an answer of sorts to the country’s energy security crisis, but not one most were hoping for.

Not only is imported gas expensive, it is also bad for the climate, and leaves us dependent on volatile global markets.

“LNG is not a good option for New Zealand. It’s a duress position, a band-aid,” says energy commentator Larry Blair.

Even the government’s own independent review warned LNG should only ever be a last resort. Frontier Economics, which led the official Electricity Market Review, warned that importing LNG would expose New Zealand to international price shocks and make local exporters less competitive.

At best, it will buy the country a bit of time while it seeks a replacement for its dwindling domestic gas supply, Blair says. “It’s like jamming a finger in the dike to hold back the flood.”

For a government staring down the barrel of blackouts and business closures, however, LNG is an attractive short-term response. A terminal can be built relatively quickly, and it is a reliable fuel source that will slot easily into our current energy and electricity systems.

Port Taranaki, which already has significant oil and gas infrastructure, is one of the proposed locations for an LNG terminal. RNZ / Robin Martin

But critics – from consumer advocates to business groups to environmental lobbyists – say taking a short-term fix will only create another long-term problem, by locking New Zealand into its costly LNG investment even after the immediate need to shore up the gas supply is over.

It will also do little to fix our energy market’s deeper structural problems and much to delay the inevitable transition to cheaper, greener, renewable energy, they say.

“Putting in LNG is counter-intuitive, because there are other options,” says Consumer’s Powerswitch manager Paul Fuge. “It doesn’t make logical sense that you would buy expensive fuel when you have free fuel here – geothermal, wind and solar.”

As ministers decide whether to proceed with an LNG terminal next month, they are also making a much larger choice: whether New Zealand doubles down on fossil fuels in the name of “security,” or throws its weight behind a home-grown energy system.

“We’re at a crossroads here. We could have this low-cost renewables future but we’re snatching defeat from the jaws of victory,” says Fuge.

“New Zealand has always had an advantage because we had access to cheap, renewable power. Expensive electricity isn’t good for consumers, and it isn’t good for New Zealand Inc.”

Fuel security or fossil security?

The idea of importing LNG barely featured in energy debates until 2024, when Prime Minister Christopher Luxon declared an “energy security crisis”. Low hydro inflows and soaring electricity prices forced some factories to close, while families struggled to pay their bills.

The crisis worsened the following year due to gas shortages, highlighting New Zealand’s inter-connected energy problems: “dry-year risk” due to a lack of rain filling the hydro dams, and plummeting natural gas production – meaning gas could no longer be relied on to fill the dry-year gap, let alone its more frequent role in producing electricity during peak demand.

Winstone pulp mill near Ruapehu closed in 2024, citing high energy prices. More than 200 workers lost their jobs. RNZ / REECE BAKER

In response, ministers promised to “fix the fundamentals” – chiefly by restoring investor confidence in fossil fuels. Since then, the coalition has lifted the ban on offshore oil and gas exploration, announced a $200m co-investment for gas, and launched the LNG procurement process. The government argues these are pragmatic moves to stabilise supply while it works toward its stated goal of doubling renewables.

Critics see something else: a retreat to “fossil security”. Instead of prioritising the next phase of wind, solar, geothermal and storage – technologies that already supply more than 80 percent of New Zealand’s electricity – policy now orbits around extending the life of gas.

“To me, importing gas is like giving an addict just enough of their drug to keep them hooked,” says 350 Aotearoa co-director Alva Feldmeier. “You keep the country and the network dependent for a bit longer-making it harder to quit-rather than supporting the transition we need to make now.”

The dismantling of alternatives

The coalition insists the country’s energy problems stem from the last government’s policies, particularly its 2018 oil and gas offshore exploration ban, and a target to achieve 100 percent renewable electricity by 2030.

At the announcement of its energy policy in October, Energy Minister Simon Watts said decisions by the last Labour government had “scared off investment and left us dangerously short of reliable backup generation”, while Luxon previously accused Labour of “screwing the scrum” by banning offshore oil and gas exploration.

Its response, prior to the October announcement, was to dismantle or delay nearly every major Labour-led initiative designed to develop a cleaner, cheaper and more reliable power system.

Among the casualties were the NZ Battery Project, which was exploring both pumped hydro at Lake Onslow and an alternative “portfolio approach”, such as flexible geothermal, demand response, grid scale batteries and hydrogen biomass.

That was scrapped in late 2023. Soon afterwards, the Gas Transition Plan, designed to manage declining reserves and ensure supply during the shift away from fossil fuels, was shelved. Plans for offshore-wind farms first stalled in Parliament, and then again because of competing mining proposals. And the GIDI Fund – which co-funded industrial electrification – was cancelled, leaving many firms without support to electrify or switch to other, cleaner fuels.

NZ Steel’s plant at Glenbrook halved its coal use after receiving GIDI funding to electrify some of its production. RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

Each move narrowed New Zealand’s energy options. And when the crisis hit, ministers had to respond quickly, with few alternatives left available.

“The coalition made a series of decisions early on in its political term that laid the ground for the position it now finds itself in,” says Greenpeace Aotearoa executive director Russel Norman. “They closed doors to the solutions to the problem – largely because they really believed the oil and gas ban was the cause of the problem, and therefore that reinstating exploration would be a magical fix.”

Yet documents from MBIE show the Gas Transition Plan – developed alongside industry – was not driven by the ban, but an attempt to manage risk as local fields depleted. Its stated aim was to maintain secure, affordable supply while planning for gradual decline. Scrapping it left the sector without a clear framework for how to replace that supply – or how to avoid over-reliance on high-priced imports.

Both the cancellation of the gas plan, and the shelving of the other policies, are consistent with a preference for a more hands-off approach in the energy space.

Ministers have repeatedly said they want the market – not the state – to drive investment. They argue large government projects such as Onslow distort markets and deter private capital. As former energy minister Simeon Brown put it when announcing Onslow’s cancellation: “We believe that will give the sector the tools to be able to make that investment, rather than the government getting involved, which has a chilling effect on the electricity market.”

Relying on the market would be fine, says Consumer’s Paul Fuge, if the market was working as it should. But electricity prices are at least 40 percent higher than when the market model was introduced. And most of the country’s generation capacity was built decades ago, before the current system began.

“The bottom line is we haven’t invested in enough new generation at the rate required because the incentives aren’t there,” Fuge says. “The system is flawed. But you don’t need to throw the baby out with the bathwater – just change the system.”

Because energy assets are generational, there needs to be a cross-party plan, Fuge says.

“Ideally, we would have a long-term energy strategy that doesn’t lurch from cycle to cycle.”

Since the election, the coalition has leaned into its market-led approach while promising to “double renewables”. But there is no current plan for how that doubling will happen – outside speeding up consents – or how we might store the energy created from the sun or wind at scale.

It has reversed the offshore oil and gas ban, but exploration is yet to get underway (possibly because the ban was not the reason for the lack of exploration in the first place). The government also recently released a draft strategy for geothermal energy, and announced statements on biomass and biogas, but it still has no overarching energy strategy, despite earlier promises one was imminent.

Energy Minister Simon Watts told RNZ this is because the government is prioritising “action and implementation” over strategy, by focussing on investing in security of supply and building better markets to improve affordability.

Simon Watts, the energy minister, says the government is prioritising security of supply. RNZ / Nick Monro

Frustration over the perceived lack of direction is widespread, coming from both energy suppliers and consumers.

Karen Boyes, from the Major Electricity Users’ Group (MEUG), says she agrees with some commentators that the previous government’s policies may have had considerable unintended consequences on the electricity market.

“Generators have told us that the offshore gas exploration ban and Lake Onslow project created uncertainty which put the brakes on much needed investment in new generation,” Boyes says.

“But on the positive side there was work well underway under the previous government on developing an energy strategy for the country, even if some stakeholders might not have agreed with all elements of it.”

The supply problem

Since the government first began investigating LNG, gas supply woes have only become more acute. Gas production from Taranaki fields is now at a 40-year low and dropping faster than anyone predicted.

Industries from dairy to food processing rely on that supply; hospitals and schools are still plumbed for gas heating. One independent estimate said gas dependent sectors alone contribute around 20 percent of national GDP both directly and indirectly, along with over 500,000 jobs.

As shortages hit last winter, several North Island manufacturers were unable to renew gas contracts. Some temporarily closed, or shut down parts of their business. For them, LNG is a secure option, in case new domestic gas supply is not forthcoming or biogas cannot be produced at scale.

The problem with LNG – other than its hefty emissions footprintis cost. The Frontier report warned that developing an LNG terminal – estimated to cost between $140m-$295m for even a small-scale option – “would make no economic sense” if the gas was used only as a backup.

Ballance Agri-Nutrients struggled to get gas supply for its urea plant at Kapuni earlier this year, after it was outbid by Contact Energy. Google Maps

The gas itself would be far more expensive than both domestic gas and new renewables. The electricity it produces will cost an estimated $200-$400 per megawatt-hour compared with about $135 for wind or solar, according to recent Electricity Authority estimates.

There is no guarantee that businesses would not fail at that price, industry experts say.

Because of that, the spectre of an LNG import terminal also creates uncertainty, the MEUG’s Boyes says.

“We need to understand what the delivered cost will be for direct users of gas, and how the use of LNG for electricity generation will affect the spot price of electricity.”

Jeffrey Clarke, the chief executive of industry body GasNZ, acknowledges the costs for an LNG terminal seem high.

“But in the context of the overall size of the economy and the benefits you get from not suddenly running out of gas, it’s not that huge.”

Clarke says New Zealanders should see LNG as an insurance policy – an interim measure that will buy us time – but that the decision should not be made in isolation.

“We should do it together with a clear, long-term strategy for energy in New Zealand. We need to be asking, how do we get from where we are now to where we are going in the future and might LNG be part of the solution to get us there?”

Currently, the economy relies on gas and a transition away from it will not be easy or immediate, Clarke says.

“The economy is not like a caterpillar that can cocoon itself and suddenly turn into a butterfly.”

The alternatives

Energy advocates spoken to by RNZ have widely differing views on the best solutions to New Zealand’s energy problem. But they had one view in common: technically, there are multiple alternatives that don’t involve importing gas.

“The energy system and the energy market is failing New Zealanders,” says Rewiring NZ chief executive Mike Casey. “The goal has to be finding the lowest cost alternative. And therefore the answer is not LNG – it’s a way more expensive outcome.”

Most experts agree that in the short term, New Zealand needs some kind of fossil fuel as back up. But that could be diesel-fired power plants, or the coal stockpile at Huntly, which recently gained approval by the Commerce Commission as an emergency reserve.

Longer term, the country needs to accelerate its build of lower-cost renewable options, including wind and solar, which are now the cheapest new generation in the country. Ideally, offshore wind will be added back into the mix, many argue.

