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Winston Peters makes u-turn on Chorus debt sell-off

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

New Zealand First leader Winston Peters has reversed his previous opposition to the Chorus debt sell-off, saying it is “monetisation” rather than an asset sale.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis last week confirmed the government would sell about $650m in interest-free loans Chorus owes the government, which is not due to be fully paid back until 2036.

In November, Peters told Morning Report he did not support the proposal, calling it “creative accounting of the worst sort”.

“You’re selling off a debt on the basis that you’ve got an asset? Why don’t we just make sure that Chorus pays us back?” he said.

“I don’t support that idea. I don’t support failed economics. I don’t support wanton neoliberalism, which is a disaster. We went through it once before.”

The government last week confirmed it would go ahead and sell off the debt, which would be ring-fenced for funding other infrastructure.

Asked why Peters had changed his mind, a spokesperson told RNZ a key word in the announcement was ‘monetisation’.

“Monetisation is a mechanism to effectively adjust the timing of the maturity of the debt,” the spokesperson said.

“New Zealand First stands firm on its position on state asset sales.”

The government’s statement announcing the move last week was titled “earlier monetisation of Chorus debt”.

Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop had said the process would begin in early 2026, and would not change the ownership of Chorus, or the company’s services and assets.

The loan was to help Chorus finance and accelerate the rollout of fibre broadband across the country.

The government does not have a stake in Chorus.

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

‘Our sense of identity’: What New Zealand and Georgia have in common

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Marika Khabazi is a video journalist with Georgian and Russian ancestry. She moved to New Zealand as a 16-year-old in 2008 to pursue a career in the Film and TV industry.

Her documentary explores the power and similarities of the Māori haka to Georgian traditional dance.

As an immigrant, the first time I saw haka being performed, I got goosebumps. It reminded me of the traditional dance of my own home, Georgia.

Haka is a universal language to all New Zealanders. Its synchronised movement has a rare ability to display both power and vulnerability at the same time.

The traditional Georgian dance evokes the same powerful feelings haka does.

How could two countries, different in so many ways, share a similar way of expressing emotion?

I travelled home to Georgia in search of the answers.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Georgian National Ensemble “Batumi” Choreographer Miranda Bagdadishvili told me Khorumi is a traditional Adjarian dance that reveres Georgian warriors.

“Georgia being a small country has always had to defend itself from invaders.”

“A lot of our dances carry that history, reflecting both the struggles and the victories of our past.”

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Matiu Hamuera has been involved in Kapa haka from a young age. They credit the bilingual school system, and their Auntie Riria who raised them, for their exposure to something they grew to love.

I showed Matiu videos of the Khorumi dance and they saw many similarities.

“I can see the warriors in this, I can see the kind of marching as a war party, which are the formations we also use in Kapa haka.”

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

Matiu highlighted the ability to explore both masculine and feminine sides in both traditions.

“In modern times too, we are recognizing that there is also space for our people who don’t often subscribe to either of those two binaries.”

Geo Tughushi is a Georgian performing artist living in New Zealand.

In early childhood, he made a decision to follow his passion for dance instead of the wrong crowd.

“Dancing saved me because I was growing up kind of on the street, for mental health it helps you focus a lot.”

Supplied

That resonated with Matiu Hamuera.

“There have been times in my life where I’ve been feeling so low and sometimes in the darkest place of my life and the things that have helped me get out of that is Kapa haka.”

My father, Guram Suleimanovich Khabazi, started dancing in the second grade and taught Georgian dance since the early 70’s. He still lives in the Adjara region where I was born.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

“There’s an ensemble here in Adjara called Bermukha, and the dancers are 80, 85, 90, even 95 years old.”

“It’s like they’re saying, I am 98, but I can still dance, I’m still full of life.”

After traveling 16,000km across the globe it became clear to me traditional dance not only unites people in joy but gives us a sense of community and grounds us in our sense of identity.

“The dances show the weight of hard work, the challenges of war, and the calm that comes with peace”, said Miranda Bagdadishvili.

“In a way, Georgian dance tells the story of both the people and the country.”

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

“I feel like Kapa Haka for Aotearoa is what really grounds us in our sense of identity, not just for Māori, but for all of Aotearoa,” said Matiu Hamuera.

More than that though, cultural dance celebrates all of it: the struggles, the differences, the battles, the love and the sadness.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

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

Holiday makers warned to check destination water is safe to drink

Source: Radio New Zealand

Water schemes for many small and rural communities lacked the same protections and treatment of systems for larger urban areas. HENDRIK SCHMIDT

Holidaymakers need to be vigilant by checking the quality of drinking water at their holiday spots which run on riskier schemes, Water New Zealand says.

The water industry body said water schemes for many small and rural communities, including some council-owned supplies, lacked the same protections and treatment of systems for larger urban areas.

Water New Zealand chief executive Gillian Blythe said improvements had made for publicly supplied water, with more councils having sufficient treatments for protection against protozoa and bacterial infection.

“However, almost 400,000 New Zealanders are still receiving water from council supplies that lack one or more critical barrier to safety,” she said.

“As well, many small communities rely on tank and ground water. It’s important that water from these sources is treated or boiled before use.”

Tank water at holiday homes and campsites were susceptible to “vermin or bird droppings”, Blythe said.

“If your water is from a public or council supply, keep an eye out for boil water notices. When a boil water notice is issued, it means E. coli has been found, usually from faecal contamination,” she said.

“No one wants their holiday spoiled by illness and a few simple measures can prevent unnecessary grief.”

Further warnings had been extended for swimming areas during the holiday period, particularly in the days following heavy rain.

Rivers, lakes, or at the beach were susceptible to runoff and sewage overflows that could cause E. coli contamination, Blythe said.

“It’s a good idea to check the LAWA website for information on the quality of water in your region and at your swimming spot.”

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

Alice Robinson an Olympic podium contender after another impressive result

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand skier Alice Robinson © Erich Spiess / Red Bull Content Pool 2025 / PHOTOSPORT

Queenstown skier Alice Robinson is a genuine contender for the podium in two events at the Winter Olympics in February.

Robinson has followed up her historic Super G World Cup win last week by finishing second in the same discipline at the latest event in France.

The 24-year-old finished behind Sofia Goggia of Italy at Val d’lsere.

The result keeps her on top of the overall Super G standings, while she also tops the standings in her previously favoured event the Giant Slalom.

“With Super G it’s taken me some time to really feel confident and trust enough in my skiing to just go for it and trust what I can do, and I feel like the last two races I’ve felt really good,” Robinson said afterwards.

“We did a little bit of work this summer trying to up my Super G and just ticking away so I am really happy.”

Last week she won her maiden Super G World Cup title in St.Moritz becoming the first New Zealander to podium in the event.

Robinson has seven career World Cup victories and 22 World Cup podiums.

New Zealand skier Alice Robinson © Erich Spiess / Red Bull Content Pool 2025 / PHOTOSPORT

She continues to progress into a genuine contender in the speed disciplines.

“I was a little annoyed when I came through the finish because it was so close and I thought I could have done it better,” Robinson said, “I’m happy I was still able to stay in touch on that kind of course, where I’m not always the strongest.”

Sofia Goggia of Italy took her eighth Super G World Cup win today, 0.15 seconds ahead of Robinson with legendary American ski racer Lindsey Vonn finishing in third, 0.21 seconds behind Robinson’s time.

With two podiums (1st and 2nd) from a total of two Super G FIS World Cup races this season, Robinson retains the red bib and leads the 2025/26 Super G World Cup standings.

“It’s so cool to have the red bib in Super G and honestly so cool to share the podium today with Lindsey and Sofia, it’s like a dream podium because they’re both so awesome.”

Robinson has one more race for 2025 and will be back in the Giant Slalom World Cup bib in Semmering, Austria on the 27th of December.

She has also been named as a Halberg Award finalist.

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

Person with imitation gun arrested in Wellington CBD

Source: Radio New Zealand

No caption

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A person has been arrested in Wellington CBD, after reports of someone with a gun.

Police said they received a report just after 6am on Monday that someone at a Willis Street residence could be in possession of a gun.

Police said they attended the residence and spoke to occupants, and they located an imitation firearm.

One person was arrested and taken into custody at about 7:45am.