Plans for offshore wind stalled after a mining company applied to excavate the seabed off Taranaki – which wind companies said was incompatible with the stability needed for huge turbines. 123RF

Geothermal could provide constant baseload, while grid-scale batteries could handle daily peaks and replace the need for gas plants.

Long-duration storage is a more difficult proposition – but it could come from pumped-hydro schemes like Onslow – or pumped hydro may not be needed at all, with the right package of other measures, some experts say.

Beyond electricity, biomethane could substitute for gas in industry and transport, and biomass could replace coal for process heat. Currently, however, New Zealand does not produce enough of either to fill the gap, and each would need significant investment to expand.

Most agree smarter demand-response programmes – paying users to reduce consumption at peak times – could cut costs and ease pressure on the grid. Some commentators say even simple rationing or prioritising existing gas use would deliver more security than importing LNG.

Casey believes using what energy we have in a more deliberate way is vital.

“Look at hydro. It’s basically a giant battery, and we need to use it more strategically. And that’s because the market incentives for those who operate large storage lakes are aligned for profit, not the strategic use of our hydro assets,” he says. “The technology we need already exists. What’s missing is a plan to join it up.”

There are also ample opportunities to electrify. EECA’s Regional Energy Transition Accelerator work shows around a third of North Island industrial fossil-fuel emissions could be eliminated through projects that save money and free up gas for critical users.

A recent New Zealand Green Building Council report found that accelerating heat pump adoption is a major opportunity to save gas – it estimated the country could save up to 40 percent of New Zealand’s current gas production. It’d also save households up to $1.5 billion a year on energy bills.

But Energy Minister Simon Watts says the country needs a reliable power source that can be accessed quickly, and on demand.

“LNG can bolster domestic gas supplies, which helps manage the impacts of dry years and keeps the wider energy system up and running,” Watts says. “This will place downward pressure on prices and support New Zealand’s energy security.”

Cabinet will decide in December whether to proceed with LNG procurement.

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

Police Commissioner accidentally takes FBI’s Kash Patel for ‘brief dip’ during active tsunami advisory

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers and FBI Director Kash Patel went for an early morning run on 1 August. AFP / RNZ

A “brief dip” in Wellington’s Oriental Bay with FBI Director Kash Patel ended with the Police Commissioner apologising for mistakenly believing a tsunami advisory had been lifted.

Patel, the highest-ranking US official to visit New Zealand under US President Donald Trump’s second presidency so far, arrived in Wellington in July for a three-day programme, in what was supposed to be a secretive trip.

Patel was spotted in the Beehive basement after his meeting with Foreign Minister Winston Peters on the afternoon of Wednesday, 30 July.

That same day an 8.8 magnitude earthquake struck off Russia’s remote east coast triggering tsunami waves on multiple country’s shores – including New Zealand, several Pacific nations, the US and Canadian coasts, and parts of South America.

The earthquake prompted the National Emergency Management Agency to issue a tsunami advisory urging people to stay away from shorelines.

Police Commissioner Richard Chambers confirmed to RNZ that on 1 August he went for an early morning run with Patel, followed by a “very quick swim” at Oriental Bay about 7.05am.

“It was the middle of winter, so it was a very brief dip.

“At the time, I believed the tsunami advisory put in place on 31 July had already lifted.

“When I subsequently discovered it was not lifted until about 8.30am that day, I apologised to Police Minister and Minister for Emergency Management Mark Mitchell for my oversight. It is not usual for me to ignore such warnings.”

Wellington’s Oriental Bay. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Last week Chambers was delivering a speech to graduating police recruits when he told the new officers and their supporters he had recently been ticketed for speeding.

He said it was the “dumbest thing I’ve done” as commissioner.

“It’s not something that I’m proud of. Course I wish I hadn’t done it. Oblivious, away with the fairies – none of that’s an excuse – I should know better. It’s the dumbest thing that I’ve done since I’ve been the commissioner of police.”

He later told RNZ he was clocked going 112 km/h as he returned from a ceremony marking the graduation of new patrol dog teams on 6 November.

A police spokesperson said Chambers paid the $80 fine – which had been dropped in his mail box – as soon as he arrived home from the graduation.

The spokesperson corrected Chambers, and said he was actually recorded as travelling at 111km/h.

The $10,000 trip

After Patel was spotted in New Zealand the US embassy revealed the FBI was opening a “standalone office” in Wellington.

Documents, earlier released to RNZ, set out a timeline, budget and communication plan for Patel’s trip.

They show spy Minister Judith Collins signed off on a $10,000 budget to cover accommodation, meals, flights and tourism activities for Patel and an official

A SIS briefing note – dated 25 June – described Patel as a person with “significant influence” within the US administration as a direct Trump-appointee.

“This visit provides an opportunity for New Zealand to continue to enhance the bilateral relationship with the United States by demonstrating our commitment and contributions to our intelligence partnership with the FBI, as well as wider Five Eyes constructs.

“The NZIC [Intelligence Community] will have the opportunity to provide detailed classified briefings to Director Patel in this regard.”

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

Space magnet research project Hēki extended for three months

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Japanese Experiment Module-Exposed Facility on the International Space Station. This photo was taken before Hēki’s installation, but the Nanoracks External Plaform (which currently houses Hēki) is visible in the lower centre of the image. Supplied / NASA via Paihau-Robinson Space Team

The New Zealand experiment to test superstrong magnets in space to eventually propel spaceships has lined up an extra three months of testing.

Victoria University’s Hēki project went up on a NASA-linked rocket to the International Space Station in September.

Its team said three of its five goals around sending data back here had been met already and big progress was being made on the last two.

It is meant to wrap up in January.

“We’ve been asked if we would like to take advantage of this additional three months to extend our operations (yes!),” emailed Professor Randy Pollock, chief scientist and engineer.

“Doubling the mission duration will enable a much wider range of test cases which, in turn, will better inform future applications of this technology.”

They were “intrigued” by what they had learned so far, an online blog said.

“In preparation for this extended mission, the Hēki team has been developing a new set of tests to explore.”

Hēki achieved crucial thermal stability with the magnet at superconducting temperatures early last month. Its cryocooler is a commercial off-the-shelf product about the size of a can of fizzy.

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

Silver Ferns want to finish turbulent international window with trophy

Source: Radio New Zealand

Silver Ferns Grace Nweke with England Francesca Williams during game 2 of the Taini Jamison Trophy Marty Melville

The Silver Ferns are determined to finish an intense three months of netball, which will be remembered against the backdrop of a turbulent coaching saga, on a high.

The England Roses bounced back to beat the Silver Ferns 61-58 in London on Monday, after New Zealand took the first game by three goals 24 hours earlier.

Thursday’s final test in Manchester to decide the series will be the Silver Ferns 12th test in the space of two months.

The Silver Fern’s international window started with a three-nil series sweep over South Africa in September, just days after Netball New Zealand announced that coach Dame Noeline Taurua was being stood down due to issues in the environment.

They then met the world champion Diamonds, and after suffering two big losses on Australian soil, they looked like a different team during the second leg of the Constellation Cup series in New Zealand.

The Silver Ferns won the next two tests and only narrowly lost the Cup after a one goal loss in series decider time.

A few days later, the squad flew to Scotland where they beat the Thistles twice, before heading to London to meet the Roses.

With nothing much separating the two teams, the series against England is ideal preparation before next year’s Commonwealth Games. It’s quite possibly the Silver Ferns last hit-out before the pinnacle event next July, with no other tests scheduled.

While Dame Noeline was reinstated last month, she was not returned for the remainder of the international season to “minimise disruption” to the Ferns camp. Yvette McCausland-Durie has been at the helm as interim coach for the entire 2025 international season.

Grace Nweke, who shot 53 and 51 in the opening two matches against the Roses, said they want to come home with the trophy.

“The ability to win under pressure is something that we have shown in Constellation Cup but we weren’t able to take that trophy out and so we’re trophy hungry, we want that successful moment,” Nweke said.

“England are a very confident, proud team and that showed in their win and to beat them at home would be huge for us and huge in preparation for what it will be like playing away at Comm Games.

“It’s been a really challenging season for us and I think above all for the group of girls, the 14 who have had to live through it …it’s been huge and to finish on a high would mean a lot for our group for the people who have been a part of it from day one.”

Nweke said it had been a tough period but the team had shown a lot of resilience.

“To still be here …still connected, still showing up for each other, looking out for each other …proud of the group and to get that win would be a nice way, I guess a silver lining for our group in what’s been a really big year.”

Recovery will be key for the Silver Ferns as they prepare for their final test of the year after two games in two days. The two sides are at opposite ends of their seasons, with this series marking the start of the Roses international window.

Nweke said the fatigue of a long season was creeping in but the 23-year-old said they have to be able to play through that.

“The girls have put in a power of work to be able to play, be fit and strong. It’s been a long season and both physically, emotionally and mentally the girls are feeling it. So one more game where we are equally excited to win that game as we are to see the season through.”

The through court attack was laboured at times during the second test and the New Zealand defenders weren’t able to win much ball particularly in the second half.

The third quarter has proved problematic in both tests and Nweke said they needed to address on-court lapses faster.

“I think our CPAs (centre pass attack conversion rate) are a key issue for us at the moment and just not being able to get that depth, or that first and second [phase] has been a big issue …there needs to be a bit more direction and urgency around how to fix that and just the confidence to take it on.”

Nweke credited Kate Heffernan for another strong game at wing defence. “The intent from Kate back there to will us through the game to turn over ball out of nothing, some individual strong performances from her.”

McCausland-Durie said they had opportunities in the second test but didn’t make the most of them. She also credited the England shooters, who were prepared to shoot from range.

Star goal attack Helen Housby shot 23 goals at 96 percent and Liv Tchine shot 38 at goal shoot. In contrast, Nweke scored 51 of the Silver Fern’s 58 goals.

McCausland-Durie said England put them in uncomfortable feeding positions.

“We got caught quite wide and then made us pass some of the things we didn’t really need to put in and put ourselves under a lot of pressure with a few turnovers that I felt we were a little untidy at times and we got a little bit stressed and pressured and they created that as well.”

She said better execution and finesse were needed.

“And continuing to build our resilience and our ability to perform under pressure, as what that looks like in terms of playing it to circle edge and taking really good care of ball.”

The final test on Thursday starts at 8am.

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

Tauranga Airport cancels flights due to Whakaari White Island ash

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tauranga Airport. Google Maps

Ash from Whakaari White Island has forced the Tauranga Airport to cancel eight flights.

Airport Manager Ray Dumble said the last four flights departing Tauranga on Monday night had been cancelled along with the first four departures on Tuesday morning.

The volcano is currently at Alert Level 3, denoting a minor eruption, and has been seen releasing ash and steam over the weekend.

Forty-seven people were on the Bay of Plenty volcano when it erupted in December 2019, killing 22 and seriously injuring 25.