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

Keeping cats away with sound: ‘It’s important we explore these different options’

Source: Radio New Zealand

The head of the Predator Free NZ Trust says there is “some complexity” in using sound to keep cats away from nesting native birds.

Jessi Morgan says it is important to keep the country’s native wildlife safe, while recognising the role cats play as companions.

A project from the Bioeconomy Science Institute has discovered a way to use sound as a harmless deterrent.

The research found feral cats were most averse to the sound of human voices, and domestic cats were most averse to the sound of other cats.

Feral cats were recently added to the Predator Free 2050 target species list, but domestic cats are still part of many New Zealand households.

There was no official estimate of how many feral cats live in New Zealand. While 2.4 million is often cited, some believe the true number is far higher.

Morgan said New Zealand has the highest rate of cat ownership in the world, with about 1.2 million owned cats.

She said the research could be applied to other animals.

New research project uses sound to protect native birds from cats. Supplied / Patrick Garvey

“Research that we do on protecting native birds from cats is also transferable to other species, which is really important,” Morgan said.

“The key is removing cats from those environments where the native birds are, that’s the ultimate.”

She said there needed to be a way of keeping the cats that were in the area away in the meantime.

The sound technology could be costly to establish, Morgan said.

“It’s quite an expensive application at the moment, in terms of you need the speaker to play the sound out loud, and it needs to be weather proof.

“There’s some complexity around it,” she said.

Morgan said sound could also be used to lure pests into traps.

“I think sound does have a role to play for cats but also for other predators, could we use sound lures to attract animals towards a trap or towards a cage so we were able to catch them.

“It’s really important that we explore all these different options because at the moment most of our lures for trapping are food lures, so it’s kind of smell and taste, and so if we can have sound lure as another option then it actually just makes our trapping more effective in time – it just give us different options.”

Exploring different strategies like sound, light or pheromones was important, Morgan said.

“It’s not going to be a cookie cutter approach, there’s not a one size fits all here.

“Obviously, the best thing cat owners can do is actually keep their cats safe and happy at home, so contained on their own property, and that means it minimises their impact on wildlife but also keeps the cats safe which is really important, especially when they’re important companions or members of the family.”

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

Who was Amelia Frank? The life of a forgotten physicist

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Peter Jacobson, Senior Lecturer in Condensed Matter Physics, The University of Queensland

Amelia Frank, June 1930. University of Wisconsin

In 1977, an American physicist named John H. Van Vleck won the Nobel prize for his work on magnetism. In his Nobel lecture, amid a discussion of rare earth elements, one sentence leaps out:

Miss Frank and I made the relevant calculations.

Who was Miss Frank? Van Vleck credits her with key work on the quantum mechanics of magnetism, but she is almost absent from the history books.

Amelia Frank published a handful of scholarly papers which are well-cited for the time. Yet histories of physics mostly mention her only as the wife of Eugene Wigner, who was himself awarded the physics Nobel in 1963.

Why don’t we know more about Frank, and why aren’t her contributions recognised? When we searched through the archives, we found a remarkable scientific life unfolding at the dawn of quantum mechanics.

A bright beginning

Born in 1906, Amelia Z. Frank grew up a junkyard owner’s daughter in Adrian, Michigan. Local newspaper reports paint her as a bright, accomplished teen and an independent thinker.

As an undergraduate at a leading women’s university, Goucher College, Frank joined the physics club. Her senior yearbook relates that her presentation on the Compton effect – a description of how light interacts with electrically charged particles, named after Arthur Compton – was both highly technical and engaging.

Nine months later, Compton gained wide public recognition with the award of the 1927 Nobel prize for demonstrating that X-rays could behave like particles. Frank clearly had her finger on the pulse of the quantum mechanical revolution then occurring in physics.

Where many scholars intrigued by the quantum frontier pursued their study in Europe, Frank went to the University of Wisconsin. There, she met the recently recruited Van Vleck.

Quantum innovation

Arriving in Madison in 1928, Frank had placed herself at the American centre of quantum innovation.

At that time, quantum mechanics could describe isolated particles or atoms, but puzzling out the behaviour of solid materials was proving difficult.

Front page of a paper titled 'Temperature Variation of the Magnetic Susceptibility, Gyromagnetic Ratio, and Heat Capacity in Sm+++ and Eu+++' by Amelia Frank
Part of Amelia Frank’s PhD thesis was published in 1932.
Physical Review

Magnetism was the perfect testbed, as it can only be explained by quantum mechanics – not classical physics. Frank, supervised by Van Vleck, turned to rare earth elements, where magnetism is strong and existing theories were insufficient. Could quantum physics resolve this conundrum?

Frank’s thesis, partially published in Physical Review in 1932, focused on the element samarium. It showed quantum mechanical corrections were needed to explain the experimental data and contains a plot that appears in Van Vleck’s Nobel lecture, labelled “V.V. & F”.

Hard times

After her PhD, Frank worked as a tutor at the University of Wisconsin and continued her research. Her 1935 article on crystal field theory showed how samarium’s energy levels shift due to neighbouring atoms.

Colleagues described her as a promising scholar and her publication record was good. But she faced barriers that slowed her work.

Money was one issue. Frank was supporting her younger sister, an undergraduate chemistry student, and it was the middle of the Great Depression.

In an unpublished 1935 letter we found in Box 12, Folder 214 of the J. H. Van Vleck papers held by the American Institute of Physics in the Niels Bohr Library and Archive, Frank told Van Vleck she’d had to take another job to survive:

Our finances were in such bad shape that I suggested to various people that I’d be interested in typing […] and so I have taught classes, tutored, typed and cooked, but I have not finished my paper.

Van Vleck was seeking positions for Frank, but jobs were scarce – and as a Jewish woman in that era, Frank would have faced multiple forms of discrimination.

Marriage and death

Ultimately, Frank left physics, resigning from the University of Wisconsin around October 1936. When Van Vleck asked why, Frank let him in on a then-closely guarded secret: she had started a relationship with new colleague Eugene Wigner.

The pair married shortly before Christmas. Wigner described himself as astonished by his love for her.

But their happiness didn’t last. Just weeks after the wedding, Frank fell ill.

Wigner said it was her heart, others said it was cancer. Either way, Frank’s condition was grave.

After months in hospital, she returned to Michigan. She passed away in her parents’ home on August 16 1937. She was 31.

An enduring contribution

Frank’s untimely death is one reason why she is under-recognised today. But it is not a sufficient one.

Frank kept company with other trailblazing women across the country. Her flatmate in Wisconsin was Mary Bunting, who was later president of the women-only Radcliffe College and oversaw its integration with Harvard.

Frank’s ambition, intellect and drive took her to the frontiers of knowledge. There, Van Vleck’s support kept her in physics long enough to make lasting, if overlooked, contributions.

Ninety years have passed, but Frank’s life exemplifies women’s ongoing experiences in physics, good and bad.

Women remain drastically under-represented in quantum physics. To take one example, a 2023 survey found 87.5% of full-time Australian quantum researchers were men.

Women remain more likely than men to have caring responsibilities that increase financial stress and reduce research time. And mentorship and purposeful community-building remain vital to bring women into the field – and keep them there.

In the end, this may be Frank’s most enduring contribution to quantum physics. Recovering her story is important because it allows her scientific contributions to be appropriately recognised. Perhaps more importantly, her story reminds us that women have belonged in quantum physics from the beginning.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Who was Amelia Frank? The life of a forgotten physicist – https://theconversation.com/who-was-amelia-frank-the-life-of-a-forgotten-physicist-270953

More than just being well: teens and Gen Z are redefining what it means to be healthy

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Susanna Trnka, Professor of Anthropolgy, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

Getty Images

Health isn’t what it used to be – namely the absence of being sick.

Ask any teenager today what it means to them to be healthy, and you’re likely to hear about the vast array of areas in their lives they are “working on”.

This can include emotional health, aesthetic health, fitness, nutrition, social health, financial health, social media health, mental health, spiritual health … the list goes on.

When I was a teenager in the 1970s, health wasn’t something I or my friends thought about much. We took it for granted it was either something you had, or were unfortunate to have lost.

In contrast, today’s young people view health as something they can “grow” and should already be working on. Health has become an investment. And, through a process of expansion I call “healthization”, it has become an increasingly diverse one.

Beyond Dr Google

In my recent research, I asked 235 young New Zealanders aged 14–24 to talk about how they use digital technology as part of understanding their health. The results inform my recent book, Healthization: Turning Life into Health.