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

Bench top manufacturer calls out use of potentially deadly engineered stone

Source: Radio New Zealand

Nelson MP Rachel Boyack opening the new AGB factory in Tasman. RNZ/Samantha Gee

A New Zealand stone fabricator is calling on manufacturers and consumers to end the use of potentially deadly crystalline-silica engineered stone.

About 1000 workers are thought to have been been exposed to high concentrations of respirable crystalline-silica dust while working with engineered stone slabs during the past 15 years.

The product has been banned in Australia and while the New Zealand government considers tighter controls, AGB Stone – one of the country’s largest fabricators – has already made the switch to zero-silica engineered stone and is calling on others to do the same.

The company has been manufacturing bench tops for 18 years and has now opened the country’s first zero-crystalline-silica engineered stone fabrication factory in Tasman.

Co-owner Cam Paranthoiene said the business was no longer using high silica engineered stone after the ban in Australia.

“We went to investigate zero-silica [products] commercially because we lost a big contract, but once we found out the impact on the staff in Australia, we knew that we had to do the same thing for our staff here. We’ve proven that this product works, so why have that risk?” Paranthoiene said.

Zero-silica products now made up 60 percent of AGB’s orders and the plan was to convert the company’s six other factories to zero-crystalline-silica over time, he said.

“This is a milestone day for our industry, that we can run a zero silica engineered stone plant. So, where are the governance people? Where are the people that are trying to solve silicosis in New Zealand? Why aren’t they standing right here going ‘well done’?”

AGB Stone co-owner Cam Paranthoiene. RNZ/Samantha Gee

How many people have been affected by working with engineered stone?

Engineered stone used in benchtops and flooring has a high silica content. Those working with it may be exposed to respirable crystalline-silica (RCS) dust while cutting, grinding, sanding and polishing the stone. Exposure can lead to a progressive respiratory disease called accelerated silicosis.

An ACC spokesperson said since 2019 the Ministry of Health, WorkSafe and ACC had advised people who had worked with engineered stone for six months or more in the last ten years to have a health check at their GP or medical provider, who could refer them for tests to assess for accelerated silicosis.

An ACC claim could then be lodged on the basis of exposure, not diagnosis.

Data from ACC showed there had been 253 claims lodged as of 15 August for assessment of accelerated silicosis since the corporation’s assessment pathway came into effect in September 2020.

Of those, 30 were accepted for cover and most were for simple or complex silicosis, not accelerated silicosis.

But research published in March by the Public Health Communication Centre found in past 15 years about 1000 NZ workers had been exposed to high concentrations of RCS dust while working with engineered stone slabs.

It said, applying Australian data, 250 of the 1000 New Zealand workers who had fabricated engineered stone in the past 15 years would develop silica-related diseases.

AGB has opened the country’s first zero crystalline silica engineered stone fabrication factory in the Tasman District. RNZ/Samantha Gee

What are we doing about it?

The government is reviewing options to control the health risks associated with engineered stone.

Earlier this year, the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) consulted on various control measures – including a potential ban – while WorkSafe NZ lowered the workplace exposure standard for silica dust and updated guidance for businesses.

The Employers and Manufacturers’ Association, The Council of Trade Unions and MinEx – the national health and safety council for New Zealand’s extractive sector – had advocated for it to be banned.

MBIE sectoral health and safety policy manager Nita Zodgekar said it received 68 submissions from businesses and organisations during public consultation on options to control the risks from engineered stone and other sources of exposure to respirable crystalline silica.

It had now provided advice to Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Brooke van Velden.

Zodgekar said any workers who came into contact with RCS were potentially at risk of developing health issues, with approximately 80,000 workers experiencing probable high levels of exposure.

That included a range of industries such as construction and demolition and activities like cutting and grinding concrete products.

It estimated between 600 and 900 workers in engineered stone fabrication were significantly exposed to an elevated risk of silica-related disease.

Van Velden said the government needed to used an evidence-based approach when making decisions around engineered stone.

Several initiatives had been established to encourage businesses to improve their risk management practices, she said.

WorkSafe had conducted inspections in workplaces fabricating engineered stone since 2019, published information for businesses and workers on RCS and silicosis, and reduced the workplace exposure standard for RCS in 2019 and again in 2023.

Inspectors reported businesses were now more aware of the risks of exposure to RCS and overall were managing those risks more effectively, van Velden said.

She was considering the advice from MBIE and would report back to cabinet on the proposed policy direction in due course.

Industry leading the change

Paranthoiene said major industry players should support the safer zero-silica product even though engineered stone products had not been banned in New Zealand.

AGB has opened the country’s first zero crystalline silica engineered stone fabrication factory in the Tasman District. RNZ/Samantha Gee

AGB had spent the last 15 years instigating safer processes to manage the risks of silicosis.

It phased out high-crystalline silica products in 2023 and then introduced zero-crystalline silica engineered stone last year.

“If you’re a good fabricator with really good disciplined systems and controls, you’re okay, but not everyone is okay and that’s the problem,” he said.

“We have to look at this as being about the lowest common denominator in our industry. It’s not the best people, it’s the bottom end and generally the bottom end comes with the most vulnerable workers as well. So you get this double whammy of toxic product, poor systems and then poor application of those systems.”

AGB had worked with kitchen hardware supplier Archant to find zero-silica stone products after the ban across the ditch and sales director Sefton Clare said now that was all they sold.

“We’re just seeing the volumes of the zero-silica product increase going from strength to strength, it’s really a no brainer,” he said.

“When Australia banned engineered stone we just took the simple route and said that anything that’s banned over there, we’re over it, we’re not going to continue with it.”

Archant sales director Sefton Clare. RNZ/Samantha Gee

New Zealand should also ban the product, Clare said.

“We obviously don’t know what the New Zealand government is going to do in this situation, but from a risk adverse perspective it just makes no sense at all to continue with products that they’ve got a cloud over them now, it’s a much safer, easier choice to go for zero.

“One person with silicosis is one too many.”

Nelson MP Rachel Boyack officially opened the new factory in Tasman on Monday and said it was good to see industry taking action where the government had not.

“We know that these products can cause silicosis for workers and that’s devastating for them, so to have a zero-silica engineered stone factory – the first of its kind in New Zealand – operating here in Nelson, sends a really strong signal to the market.”

Nelson MP Rachel Boyack opening the new AGB factory in Tasman. RNZ/Samantha Gee

New Zealand needed to do more to keep people safe at work, Boyack said.

“Likewise customers actually need to take some responsibility in terms of the products that they’re choosing to purchase. There has been publicity around these products so when you’re making your purchase you should be checking what is the silica quantity within the product and ideally choosing a zero silica product.”

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

IT system at Wellington Hospital a ‘constant risk’ to patient safety, says union

Source: Radio New Zealand

There have been performance issues and recurring outages with the IT system at Wellington Hospital. RNZ / REECE BAKER

The union for senior doctors says an IT system introduced this year at Wellington Hospital is a “constant risk” to patient safety.

The system was very slow and crashed all the time, Sarah Dalton – head of the Association Of Salaried Medical Specialists – told Midday Report on Monday.

Health New Zealand said there were “performance and stability issues” but it had safeguards in place to ensure patient information was not lost.

It would “keep pushing until the system is stable and reliable”.

RNZ has seen one email from the hospital front line that said: “Wellington’s IT disaster has become so bad that some specialists are now cancelling/cutting back their clinics as they can’t get through all their patients.”

Dalton said they had been trying for months to get a meeting with Health NZ about this, which they now expected to be in a week or so, as what Health NZ had called “teething” problems got worse.

“We now believe the failure of the system is a constant risk both to efficiency but more concerningly to patient safety,” she said.

It took two to three minutes to load a screen with a patient’s information – for example, what medications a sedated patient was on – then regularly crashed when multiple screens were needed.

“It’s pushing back to paper-based workarounds to try and care safely for patients.”

Health NZ chief information technology officer Darren Douglass said performance problems arose in March, and they set up a team to fix them, including working with the supplier, replacing older hardware and improving remote access.

Dalton said the system would be very useful in linking all sorts of medical specialists, if it worked.

She understood any fixes would likely take months.

This was linked to the government and Health NZ stripping $100m and key roles – mislabelled back office, said Dalton – from data and digital teams.

“We can see here a direct negative impact on patient care.”

The Public Service Association echoed that line: “We warned the government last year that cutting IT staff at Health NZ Te Whatu Ora was playing with fire.”

Health NZ’s Douglass said clinicians had processes in place to ensure critical information was not missed.

“While the system is still working, it can be slow to access functions and open clinical documents, especially during busy times,” he said in a statement on Monday.

“This performance issue and recurring outages have made it harder for clinicians to access patient information quickly.

“While the risk is low, any disruption is taken seriously and safeguards are in place to ensure critical patient information is not lost.”

Patient safety remained the top priority and urgent care was prioritised.

“While these issues can add time to some tasks, we are working hard to minimise any impact on wait times.”

The PSA called on the privacy commissioner to investigate.

“The privacy commissioner refused our request to investigate privacy risks to patient data last year,” national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons said in a statement on Monday.

“We say he needs to think again – before patients are harmed and confidential health information is compromised.”

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

World’s largest indigenous education conference kicks off in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pōwhiri for the start of four-day WIPCE 2025 conference. Tamaira Hook

The world’s largest indigenous education conference has kicked off in Auckland, bringing with it thousands of indigenous educators from around the world.

About 3000 people were welcomed by Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei for the World Indigenous Peoples’ Conference on Education 2025 (WIPCE) with a pōwhiri at the city’s waterfront on Sunday.

Around 3800 delegates are expected to attend the conference at the Aotea Centre over the week.

Auckland University of Technology (AUT) is hosting the event which is set to be the largest academic conference hosted in New Zealand this year.

WIPCE 2025 attendees fill out Auckland’s Cloud for the beginning of the conference. Tamaira Hook

WIPCE 2025 Co-Chair and AUT Vice-Chancellor Damon Salesa said it was an honour to host such an extraordinary range of speakers.

“Each kaikōrero brings their unique perspectives and knowledge. This conference is an opportunity to listen, learn and be inspired by those who continue to lead and shape Indigenous education across the world,” he said.

WIPCE 2025 co-chair Damon Salesa (right) at the conference opening. Tamaira Hook

The four-day conference features keynote presentations from a number of Māori academics including educator Professor Linda Tuhiwai Smith, linguistic and cultural revilitalists Professor Leonie Pihama and Raniera Proctor, legal academic Eru Kapa-Kingi and Māori movie star Cliff Curtis.

There are also a number of break out sessions, guest speakers and panels discussions featuring academics from around the world.

Professor Meihana Durie WIPCE 2025

WIPCE 2025 Co-Chair Meihana Durie said the gathering comes at a pivotal time for indigenous education and indigenous rights more broadly.

“We are immensely grateful for the pōwhiri yesterday hosted by iwi manaaki, Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei, which highlighted the sheer importance of those themes within the unique dimensions of Indigenous ceremony, language and ritual.”