Some of the results were not unexpected: young people discussed googling their symptoms and self-diagnosing anything from a sore throat to a miscarriage.

They also talked about using online quizzes and a variety of websites and forums to ascertain their mental wellbeing, including self-diagnosing themselves with anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

But at the same time as invoking the value of using “Dr Google”, they also talked about sophisticated strategies they use for determining what forms of online and offline knowledge are trustworthy.

They described how they triangulate online results, determine when to check with medical professionals, and frequently compare their understanding of health information with friends, siblings or parents.

Perhaps more unexpectedly, their definitions of what it means to be healthy were all-encompassing. So much so that for some there appeared to be almost no limit to the role that striving to be healthy plays in their lives.

Things that a generation ago were thought to be important but not necessarily part of being healthy – such as friendship, beauty, having a sense of community, dating, doing well in school, creating “down time” or moments of relaxation – are now rolled into this expansive concept of health.

Not having these things is no longer seen as sad or due to misfortune, but as being actively detrimental to one’s health.

Health’s moral dimension

In a country often stereotyped for its rugged but sometimes cavalier “she’ll be right” ethos, young people openly worry about their own and other people’s physical health in ways strikingly at odds with previous generations.

There has been a lot written about the 21st-century focus on self-improvement. But young people also describe eagerly helping others in their health projects or “journeys”, spending time googling mental health issues so they can help diagnose friends, or even taking their parents along on a run.

Indeed, mental and emotional health in particular are singled out as areas where young people see a generational role to promote greater transparency and social acceptance.

Health takes on a moral dimension as young people describe investing in their own and others’ health as a means to achieve “a good life”. In fact, not to work on one’s health was often depicted as morally wrong.

Through the process of healthization, health has come to cover a much broader terrain than it did a generation or so ago. So, is it even achievable?

Or, given so many different components to health – from minding one’s time on social media to drinking enough water, from working on establishing meaningful friendships to logging in with MapMyRun – is it an illusion that no one can possibly fulfil?

While this might initially appear to be the case, the young people I interviewed suggest differently.

While some did indeed seem overwhelmed by the amount of necessary “work” on health that faces them, others noted the need for “balance” and pathways (sometimes multiple ones) toward enacting those aspects of health that appear most meaningful and achievable.

Finding real balance

In my book I suggest the turn towards such holistic views of health not only helps us acknowledge the wide variety of things that affect our wellbeing, but highlights how the mind and body are interrelated – how our mental wellbeing can influence our physical health and vice versa.

The downside is that it can feel overwhelming and also draw attention away from other things we value and which we need or want to do. These may not necessarily be good for our health but are nonetheless socially meaningful.

That might include devoting time to caring for family members, for example, rather than working on our physical fitness. Or sacrificing our time or wellbeing to promote or protect a greater cause.

The trick, the book concludes, might be to adopt a point of view that embraces the merits of a broad view of health while also encouraging ourselves to look beyond it.

Just as young people are recognising the importance of working on the self while also emphasising the importance of their relationships with others, maybe we can all discover a better kind of “balance”.

The Conversation

Susanna Trnka received funding for this research from the Royal Society of New Zealand – Marsden Fund.

ref. More than just being well: teens and Gen Z are redefining what it means to be healthy – https://theconversation.com/more-than-just-being-well-teens-and-gen-z-are-redefining-what-it-means-to-be-healthy-269258

No gym or regular routine? Here’s how to stay fit over the holiday break

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Joanna Nicholas, Lecturer in Dance and Performance Science, Edith Cowan University

Westend61/Getty

The festive season can throw our exercise routines out the window. You might be staying somewhere different, with no access to a gym. Maybe your yoga studio is closed or social sport is on a break. Or you might just be too flat out with social events to find the time.

For some people, a break from pushing their bodies will be exactly what they need.

But others will want to keep up the fitness and strength they’ve been working on throughout the year – and some will crave the mental release.

Here are some low-equipment, time-efficient strategies to keep you exercising through the break.

Staying fit

If you want to stay fit over the festive season, walking can be an easy and effective low-impact way to keep enjoying the health benefits of cardio exercise.