“WIPCE is the only educational platform designed specifically for native peoples from around the world to come together to share our stories, our challenges and our successes with each other.” he said.

Tamaira Hook

Outside of the conference is the Te Ao Pūtahi, a free, public festival with live performances from Māori artists inlcluding kapa haka rōpu Ngā Tūmanako, Sons of Zion, Corrella, Jackson Owens and Betty-Anne and a number of food and gift stalls.

Tewnty-one cultural excursions named Te Ao Tirotiro will also be held across the city including an onboard waka sailing demonstration and a hāngi.

The conference ends on Thursday.

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

Heavy rain, humidity and warm nights to hit parts of the country

Source: Radio New Zealand

Heavy rain warnings and watches have been set over parts of the country as a warm air mass approaches the country. MetService/Screenshot

An active warm air mass will be “rung out like a sponge” over parts of the country this week, bringing heavy rain warnings, humidity and warm nights.

MetService issued orange heavy rain warnings for the next two days over parts of the North Island including Tauranga, Rotorua and Coromandel and a heavy rain watch over Hamilton, Taupo and New Plymouth.

Some of the South Island’s West Coast also received orange warnings with parts of Southland including Te Anau being on a strong wind watch.

Most of the warnings are set to be active from Tuesday and continue to Wednesday.

MetService meteorologist Alec Holden said the rain warnings and watches were due to different reasons for each island.

“For the South Island, we have a very large frontal feature that is crossing the island over the next couple of days,” he said.

“Ahead of it, it is directing a large, very moist and warm air mass almost straight from the tropics down over the top of the North Island. . . we’re expecting that to be wrung out like a sponge.”

The Bay of Plenty was a particular area of concern which currently had an orange warning, but there was a moderate chance of it turning into a red warning.

Although there was no warning set in place for Auckland, Holden said that could change as they were monitoring the area closely.

He also said with heavy rain warnings there was the risk of flooding and in parts of the North Island there was also a risk of thunderstorms developing in the “very energetic tropical air mass”.

The warm air mass, which acts similarly to an atmospheric river, would be coming to the North Island from the northeast of the country.

It is set to bring not only rain, but higher humidity and warm temperatures especially at night.

Holden said temperatures during the day would be within the average for this time of year, however, night-time temperatures are expected to be warmer than usual.

“Places like Auckland, for example, they only have like a four degree difference between their maximum daytime temperature and their minimum nighttime temperature over the next couple of days.”

Tuesday and Wednesday are expected to be wet, but as the system starts to move away towards the end of Wednesday, a ridge of high pressure would give most of the country a “reprieve from the wet weather”.

Although heavy rain is forecasted for a majority of the country, Christchurch and the East Coast of the South Island are the places to be.

Holden said warm temperatures would hit those parts of the South Island, but very little rain is expected.

“There’s always the chance of something sneaking over, but it looks like they will, if they get anything, they will be quite unlucky.”

Earth Sciences New Zealand meteorologist Chris Brandolino said the weather activity forecasted over the next couple of days was not uncommon during a La Niña cycle.

“It’s consistent with La Niña, so La Niña has emerged in the pacific and La Niña tends to increase the odds for these types of air flows which increase the odds for impactful rainfall events”

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

View from The Hill: The Liberals may fell Sussan Ley but she won’t make it easy for Taylor and Hastie

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

In 2015, soon after he had rolled Tony Abbott to become prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull was heckled when, with a straight face, he told New South Wales Liberals, “We are not run by factions”.

Once, there had been a contrast, at least in degree, between the factionally-organised Labor party and the Liberals. But those days are long gone.

Today the difference is that factions in the federal Labor Party are externally well behaved – albeit sometimes internally brutal as Ed Husic and Mark Dreyfus can attest – while the Liberal factions are currently creating havoc for their party.

On Monday, Turnbull gave the ABC his latest take on the Liberals’ internals. Ley, he said, was in a fish tank whose occupants “want to eat each other. They have the memory of goldfish and the dining habits of piranhas”.

The conservatives have taken over the party. After being trounced on net zero, moderates are angry with Sussan Ley for mishandling the issue: if she had brought things to a head months or even weeks ago she might have achieved a compromise. On the other hand, if the moderates undermine her they just aid conservatives Angus Taylor or Andrew Hastie to become leader, probably bringing all sorts of other policies they don’t like.

Against this background, Monday’s Australian carried a front page lead claiming: “A growing number of moderate Liberal MPs are pulling their support for Sussan Ley and are backing Andrew Hastie to be the next leader, arguing she has caved to his agenda and he has a better chance of lifting the Coalition’s stocks electorally”.

The story went on to say two senior moderates had said a majority of moderate MPs would vote for Hastie against Ley.

It looked like some in the moderates were having a hissy fit, or declaring they were generally stuffed, or perhaps engaging in some unfathomable plot to stymie Hastie.

As a punchdrunk Ley hit yet another morning media round, other moderates then sought to get the faction back on a more even keel.

Senator Anne Ruston, as close to a leader as the faction has, and Senator Maria Kovacic in a joint statement rejected the media reporting.

“We, along with an overwhelming majority of our moderate colleagues, continue to strongly support Sussan’s leadership. This matter was resolved in the party room six months ago and Sussan will lead us strongly to the next election,” they said.

Ruston then went on Sky News to further defend Ley, days after trenchantly fighting to head off the ditching of net zero.

“I’ve spoken to a lot of my colleagues this morning, and I can confirm that every single one of the moderates I spoke to supports Sussan Ley as the leader of our party,” Ruston said.

Ley’s tactic when on the defensive is to go out and do more and more media, even if it looks like a losing battle.

On the ABC she was asked about her message to future generations, now net zero has been abandoned by the Coalition. “I want to reassure people listening who care about the climate, that I do too.”

On 2GB during her interview, presenter Ben Fordham played talkback calls from September, when people had been asked whether they would prefer Ley or Hastie as leader. Those played all said Hastie.

Fordham then asked Ley, “what’s that like to listen to?” When she fobbed him off, he persisted, “Does that hurt though?”

He went on, rather bizarrely: “Don’t get me wrong, we all have it in our jobs. I have the same thing here, not everyone wants me hosting the breakfast show, but they’re stuck with me, and the Liberal voters are stuck with you.”

Ley said she wasn’t “here for a sense of ego about me”.

Fordham, after inviting her back, presumably to be pummelled again, threw her a final question.

“You’re tough enough to withstand any pressures coming from the likes of Andrew Hastie or Jacinta Price or anyone else who’d like to see you as a former opposition leader, not the current one?”

To which she replied: “Ben, I’ve been underestimated a lot of my life. I remember when a lot of blokes told me I couldn’t fly an aeroplane and did a lot to keep me out of the front seat. I flew an aeroplane, I flew a mustering plane in very small circles, very close to the ground, and that was pretty tough at the time.”

Ley is once again flying very close to the ground. She knows she may not be able to keep herself aloft, but she appears determined to make Taylor and Hastie’s chase for the leadership as difficult as she can.

The Conversation

Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. View from The Hill: The Liberals may fell Sussan Ley but she won’t make it easy for Taylor and Hastie – https://theconversation.com/view-from-the-hill-the-liberals-may-fell-sussan-ley-but-she-wont-make-it-easy-for-taylor-and-hastie-269914

A cancer specialist explains why parents should not be too worried about coloured sand recalls

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anthony Linton, Associate Professor, School of Medicine, University of Sydney

Schools have been shut in the Australian Capital Territory after children’s play sand was recalled due to asbestos fears.

Almost all Canberra primary schools were closed on Monday, with Education Minister Yvette Berry conceding it could take “days” for schools to be declared safe to open again.

The sand has also been used in schools in other states and territories and has been sold nationwide by major retailers. I am a cancer specialist and researcher into asbestos related diseases, should parents be worried?

Coloured sand recall

Last week, the Australian consumer watchdog recalled several types of coloured sand, which children use for art and craft activities or sensory play.

This was because tremolite asbestos (a naturally occurring form of asbestos) had been “detected in some samples after laboratory testing”.

Worksafe ACT says it has also found traces of chrysotile (another type of asbestos) in one product, Kadink decorative sand. It says “the risk of exposure to traces of chrysotile is low”.

All the products came from China and were sold by a wide range of retailers, including Woolworths and Officeworks, between 2020 and 2025.

A blue, yellow and red tub of coloured sand.
Examples of the Kadink coloured sand that have been recalled.
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission



Read more:
Asbestos has been found in children’s coloured sand. What’s the risk to kids?


How worried should parents be?

People should not be overly worried about this as the risk for children and families is going to be very small. The odds of developing an asbestos-related disease from any exposure in this particular scenario are very low.

Our understanding is the asbestos in the sand is not respirable (able to be breathed in) in its current form. Significant mechanical processes (crushing/pulverising) would be required for release of the fibres.

In routine play, the risk of this happening is low.

Why are authorities concerned then?

We still need to make sure these products are adequately and safely removed.

Australia has a long history of asbestos use and deaths and illness related to exposure. About 4,500 Australians die per year from asbestos-related diseases. These deaths happen many years after exposure. For example, lung cancers occur 20–30 years after exposure. Mesothelioma occurs 30–50 years after exposure.

So we can’t be complacent and want to be able to reduce any risks of the exposure to any member of the population – especially children.

When asbestos is removed from homes during a renovation, expert removalists come in with full body coverings, including gloves and masks. Even though the risk is low, the process should be the same for schools.

What should you do if you have coloured sand at home?

If you’ve got these products at home, put unopened containers in a heavy-duty plastic bag and double tape them. Then take them to somewhere that accepts asbestos waste. Do not just throw it in the kitchen or curbside bin.

If there is loose sand, wipe it away with a wet cloth while wearing protective clothing and masks – and then follow the same procedure with heavy-duty plastic bags and tape. If you have any doubts, consult an asbestos removal specialist for further support.

Worksafe ACT has more detailed instructions on disposal here. So does Australia’s asbestos eradication agency.

I’m worried my family has been exposed

Unfortunately, there is no test to determine your disease risk if you have been exposed to asbestos. This means there may be little value in going to your GP.

But we can be reassured by the statements made by authorities so far, and do not expect significant danger to families and other groups exposed to this product at this time.

A timely warning

Australia banned asbestos more than 20 years ago. But there are still countries who mine this deadly substance.




Read more:
From a ‘magic mineral’ to the stuff of nightmares: a 6,700-year history of asbestos


So we need to make sure it does not come across our borders. In 2015, trace elements of asbestos were found in children’s crayons, for example.

We also still have it in our community – asbestos is in about one-third of our houses. It is also in our schools and hospitals because it used to be a standard building material.

Coincidentally, next week is asbestos awareness week. This is a reminder of why we all have to be vigilant about asbestos and continue our efforts to remove it from our community.

The Conversation

Anthony Linton is senior staff specialist in medical oncology at the Concord Cancer Centre in Concord Repatriation General Hospital. He is also the research director at the Asbestos and Dust Diseases Research Institute. He receives funding from iCare and the NSW Dust Diseases Authority.

ref. A cancer specialist explains why parents should not be too worried about coloured sand recalls – https://theconversation.com/a-cancer-specialist-explains-why-parents-should-not-be-too-worried-about-coloured-sand-recalls-269904

Amyl and the Sniffers’ generosity shows what’s missing for Australia’s live music venues

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Sam Whiting, Vice-Chancellor’s Senior Research Fellow in Music Industries and Cultural Economy, RMIT University

When the Amyl and the Sniffers’ free show at Federation Square was cancelled on Friday night due to safety concerns, the band worked quickly to turn this disappointment around.

Using their performance fee, they placed A$35,000 across the bars of seven prominent grassroots music venues around Melbourne.

Many celebrated the band giving back to spaces that had nurtured them in their infancy, while providing much needed support to a struggling sector.

However, the gesture raises questions as to why these spaces are not already supported. And why are musicians – rather than governments, audiences or the community at large – the ones that need to step in?

Grassroots venues are struggling

Independent, grassroots music venues have been doing it tough. Australia has lost 1,300 venues and stages in the past five years.

Music venues have always been precarious. But inflation and exorbitant insurance costs have made running a venue exceedingly difficult.

Audience behaviours have also changed. Punters today attend more major events at the cost of attendance for smaller venues.

Audiences are also drinking less. This is an existential challenge for these venues, whose primary revenue stream is alcohol sales.

Despite this significant shift in the market, venues appear reluctant to change their business practices.

James Young of Melbourne’s Cherry Bar recently praised the same large arena tours that often draw punters away from grassroots venues for stimulating increased drinking in CBD venues, revealing the priorities of these spaces.

Meanwhile, owners of The Tote and The Last Chance Rock & Roll Bar have decried the lack of government support, while begging punters to come to more shows.

Such responses do not consider the fundamental ways in which the market for live music has changed, or whether live music should be subject to the market at all.

Is a commercial model fit for purpose?

Australian grassroots music venues largely conform to a market-based model of alcohol consumption that cross-subsidises cultural activities like live performances.

Live music may often attract considerable audiences, and young people are spending more on entertainment and leisure – particularly for major concert events. But grassroots music venues often use music as a “loss leader” to promote increased liquor sales.

Such a business model may have been lucrative in the 1980s and 90s. But as audience behaviours have changed, a rethink is needed.

In much of northern Europe and France, there is a strong precedent of nonprofit venues receiving operational subsidies from municipal governments to avoid reliance on alcohol sales.

These models maintain strong public support thanks to disciplined and professional advocacy from the sector. Advocacy has also increased in the United Kingdom through the work of the UK Music Venue Trust.

Having made significant progress on a big ticket levy aimed at supporting grassroots venues, the Music Venue Trust has also encouraged many small venues in the UK to transition to nonprofit corporate structures. As nonprofits, these venues become eligible for greater public funding and tax exemptions.

France’s Scene de Musiques Actuelles (Contemporary Music Venue) model also promotes engagement with disadvantaged communities, facilitating greater accessibility and diversity in return for public subsidies.

This stands in stark contrast to Australia’s alcohol-dependent, market-based approach, which often attracts a homogeneous audience that may not reflect contemporary, multicultural Australia.

Structural reform

Grassroots music venues require structural reform to reduce their reliance on alcohol sales.

Such reform could involve nonprofit structures, such as Lazy Thinking in Dulwich Hill, soon to be incorporated as a registered charity eligible for tax-deductible donations. Charity status also reduces tax obligations on wages and salaries.

Other reforms involve who owns the building itself.

Commercial rents and overheads are exorbitantly expensive. Insecurity of tenure is a recurring problem for venues, such as in the case of The Curtin Hotel in Melbourne and The Crown & Anchor in Adelaide.

In the UK, Music Venue Properties operates as a collectively-owned community benefit society. Through crowd-sourcing shares and donations from passionate live music fans, the organisation is able to purchase the freeholds to grassroots music venues. Through this, they can protect them in perpetuity and offer long-term cultural leases to their operators.

Apart from some additional top-up funding from government, the scheme requires little regulation or intervention to be successful.

Other successful non-government initiatives include voluntary ticket levies, such as in Germany and Wales.

Such community-led reforms are possible in Australia, but require an acknowledgement of the many important non-market roles venues perform and some (literally) sober thinking about how best to support them.

Musicians save the day, again

Amyl’s act of generosity towards seven of Melbourne’s grassroots music venues might have been unprecedented, but it was not surprising. The band is known for their commitment to crowd safety, community spirit and generosity towards fans.

But should the band have been the ones to make it up to the city? Particularly in a chronically underfunded arts and cultural ecosystem that requires musicians to cope with the rising costs of doing the work they love.

Musicians, venues, governments and other industry stakeholders need to work together to ensure that this ecosystem is valued for what happens on stage, rather than just what’s exchanged over the bar.




Read more:
Civic squares as contested spaces: what history and urban planning can tell us about Fed Square


The Conversation

Sam Whiting receives funding from RMIT University, the Winston Churchill Trust and Sound NSW.

Megan Sharp does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Amyl and the Sniffers’ generosity shows what’s missing for Australia’s live music venues – https://theconversation.com/amyl-and-the-sniffers-generosity-shows-whats-missing-for-australias-live-music-venues-269899

Hundreds to commemorate loss of ancestors on Waerenga-A-Hika 160 years ago

Source: Radio New Zealand

Shaan Te Kani

Hundreds of people will this week commemorate the loss, arrest and deportation of their ancestors in a siege that took place 160 years ago on Waerenga-A-Hika near Gisborne.

Over five days, the pā was flattened, 71 Māori living at the pā and 11 government soldiers were killed and many more including elderly, women and children were captured, arrested and deported to the Chatham Islands.

The lands were partitioned and given to soldiers whose families today are sixth generation farmers, orchardists and viticulturists.

Artist, iwi historian and Gisborne District Councillor Nick Tupara’s five times great-grandfather was killed in the battle, he was a carver and teacher of the arts.

“His loss marks the total destruction of that school and the removal of our mātauranga and our knowledge and that weighs very heavily on the family,” he said. “From that point we took the name Kerekere from a reference to te Pōkerekere a deep intense darkness and not only a darkness because of the loss of ancestors land but also the loss of that ancestral knowledge.”

This years commemorations begin on Tuesday evening with the opening of the Waerenga-a-Hika exhibition at the Tairawhiti Museum, it features a collection of historic pieces including taonga from the battle and contemporary artworks.

On Saturday, there will also be a commemoration at the battle site.

Tupara said that by 1865 when the pā was attacked the East Coast was the only area that was untouched by war between the Crown and Māori.

“Colonial settlement was occurring pretty rapidly across the whole of the country and the Tairāwhiti was the last of all of that and eventually war was going to come here in some form or another.”

Waerenga-a-Hika was established where it was because it was a fertile area, whare wānanga that taught carving and weaving were also based there, he said.

“It was a place where people could feel safe and settled… it’s probably the last place I would classify as being a fortress or a place of military action, we have far stronger examples of that in our rohe, but this place was a place to gather, grow kai.”

Waerenga-ā-Hika pā in ruins after it was attacked in 1865. Alexander Turnbull Library Reference: 1/2-008137; F

Tupara said local iwi were well connected with the settler communities, many tīpuna had been baptised in the church and many had also married settlers.

The principle reason given for the attack on Waerenga-a-Hika was a clash between followers of the Pai Mārire religion and Europeans and Māori who opposed the religion, he said.

“My personal view on that is that was a tool to instil fear and anxiety amongst the settlers, to create significant worry to justify the intervention of troops.”

Tupara said another motivating factor was to clear the land for settlement.

With the exile of a large number of people to the Chatham Islands the land was surveyed and parcelled out to settlers, he said.

Tupara said he is hopeful that the commemorations can raise the consciousness of the battle among the local community.

“It’s remembered rather poorly, it’s remembered by the families who lost ancestors, it’s remembered by the hapū and the iwi who lost their land and their resources.”

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

Man jailed after using fake identities to gain NZ residence

Source: Radio New Zealand

He was sentenced to three years in prison. RNZ

A man has been sentenced to three years in prison for using false identities and forged documents to obtains visas and residence in New Zealand.

Immigration NZ said the man, aged 50, and his 44-year-old partner arrived using the identities of Hungarian nationals.

Over the next five years, they submitted a series of fraudulent visa applications, including visitor, work, resident and citizenship applications, using forged documents and false declarations.

The couple admitted 16 charges of immigration and identity fraud when they appeared in the Auckland District Court.

The woman was sentenced to 11 months home detention.

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

Civic squares as contested spaces: what history and urban planning can tell us about Fed Square

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rachel Iampolski, PhD Candidate, Centre for Urban Research RMIT, RMIT University

kevin laminto/Unsplash

On Friday, thousands packed into Melbourne’s Federation Square for a free Amyl and the Sniffers show. Within minutes, fences buckled, the perimeter was breached, and the gig was cancelled over crowd crush fears.

It was gutting for fans – but it’s also the latest episode in a much longer fight over what, or who, Federation Square is really for.

A city that avoided gathering spaces

Melbourne’s uneasy relationship with civic squares goes back to the 1830s, when surveyor Robert Hoddle laid out the city grid without a major central square. This was a deliberate design choice to avoid the open plazas that elsewhere had become magnets for dissent and mass protest.

Map of Melbourne and its suburbs
Early plans of Melbourne and its first suburbs showing a distinct lack of open space, 1855, compiled by James Kearney. Source:
State Library of Victoria

In the 19th and 20th century there were repeated failed attempts to retrofit a proper city square.

Proposals for a grand Parliament forecourt, for example, were abandoned in 1929 amid fears it would be used for protest.

City Square eventually opened in 1968 as a temporary design after the City of Melbourne acquired the land across from Town Hall. However, by 1997 it was carved up and sold off for the Westin hotel development, with much of its original design features (including a small waterfall) razed.

Federation Square, opened in 2002 on decking above rail yards, meant to fix our critical civic space gap. A publicly owned, privately operated space, the square blurred public place and commercial asset.

A focus on tourism and entertainment resulted in a square that often struggled to draw people in outside of events and beyond its surrounding venues, such as ACMI and NGV Australia.

In 2017, Fed Square’s management accepted a bid from Apple to demolish an existing building to erect their own flagship store within the square. This triggered fierce community backlash.

In response, Heritage Victoria listed Fed Square on the state heritage register – the youngest place ever to be listed. This limited development in the square, effectively putting a stop to the demolition plans.

The Heritage Council recognised the square as “the most important public square in Victoria”.