But how much should you walk? The more steps you take each day, the lower your risk of dying early, from any cause.

For adults 60 years and older, the benefits plateau around 6,000–8,000 steps a day, and for those under 60, at 8,000–10,000 steps. So these are good to aim for.

But people who run a lot or play a sport may be trying to maintain a higher level of cardio fitness over the holidays.

So, say you have been including brisk walks, running or high-intensity interval training into your routine.

You can reduce the number of sessions (for example, from five to two sessions a week) and/or how long they last (for example, from 40 minutes down to 20 minutes).

But to maintain your fitness, it’s key to push to the same intensity as normal when you do train.

You can also try cardio exercise snacks. These are short, high-intensity workouts, typically less than ten minutes. But they’ve been shown to enhance cardio fitness.

There is evidence even five minutes or less of high-intensity interval training – where you work hard for 30 seconds and then rest for 30 seconds – can still improve cardio fitness.

Another recent study found one minute of vigorous physical activity has the same health benefits as 4–9 minutes of moderate activity, and up to 153 minutes of light exercise.

So even a tiny “snack” is worth doing, if you’re able to exercise at a high intensity.

Keeping strong

For those who want to build or maintain muscle strength, small bouts of body weight training can work as resistance exercise snacks – a similar idea to cardio snacks.

These involve using your body for resistance rather than gym equipment. So they are lower intensity, but you do them more often (most days or even every day).

A suggested approach: do just 1-2 exercises per muscle group and 1–2 sets per exercise. Do this for up to 15 minutes at a time, in five to seven sessions a week.

Below is an example workout which can be completed as a circuit at home or the local park. Be sure to include a warm-up and cool-down either side of the workout.

Women performing a range of body weight exercises using no or minimal equipment
You can build a full body workout with these body weight exercises.
Joanna Nicholas, CC BY-NC-ND

If you already lift moderate to high loads at the gym, and still have access to equipment, you may prefer to try a low-volume and high-load approach.

This might mean you do just one session a week, and one set of exercises, but you keep the amount you lift the same.

Maintaining your wellbeing

Many of us exercise because it helps us de-stress and improves our mental health.

One 2025 study pooling the evidence shows people often report better wellbeing on days when they are active, and dips on days they are more sedentary.

Fitting exercise in during holidays can be tricky. But this period, which can mean more social events and fun as well as stress, tension, conflict – and for some people, loneliness – may be when you need it most.

Activities such as swimming, yoga or walking for 20–40 minutes can help to improve mood, anxiety and tension.

Exercising in a calming environment is also important for reducing stress. So if you can, find somewhere quiet or go outdoors in nature, whether solo or with family and friends.

Exercise can also be a chance to connect. Research shows for families with younger children, being active together can increase the feeling of involvement and closeness.

Consider family activities for the break such as bike riding, swimming at the pool or beach, Christmas light walking trials or “exergaming” (digital games that involve physical activity) such as Just Dance.

But it’s OK to take a break

Regular physical activity is important for health and wellbeing. But it’s possible to become fixated on fitness and for feelings of worry or withdrawal to creep in at the thought of working out less over the holiday period.

Don’t forget that taking a few weeks off can also be good for you. It allows the body and mind to have a break and recover both physically and mentally from a regular or strict exercise regime.

Sleep and downtime are vital for recovery. But you’re more likely to neglect these during busy periods, such as when you’re juggling deadlines and social events in the lead up to the holidays. And you’re more likely to be stressed and tired too.

Allowing yourself to reduce your exercise commitments, prioritise self-care, and allow more time to rest might be just what you need.

Seek guidance from your health-care provider and/or an exercise professional before undertaking a new exercise program.

The Conversation

Joanna Nicholas has worked for a business selling fitness equipment and delivers strength and conditioning sessions at dance studios.

ref. No gym or regular routine? Here’s how to stay fit over the holiday break – https://theconversation.com/no-gym-or-regular-routine-heres-how-to-stay-fit-over-the-holiday-break-270296

When disasters strike, home batteries could be a lifeline

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jamshid Aghaei, Professor of Electrical Engineering at Central Queensland University, CQUniversity Australia

Extreme weather is placing greater strain on Australia’s power grids. In 2022, the record-breaking Northern Rivers floods blacked out almost 70,000 households. A powerful storm in 2024 cut electricity to more than half a million Victorians. In 2025, Cyclone Alfred left 320,000 homes without power.