This flashpoint triggered a state government review into the square’s management, after which Fed Square was incorporated into the new Melbourne Arts Precinct Corporation in 2019. This brought a renewed emphasis on cultural programming. The irony, however: it has worked almost too well.

When you truly activate civic space, people show up. The Amyl gig proved relevant, exciting events draw crowds. But even with perfect crowd management, Fed Square – or any of Melbourne’s existing squares – simply couldn’t safely accommodate a crowd that size.

Lessons from Friday night

Fed Square has limited entry points and rigid borders: ideally, civic squares should have porous edges with lots of opportunities for spillover, or surrounding streets that can be closed to absorb crowds.

Melbourne’s rigid grid makes this difficult. As such, much of Melbourne’s public life has long been pushed into edge spaces – laneways, riverbanks, footpaths and markets, the State Library lawn (originally designed as a fenced off ornamental space, now inadvertently our most successful protest space following the removal of the picket fence).

This constraint has bred its own cultural innovation: Melbourne’s famed laneway culture emerged partly from necessity. And these diffuse, in-between spaces are genuinely valuable for everyday public life, not just mass gatherings.

But Friday shows we still need more opportunities for large-scale assembly. Other cities with established grids have managed it: Midtown Manhattan closed parts of Broadway to traffic; Barcelona’s Superilles (superblock) program created pedestrianised networks and new public squares within dense neighbourhoods.

Melbourne needs both large gathering spaces for moments like Friday night, and a diffuse network of everyday public spaces. That means seizing opportunities to create new civic plazas from major transport projects and renewal sites, protecting existing spaces like the State Library lawn and City Square from further privatisation, and challenging car dominance by closing more streets – temporarily or permanently.

If our only response to Friday night is tightening controls at Fed Square without also bolstering this diffuse cultural infrastructure – through planning protections, fairer regulation and investment in small venues (like Amyl and the Sniffers did themselves) – we will have missed the point.

Re-imagining public space

After a vexed history, rooted in a colonial planning logic that wanted to minimise gathering, Fed Square is slowly becoming the vibrant civic space people wanted. But we haven’t built the infrastructure to support that success.

People want to gather, but activating civic space without accommodating for growing demand is setting ourselves up for failure. We can’t just program better events; we need flexible crowd management systems, surrounding streets that can absorb overflow, and more public spaces.

Most importantly, we need to support the entire ecosystem – from Fed Square’s big stages to the small venues that quietly hold up Melbourne’s cultural life every night, and continue to carve out opportunities for public life.

Friday night proved Melburnians are hungry for public gathering. Now we need the civic infrastructure to match that appetite.

The Conversation

Rachel Iampolski received funding from Australian Government’s Research Training Program as part of her PhD. She is affiliated with the Australian Greens Victoria.

ref. Civic squares as contested spaces: what history and urban planning can tell us about Fed Square – https://theconversation.com/civic-squares-as-contested-spaces-what-history-and-urban-planning-can-tell-us-about-fed-square-269920

Finally, Indigenous peoples have an influential voice at COP30. They’re speaking loud and clear.

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Danilo Urzedo, Research fellow, The University of Western Australia

Indigenous peoples are on the vanguard of climate action. Longstanding relationships with land means they endure the direct consequences of climate change. And their unique knowledge offers effective solutions to climate problems.

But despite this, international climate policies have fallen short of encouraging Indigenous leadership. With the UN climate summit hosted in the Amazon for the first time, COP30 marks an unprecedented effort to elevate Indigenous voices.

Returning to Brazil again after the 1992 and 2012 Rio conferences, COP30 has the largest Indigenous delegation in the summit’s history. More than 3,000 Indigenous representatives from around the world are in the Amazonian city of Belém.

Inside and outside the negotiation rooms, Indigenous organisations and coalitions have brought an unprecedented agenda to the summit: pressure for climate justice centred on the recognition of land rights and fair financing mechanisms.

Indigenous voices in diplomacy

A new form of climate diplomacy is emerging. This shift marks the creation of space for Indigenous delegates to participate in formal discussions that were previously exclusive to government officials.

Since 2019, the UN’s Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples Platform has expanded the Indigenous role in official negotiations. At this year’s summit, more than 900 Indigenous delegates – a record number – are participating in official debates.

Led by Brazil’s Minister for Indigenous Peoples, Sônia Guajajara, the COP30 presidency has encouraged Indigenous leadership in decision-making. This includes giving Indigenous delegates seats in negotiation rooms and embedding their demands in climate pledges and finance mechanisms.

“Indigenous Peoples want to take part, not just show up”, said Guajajara. “We want to lead and be part of the solution. So far, the investments driven by COP decisions have failed to deliver results – the 1.5°C goal is slipping out of reach”.

But turning community participation into political influence requires more than participation. Initiatives such as Kuntari Katu in Brazil assist Indigenous leaders in connecting their priorities with broader climate policies. Such training provides modules on topics such as carbon market mechanisms and equips Indigenous representatives with tools to communicate their priorities in climate debates.

Indigenous influence at COP30 is not confined to formal diplomacy. Protests inside and outside the COP venue have amplified long-sidelined demands. Under the rallying cry “Our land is not for sale”, one of the demonstrations occupied areas of the COP30 venue with direct confrontation with the security staff.

Thousands of activists also joined a four-kilometre march in the host city of Belém to call for action from leaders to stop environmental destruction. These protests have brought global attention to injustices that climate politics have long tried to contain. They highlight unresolved land-tenure conflicts and the rising violence faced by Indigenous communities on the frontline of climate impacts.

Land rights as climate solutions

Indigenous territories deliver some of the world’s most effective responses to the climate crisis, from curbing deforestation to storing vast amounts of carbon. Yet much Indigenous land remains without formal recognition, leaving it exposed to invasions by illegal mining, agribusiness expansion, and land grabs, including for renewable energy projects.

COP30 has brought commitments to recognising Indigenous territories as climate solutions. During the opening ceremony, Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva emphasised the centrality of Indigenous territories to promote effective climate action. World leaders pledged to secure 160 million hectares of Indigenous and community lands by 2030.

Indigenous organisations say pledges remain far from sufficient given the threats to their lands. The Munduruku Indigenous community, an indigenous people living in the Amazon River basin, made this clear with a major blockade at COP30. Their action created long queues at the summit entrance, delaying thousands of delegates. The disruption compelled the COP presidency to meet with Munduruku leaders, who pressed for the demarcation of their territories and the right to be consulted on development projects in their territory.

Fair climate finance

One of COP30’s major negotiation challenges is finalising the Baku-Belém Roadmap, which aims to unlock A$1.5 trillion in climate funding. Yet climate finance mechanisms have a long history of undervaluing Indigenous knowledge and governance. Indigenous organisations say that fairness must be central to these pledges.

At the Leaders’ Summit, a multilateral coalition launched the Tropical Forests Forever Fund. This commits A$7.6 billion to protect over one billion hectares of forests. With backing from 53 nations and 19 sovereign investors, the fund earmarks 20% of its finance for Indigenous projects. The Forest Tenure Funders Group also renewed its pledge, with a commitment of A$2.7 billion to secure Indigenous land rights.

Still, Indigenous advocates warn climate finance must go beyond dollar amounts. They want a shift in who controls the funding and how projects are governed. Placing Indigenous leadership at the centre of financing means making sure Indigenous communities can receive funding directly and have fair agreements that protect them from financial risks.

Transformative leadership

UN climate conferences have long been criticised for delivering incremental progress but little systemic change. Yet signs of political transformation are emerging.

Beyond climate debates, significant Indigenous leadership is gaining momentum across other international environmental policies. In 2024, the UN’s meeting to combat desertification formalised a new caucus for Indigenous Peoples, while the Convention on Biological Diversity established a permanent Indigenous subsidiary body.

These growing political shifts reveal that effective environmental actions depend on dismantling power inequalities in decisions. Inclusive leadership in policymaking may not completely address the environmental crisis, but it marks a turning point as historically silenced voices begin to lead from the centre.

Danilo Urzedo receives funding from the Australian Research Council under the Industrial Transformation Training Centre for Healing Country (IC210100034).

Oliver Tester receives funding from the ARC Industrial Transformation Training Centre for Healing Country.

Stephen van Leeuwen receives funding from the ARC Industrial Transformation Training Centre for Healing Country.

ref. Finally, Indigenous peoples have an influential voice at COP30. They’re speaking loud and clear. – https://theconversation.com/finally-indigenous-peoples-have-an-influential-voice-at-cop30-theyre-speaking-loud-and-clear-269403

An AI lab says Chinese-backed bots are running cyber espionage attacks. Experts have questions

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Toby Murray, Professor of Cybersecurity, School of Computing and Information Systems, The University of Melbourne

Lone Thomasky & Bits&Bäume / Better Images of AI, CC BY

Over the past weekend, the US AI lab Anthropic published a report about its discovery of the “first reported AI-orchestrated cyber espionage campaign”.

The company says a Chinese government–sponsored hacking group used Anthropic’s own Claude AI tool to automate a significant part of an effort to steal sensitive information from around 30 organisations.

The report has drawn a lot of attention. Some, including respected experts, have warned that AI-automated cyber attacks are the future, urging cyber defenders to invest now before the coming onslaught.

At the same time, many in the cyber security industry have been underwhelmed by Anthropic’s claims, saying the actual role AI played in the attacks is unclear.

What Anthropic says happened

Critics have pointed out what they say is a lack of detail in the report, which means we have to do a certain amount of guesswork to try to piece together what might have happened. With that in mind, it appears the hackers built a framework for carrying out cyber intrusion campaigns mostly automatically.

The grunt work was carried by Anthropic’s Claude Code AI coding agent. Claude Code is designed to automate computer programming tasks, but it can also be used to automate other computer activities.

Claude Code has built-in safety guardrails to prevent it from causing harm. For example, I asked it just now to write me a program that I could use to carry out hacking activities. It bluntly refused.

However, as we have known from the very first days of ChatGPT, one way to bypass guardrails in AI systems is to trick them into engaging in role-play.

Anthropic reports that this is what these hackers did. They tricked Claude Code into believing it was assisting authorised hackers to test the quality of a system’s defences.

Missing details

The information Anthropic has published lacks the fine details that the best cyber incident investigation reports tend to include.

Chief among these are so-called indicators of compromise (or IoCs). When investigators publish a report into a cyber intrusion, they usually include hard evidence that other cyber defenders can use to look for signs of the same attack.

Each attack campaign might use specific attack tools, or might be carried out from specific computers under the attacker’s control. Each of these indicators would form part of the cyber intrusion’s signature.

Somebody else who gets attacked using the same tools, coming from the same attacking computers, can infer that they have also been a victim of this same campaign.

For example, the US government Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency recently partnered with government cyber agencies worldwide to publish information about ongoing Chinese state-sponsored cyber espionage, including detailed indicators of compromise.

Unfortunately, Anthropic’s report includes no such indicators. As a result, defenders are unable to determine whether they might also have been victims of this AI-powered hacking campaign.

Unsurprising – and with limited success

Another reason many have been underwhelmed by Anthropic’s claims is that, on their face and absent hard details, they are not especially surprising.

Claude Code is widely used by many programmers because it helps them to be more productive.

While not exactly the same as programming tasks, many common tasks performed during a cyber intrusion are similar enough to programming tasks that Claude Code should be able to carry them out, too.

A final reason to be wary of Anthropic’s claims is that they suggest the attackers might have been able to get Claude Code to perform these tasks more reliably than it typically does so.

Generative AI can perform marvellous feats. But getting systems such as ChatGPT or Claude Code to do so reliably remains a major challenge.

In the memorable words of one commentator, too often these tools respond to difficult requests with “ass-kissing, stonewalling, and acid trips”. In plainer language, AI tools are prone to sycophancy, repeated refusal to carry out difficult tasks, and hallucinations.

Indeed, Anthropic’s report notes that Claude Code frequently lied to the attackers, pretending it had carried out a task successfully even when it hadn’t. This is a classic case of AI hallucination.

Perhaps this explain the attack’s low success rate: Anthropic’s own reporting says that while about 30 organisations were targeted, the hackers succeeded against only a few.

What does this mean for the future of cyber security and AI?

Whatever the details of this particular campaign, AI-enabled cyber attacks are here to stay.

Even if one contends that current AI-enabled hacking is lame, it would be foolish for cyber defenders to assume it will stay that way.

If nothing else, Anthropic’s report is a timely reminder for organisations to invest in cyber security. Those who do not may face a future in which their secrets are stolen or operations disrupted by autonomous AI agents.

The Conversation

Toby Murray receives funding from the Department of Defence, and has previously received funding from Google and Facebook. He is Director of the Defence Science Organisation, which receives funding from state and Commonwealth governments.

ref. An AI lab says Chinese-backed bots are running cyber espionage attacks. Experts have questions – https://theconversation.com/an-ai-lab-says-chinese-backed-bots-are-running-cyber-espionage-attacks-experts-have-questions-269815

IT system at Wellngton Hospital a ‘constant risk’ to patient safety, says union

Source: Radio New Zealand

There have been performance issues and recurring outages with the IT system at Wellington Hospital. RNZ / REECE BAKER

The union for senior doctors says an IT system introduced this year at Wellington Hospital is a “constant risk” to patient safety.

The system was very slow and crashed all the time, Sarah Dalton – head of the Association Of Salaried Medical Specialists – told Midday Report on Monday.

Health New Zealand said there were “performance and stability issues” but it had safeguards in place to ensure patient information was not lost.

It would “keep pushing until the system is stable and reliable”.

RNZ has seen one email from the hospital front line that said: “Wellington’s IT disaster has become so bad that some specialists are now cancelling/cutting back their clinics as they can’t get through all their patients.”

Dalton said they had been trying for months to get a meeting with Health NZ about this, which they now expected to be in a week or so, as what Health NZ had called “teething” problems got worse.

“We now believe the failure of the system is a constant risk both to efficiency but more concerningly to patient safety,” she said.

It took two to three minutes to load a screen with a patient’s information – for example, what medications a sedated patient was on – then regularly crashed when multiple screens were needed.

“It’s pushing back to paper-based workarounds to try and care safely for patients.”

Health NZ chief information technology officer Darren Douglass said performance problems arose in March, and they set up a team to fix them, including working with the supplier, replacing older hardware and improving remote access.

Dalton said the system would be very useful in linking all sorts of medical specialists, if it worked.

She understood any fixes would likely take months.

This was linked to the government and Health NZ stripping $100m and key roles – mislabelled back office, said Dalton – from data and digital teams.

“We can see here a direct negative impact on patient care.”

The Public Service Association echoed that line: “We warned the government last year that cutting IT staff at Health NZ Te Whatu Ora was playing with fire.”

Health NZ’s Douglass said clinicians had processes in place to ensure critical information was not missed.

“While the system is still working, it can be slow to access functions and open clinical documents, especially during busy times,” he said in a statement on Monday.

“This performance issue and recurring outages have made it harder for clinicians to access patient information quickly.

“While the risk is low, any disruption is taken seriously and safeguards are in place to ensure critical patient information is not lost.”

Patient safety remained the top priority and urgent care was prioritised.

“While these issues can add time to some tasks, we are working hard to minimise any impact on wait times.”

The PSA called on the privacy commissioner to investigate.

“The privacy commissioner refused our request to investigate privacy risks to patient data last year,” national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons said in a statement on Monday.

“We say he needs to think again – before patients are harmed and confidential health information is compromised.”

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

Soldier facing court martial following accusations of strangling former partner

Source: Radio New Zealand

The accused soldier denies strangling his former partner who was also in the Defense Force at the time. RNZ / Jonathan Mitchell

A soldier is accused of strangling another soldier on two occasions in 2019.

The Army corporal is facing court martial after pleading not guilty to two charges of assaulting his former partner, who was also in the Defence Force at the time.

Both have name suppression.

In his opening address prosecutor Lieutenant Ben Ruback told the court martial that on two occasions the man became angry at the woman while he was drunk and strangled her.

On the first occasion the pair had been at a party outside of Burnham Military Camp and the woman was the sober driver, Ruback said.

In her evidence, the woman said she helped the man to his barracks because he was so intoxicated.

Once back in the barracks, he wanted to leave and continue partying but she wanted him to stay because she thought he was too drunk, the woman told the court.

“I was blocking the door and he got even more angry and he started strangling me towards the door,” she said.

The following morning there were marks on her neck and the accused asked her about them.

She told him he had strangled her and he said he did not remember but apologised, she said.

She did not tell anyone about being strangled because she wanted to protect her partner’s reputation and did not want people to know they were having problems.

Defence lawyer Andrew McCormick said the soldier admitted there were two incidents when he behaved badly but claimed he never strangled the woman.

On the first occasion his client says the woman was the aggressor, McCormick told the court.

On the second occasion the soldier accepted he pushed her against a post, but he claimed he did not put his hands around her throat, McCormick said.

“This isn’t the case of him saying – I didn’t do anything, she is completely lying. This is a case of him saying – yes, there were two flash point confrontations. Yes, I had been drinking. Yes, I have behaved badly. Yes, I have let myself down. Yes, I have treated her badly,” McCormick said.

“But he says I did not put my hands around her throat. I did not try to strangle her. I was not reckless about that either.”

During cross-examination, McCormick put to the woman she had only made the complaints in 2024 because the Defence Force was reviewing her retention in the army.

“You made these complaints because you were upset you were discharged from the Defence Force and he was still there,” McCormick said.

The woman said that was not true.

The court martial at Burnham Military Camp is set down for three days.

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

Kahureremoa Fleur Mantell jailed for more than $120k in false Covid-19 relief claims

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

An Auckland woman has been jailed for more than three years after she made false claims for more than $120,000 in Covid-19 relief.

Kahureremoa Fleur Mantell was sentenced in the Manukau District Court after she was found guilty of 33 dishonesty charges.

She pretended to run a business and used Small Business Cashflow Scheme and Resurgence Support Payment applications to get Covid-19 relief money.

The applications were made in her name and those of six other people.

Mantell dishonestly attempted to obtain $122,000 in income tax returns and Covid-19 relief money.

The total amount paid out was just under $69,000.

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

Ministry of Education closer to making decision on Gloriavale Christian School’s future

Source: Radio New Zealand

Gloriavale Christian community is small, isolated place in Haupiri, West Coast. Jean Edwards

The Ministry of Education is reviewing Gloriavale Christian School’s response to officials’ concerns as it weighs up the school’s future.

Secretary for Education Ellen MacGregor-Reid wrote to the private school last month advising she was considering cancelling its registration after a second failed Education Review Office audit in as many years.

July’s ERO report found Gloriavale Christian School had not met three of eight registration criteria and was not a physically and emotionally safe space for students.

Gloriavale’s school leadership had five weeks to respond to the secretary’s letter with an initial deadline of 7 November. However, it was extended until Friday after the West Coast Christian community requested more information.

Ministry of Education Te Tai Runga (South) acting hautū (leader) Andrea Williams confirmed the ministry had received a response from Gloriavale.

“The Ministry received a response from the school on Friday and is now carefully reviewing it before making a decision,” she said.

“There is no set timeframe for this process, but the ministry will make sure it moves forward within a reasonable period. The school will be kept informed about when a decision can be expected.”

Education officials met Gloriavale school leaders on 23 July to express concerns about its compliance with registration requirements and issue a second formal “notice to comply”.

In August, Children’s Commissioner Claire Achmad called for the school’s urgent closure, saying she had zero confidence that students were safe.

The Gloriavale Leavers’ Support Trust favoured a special transitional model for the children’s education, if the school closed, saying the community’s hostels were not an appropriate place for homeschooling.

Under the Education and Training Act, the ministry could cancel the registration of a private school, if it no longer met the criteria, including providing suitable premises, staffing, curriculum, or ensuring student safety and wellbeing.

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

Trump’s Gaza peace plan faces a pivotal UN Security Council vote. Can it get across the line?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, Professor of International Law, La Trobe University

The UN Security Council is set to vote on a US-proposed draft resolution in New York on Monday that sets the groundwork for the next stage of President Donald Trump’s 20-point peace plan for Gaza to be put into force.

Over the last few weeks, Russia, China and various regional states have been pushing for amendments to a draft that was first circulated in early November. The key contention has centred on a proposed transitional authority – the so-called Board of Peace, chaired by Trump himself – with sweeping governance powers devoid of any Palestinian participation or endorsement.

The latest draft now at least includes notional recognition of Palestinian self-determination, which may be enough to deter a veto by either China or Russia.

While many countries continue to be concerned about the details (or lack thereof) in the resolution, support from a broad coalition of regional states will probably push it over the line.

Neither the Israelis nor Palestinians have been formally included in the negotiations, but Israel has presumably worked closely to shape the text. It has pushed back strongly on language supporting Palestinian statehood and will continue to do so.

The Palestinian Authority leader, Mahmoud Abbas, has given his broad support to the plan.

What’s in the proposed resolution?

While Trump revelled in the success of his ceasefire and peace deal in October, the efforts by his administration to push for UN Security Council resolution since then underscore how fragile the situation is.

The United States has ignored, shunned or actively obstructed the UN’s work in Gaza over the last two years. It has imposed sanctions on Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese, defunded the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine (UNRWA) and vetoed numerous previous resolutions calling for ceasefires in Gaza.

Now, it seems the US is willing to concede a role to the UN. But it envisions this role to be minimal at best and perhaps stretches the limits of standard Security Council mandates to their breaking point.