Large-scale power outages often coincide with mass evacuations. During the Black Summer megafires, tens of thousands of people fled.

Extreme weather will become more common and more extreme as the climate changes. Traditional far-flung power grids are often vulnerable to disasters. Trees fall on power lines, torrential rains cause outages, and bushfires can melt transformers.

Electricity is essential for emergency services, medical clinics, evacuation centres and communications systems to function during these events. Maintaining a reliable supply is a challenge.

Tapping into Australia’s growing fleet of household batteries could solve this problem by supplying electricity at local scale for hours or days, even if the grid goes down. It will take work to make this a reality, but the payoff during disasters could well be worth it.

Household storage is going mainstream

People usually use household batteries to cut their electricity bills. This works by storing excess solar energy during the day — or grid electricity when cheap — and using it later when prices are higher.

The number of household batteries installed under the federal government’s new Cheaper Home Batteries Program have now topped 146,000 in five months. The goal is to install 1 million new batteries by 2030, and the government recently boosted the program’s funding.

Batteries can be a lifeline

After Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico in 2017, a combined solar and battery system restored power to a children’s hospital.

In California, battery-supported microgrids — small, self-contained energy systems that can operate independently of the main grid — kept essential services running during the intense 2025 wildfires.

The large batteries in electric vehicles are also proving their worth during disasters. When Cyclone Alfred triggered blackouts in southeast Queensland, some EV owners used their cars to power essential items in their homes.

These examples show home batteries and other local energy storage methods can be used as lifelines for communities.

People usually use their household batteries to reduce their power bills. But they can do a lot more, especially during emergencies.

They can switch to a standalone “islanding” mode, where they power essential household appliances without drawing on the grid.

Some can be relocated to evacuation centres or temporary accommodation to supply critical needs such as lighting, refrigeration and communications.

It’s important to know batteries won’t automatically act as a backup in a blackout. Household batteries have to be specifically set up to be able to cut the connection with the grid temporarily. This capability requires an inverter which supports islanding or backup operation as well as an automatic transfer switch to stop the battery feeding energy back to the grid when the grid is down.

Batteries beyond households

If just 10% of the Victorian households hit by the major blackout in 2024 had an average-sized home battery (currently 17 kilowatt-hours), these could have delivered as much as 900 megawatt-hours of power.

During future disasters, storage capacity at this scale would have been enough to power 10 megawatts’ worth of essential services for at least 2.5 days. We estimate that would be enough to power evacuation shelters, keep medical clinics operating and run emergency communications.

This principle is already being road tested in Queensland’s Driving Resilience project, which is exploring how mobile energy hubs can supply displaced communities with electricity during floods and cyclones. These hubs are being developed to include multiple sources of energy such as fuel cells to convert hydrogen to electricity.

The challenge will be finding ways to get home batteries to work together during disasters. One solution is linking batteries through “virtual power plants” or community microgrids, where software connects and coordinates thousands of small systems to act as one. These systems make it possible to pool and share many batteries, even if the main power grid is unavailable.

In normal times, these networks can be used to support the grid by cutting costs to consumers and making it possible for more renewable power to enter the grid. During disasters, they could be redirected to power hospitals, evacuation shelters or entire neighbourhoods.

Could battery subsidies boost disaster readiness?

If household batteries are proving their worth during disasters, could subsidy programs be reshaped to increase energy resilience?

One option could be to design resilience subsidies giving extra financial support to households in disaster-prone zones. These would include bushfire-exposed urban fringe areas, flood-prone areas near rivers and coasts or in cyclone-exposed northern regions. These extra subsidies would only apply if households commit to sharing their stored electricity during emergencies.

While some people may be concerned about installing household batteries in fire-prone areas, the risks can be reduced by ensuring low-risk battery chemistries such as lithium iron phosphate are used. The alternative – diesel generators – come with their own set of problems if there’s a fire.

A scheme like this would ensure public funds are directed not only towards reducing household power bills, but towards strengthening community preparedness. Households with batteries could pledge to support neighbours, evacuation shelters and vulnerable people in exchange for higher subsidies.