The draft resolution seeks to build on Trump’s 20-point plan in fundamental ways. One of the key points is the establishment of a transitional authority (the Board of Peace) to oversee the provision of aid and start of reconstruction in Gaza; and an International Stabilisation Force (ISF) to disarm Hamas and oversee security in Gaza for the next two years.

The Board of Peace would include Palestinian technocrats. It would eventually transfer power to the Palestinian Authority, but only once the board is satisfied it is capable of ruling autonomously. Palestinian self-determination is mentioned, but as a platitude without any guarantees.

The ISF would likely comprise troops from Muslim states – such as Indonesia, Egypt, Azerbaijan and Turkey – under the guidance of special forces from Western states. It would maintain border security for Egypt and Israel, though questions remain about how and where it would maintain security within Gaza itself. Disarming Hamas could bring it into direct military confrontation with the group.

Financial details appear at the end of the text. The World Bank and donor states are called on to supply various forms of support, but again, without any concrete policies or parameters.

What’s problematic about it?

It is clear the US is seeking a Chapter 7 mandate under the UN Charter, which authorises the Security Council to take enforcement measures, including military action, to maintain international peace and security. For example, Chapter 7 resolutions authorised action against Iraq in 1990 and Libya in 2011.

While the UN Charter gives the Security Council this power, it still must operate within the framework of international law.

In the absence of explicit Palestinian agreement, the Board of Peace and International Stabilisation Force would likely be classified, in the eyes of legal experts, as occupying powers. And the UN’s highest court, the International Court of Justice, has already declared Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories as illegal under international law.

As such, any foreign entity governing Gaza and exercising force would also be considered illegal without Palestinian consent, were it to seek to transform the domestic laws in place.

The crux here is Palestinian self-rule. There is no getting around this problem in the long term.

Is there a path forward?

Palestinian buy-in is not only mandatory from a legal sense, it’s also crucial for the Board of Peace to have sufficient legitimacy to address the extremely complex and pressing needs of the Palestinians in Gaza.

Accountability is also vital to ensure the path to peace is genuine and achievable. Yet, the draft resolution ignores the overwhelming evidence put forth by a UN Commission of Inquiry of Israel’s genocidal conduct in Gaza and overlooks the responsibility and accountability of the ISF altogether.

Ultimately, then, the Security Council resolution is reminiscent of the Oslo Peace Accords in the early 1990s. The agreements also promised eventual Palestinian statehood in some vague form, along with a partial Israeli military withdrawal.

However, they did so by abandoning key international legal protections for Palestinians, centred on their right to self-determination and the territorial integrity of the post-1967 occupied Palestinian territories.

If it passes, the UN resolution might provide cover for some semblance of peace, but it won’t have had the direct formal involvement of the Palestinians or Israelis themselves. And it will likely be a peace that only secures Israel’s borders, while dangling the paltry promise of Palestinian statehood to a population already on its knees.

Michelle Burgis-Kasthala does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Trump’s Gaza peace plan faces a pivotal UN Security Council vote. Can it get across the line? – https://theconversation.com/trumps-gaza-peace-plan-faces-a-pivotal-un-security-council-vote-can-it-get-across-the-line-269894

FENZ restructure poses ‘tremendous human cost, union says

Source: Radio New Zealand

The proposed changes at FENZ would be the biggest in 8 years. RNZ / Alexander Robertson

The union for volunteer firefighters says a restructure at Fire and Emergency (FENZ) poses a “tremendous human cost”.

FENZ is proposing to cut at least 140 non-firefighter jobs and scrap its regional structure in its biggest overhaul since it was set up in 2017.

The United Fire Brigades’ Association said “We understand there is a tremendous human cost to this proposed change so will be looking carefully at the proposal and will be making a submission through the Fire and Emergency consultation process.”

It encouraged its membership of 14,000 to give feedback, it said in a statement on Monday.

The association last year put out a report calling for more investment in volunteer firefighters, suggesting they were “hidden in plain sight”.

Hundreds of fire brigades are volunteer or hybrid volunteer-paid ones.

A change proposal document sets out to disestablish a raft of positions and set up new ones.

For instance, it showed eight of 13 roles in recruitment, including of volunteers, slated to go, but a new lead role for supporting volunteers coming in.

Training for volunteers would also be separated from that for career firefighters, with three new roles for managing volunteer training proposed.

“Dedicated teams for career and volunteer personnel are proposed to provide focused oversight and ensure consistency in quality,” it 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

Watch live: PM Christopher Luxon at post-cab conference

Source: Radio New Zealand

The government is tinkering with the Clean Car Standard – again – saying most importers are unable to meet the targets under the scheme as it currently stands.

It will also fully review the scheme, with recommendations to Cabinet due by June 2026.

The government last year watered down the standard to align CO₂ emissions standards with Australia – saying that change would strike the right balance between reducing transport emissions and ensuring vehicles would be affordable.

The standard charges importers for vehicles that have CO₂ emissions-to-weight ratios above a certain target, with credits for vehicles with ratios below that target.

Transport Minister Chris Bishop said it had helped lift fuel efficiency, but now the market conditions had changed, with a supply shortage of cleaner used vehicles, and a drop in demand for new EVs.

“Most importers are now unable to meet the passenger-vehicle targets. In fact, right now, 86 per cent of importers are facing a net charge rather than net savings from credits. The scheme is so out-of-whack with reality that even some hybrid vehicles will attract charges rather than credits,” he said.

The Clean Car Discount scheme was announced by the previous government in June 2021. 123RF

The targets were set to decrease each year until 2029, while the charges for exceeding them would increase.

Under the new changes, the charges will be slashed by nearly 80 percent – from $67.50 to $15 per gram of CO₂ for new vehicles, and from a top rate of $33.75 to $7.50 for used vehicles, for 2026 and 2027.

Credits will also be protected so that none expire before 31 December 2028, while the standard is reviewed.

Bishop estimated the changes would avoid $264 million in net charges, which could have been passed onto consumers through higher vehicle prices.

The changes will made through an amendment paper to the Land Transport (Clean Vehicle Standard) Amendment Bill (No 2), with the aim of passing it this week and coming into effect on 1 January.

One of the first actions taken by the government upon coming into office was to repeal the Clean Car Discount, which charged fees to buyers of newly imported combustion engine vehicles, with the money going towards rebates for electric cars or plug-in hybrids.

ACC has also increased levies for electric cars.

– more to come

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

Why Pope Leo is making a plea to save our cinemas

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ruari Elkington, Senior Lecturer in Creative Industries & Chief Investigator at QUT Digital Media Research Centre (DMRC), Queensland University of Technology

To the best of my knowledge, Pope Leo XIV has never visited the town of Yass in New South Wales.

Yet efforts by the Yass community to restore the town’s 1930s art deco Liberty Theatre are very much aligned with the Holy Father’s latest pronouncement. The theatre – once a cultural hub for the townspeople – recently screened its first film in more than 50 years.

In Yass, like everywhere else, smart devices provide an opportunity for screen-based entertainment. So, why spend time and money restoring an old cinema when you can watch anything you want on your iPhone at home?

Remarkably, the answer to this question is the same in Vatican City as it is in rural NSW.

A Hollywood audience at the Vatican

On November 15, Pope Leo XIV had something to say to the world about cinema.

For researchers such as myself who study cultures of cinemagoing this is both a welcome and strange development.

We don’t have a long history of popes listing their Letterboxd “top four” films of all time, but on the weekend, we got Leo’s: in case you missed it, they were The Sound of Music (1965), It’s a Wonderful Life (1947), Ordinary People (1980) and Life Is Beautiful (1997).

The pontiff’s decision to invite actors, directors and film executives to the Vatican to make a speech about why cinemas and cinemagoing still matter suddenly placed questions about the value of this practice squarely in front of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics.

Australia’s Cate Blanchett was there, along with Monica Bellucci, Chris Pine and Adam Scott. So too were the filmmakers Darren Aronofsky, Spike Lee, Judd Apatow and Gaspar Noe. For anyone familiar with Noe’s oeuvre, it’s clear the pontiff wasn’t not playing it safe when it came to his choice of guests. This reflected a key line from his speech:

When cinema is authentic, it does not merely console but challenges.

Why is the pope talking about cinema?

As many of the residents of Yass will tell you, cinema is a powerful way for communities to come together and experience a shared story.

This experience, and the focus and commitment it demands from us, is arguably needed now more than ever.

The commentary in Yass when the Liberty Theatre reopened was not about the latest blockbuster, but the social, emotional and communal benefits the cinema enabled. As one resident explained:

Having a cinema back in Yass means the community can come together, and there’s a sense of pride as well.

In his Saturday address at the Vatican, Pope Leo did not hesitate to hold up cinemagoing as a deeply human and indeed spiritual pursuit that allows us to reflect on our own humanity:

Cinema combines what appears to be mere entertainment with the narrative of the human person’s spiritual adventure. One of cinema’s most valuable contributions is helping audiences consider their own lives, look at the complexity of their experiences with new eyes and examine the world as if for the first time. In doing so, they rediscover a portion of the hope that is essential for humanity to live to the fullest.

My own research has focused on understanding the various reasons cinemagoing is valuable for communities – and how the “social prescribing” of cinemagoing can benefit communities.

In surveys my colleagues and I conducted with industry, 81% of moviegoers said they believe cinemagoing enhances their overall wellbeing – underlining its broader benefits, despite the often reported gap between pre-pandemic attendance and now.

In his speech, Pope Leo homed in on one overlooked but increasingly valued understanding of why cinema matters: we get to focus. In an attention economy where “second screen shows” play alongside other digital distractions, giving ourselves over to a single onscreen story may provide much needed relief. In the pope’s own words:

We live in an age where digital screens are always on. There is a constant flow of information. However, cinema is much more than just a screen; it is an intersection of desires, memories and questions. […] As the plot unfolds, our mind is educated, our imagination broadens, and even pain can find new meaning.

A practical call to action

For anyone who thinks academics read too much into cinemagoing, the notion of going to see Avatar as an “intersection of desires, memories and questions” may seem overblown.

But the speech wasn’t just heavy on the metaphysical, it also spoke to practical issues and solutions. The pope spoke about cinemas’ struggles to sustain audiences, the closure of sites, and the idea the cinematic experience may be in danger.

He urged institutions to cooperate in affirming the social and cultural value of this activity and, like the good people of Yass, pointed squarely at why we should value cinemagoing:

If a city is alive, it is thanks in part to its cultural spaces. We must inhabit these spaces and build relationships within them, day after day.

If Pope Leo ever makes it to Yass, hopefully he will find a community united around its local theatre.

The Conversation

Ruari Elkington has received funding from the Queensland government’s Department of Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation (DETSI), Screen Queensland, The Embassy of France in Australia, and the Cinema Association Australasia.

ref. Why Pope Leo is making a plea to save our cinemas – https://theconversation.com/why-pope-leo-is-making-a-plea-to-save-our-cinemas-269898