Batteries subsidies or interest free loans already exist at federal, state and territory levels.

Adding a focus on resilience would make these programs work better for households and society at large.

The Conversation

Jamshid Aghaei receives funding from Queensland Reconstruction Authority for the Driving Resilience project, supported under the Queensland Resilience and Risk Reduction Fund.

Mohammad Reza Salehizadeh works as a Research Fellow at Central Queensland University (CQU), contributing to a project funded by the Queensland Reconstruction Authority under the Queensland Resilience and Risk Reduction Fund as part of the Driving Resilience initiative.

Milad Haghani 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. When disasters strike, home batteries could be a lifeline – https://theconversation.com/when-disasters-strike-home-batteries-could-be-a-lifeline-264698

Disaster after disaster: do we have enough raw materials to ‘build back better’?

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Missaka Nandalochana Hettiarachchi, Adjunct Professor in Disaster Management, James Cook University

This Christmas Day marks 21 years since the terrifying Indian Ocean tsunami. As we remember the hundreds of thousands of lives lost in this tragic event, it is also a moment to reflect on what followed. How do communities rebuild after major events such as the tsunami, and other disasters like it? What were the financial and hidden costs of reconstruction?

Beyond the immediate human toll, disasters destroy hundreds of thousands of buildings each year. In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan damaged a record 1.2 million structures in Philippines. Last year, earthquakes and cyclones damaged more than half a million buildings worldwide. For communities to rebuild their lives, these structures must be rebuilt.

While governments, non-government agencies and individuals struggle to finance post-disaster reconstruction, rebuilding also demands staggering volumes of building materials. In turn, these require vast amounts of natural resource extraction.

For instance, an estimated one billion burnt clay bricks were needed to reconstruct the half-million homes destroyed in the Nepal earthquake. This is enough bricks to circle the Earth six times if laid end to end. How can we responsibly source such vast quantities of materials to meet demand?

Demand causes problems

Sudden spikes in demand have led to severe shortages of common building materials after nearly every major disaster over the past two decades, including the 2015 Nepal earthquake and the 2019 California wildfires. These shortages often trigger price hikes of 30–40%, which delays reconstruction and prolongs the suffering of affected communities. Disasters not only increase demand for building materials but also generate enormous volumes of debris.

For example, the 2023 Turkey–Syria earthquake produced more than 100 million cubic meters of debris – 40 times the volume of the Great Pyramid of Giza.

Disaster debris can pose serious environmental and health risks, including toxic dust and waterway pollution. But some debris can be safely transformed into useful assets such as recycled building materials. Rubble can be crushed and repurposed as base for low-traffic roads or turned into cement blocks .

The consequences of poor post-disaster building materials management have reached alarming global proportions. After the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, for example, the surge in sand demand led to excessive and illegal sand mining in rivers along Sri Lanka’s west coast. This caused irreversible ecological damage to two major watersheds, devastating the livelihoods of thousands of farmers and fisherpeople.

Similar impacts from the overextraction of materials such as sand, gravel, clay and timber have been reported following other major disasters, including the 2008 Sichuan earthquake in China and Cyclone Idai in Mozambique in 2019. If left unaddressed, the social, environmental and economic impacts of resource extraction will escalate to catastrophic levels, especially as climate change intensifies disaster frequency.

Urgent need for action

This crisis has yet to receive adequate international attention. Earlier this year, several global organisations came together to publish a Global Call to Action on sustainable building materials management after disasters.

Based on an analysis of 15 major disasters between 2005 and 2020, it identified three key challenges: building material shortages and price escalation, unsustainable extraction and use of building materials, and poor management of disaster debris.

Although well-established solutions exist to address these challenges, rebuilding efforts suffer from policy and governance gaps. The Call to Action urges international bodies such as the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction to take immediate policy and practical action.

Building back better and safer

After a disaster hits, it leaves an opportunity to build back better. Rebuilding can boost resilience to future hazards, encourage economic development and reduce environmental impact. The United Nations’ framework for disaster management emphasises the importance of rebuilding better and safer rather than simply restoring communities to pre-disaster conditions.

Disaster affected communities should be rebuilt with capacity to cope with future external shocks and environmental risks. Lessons can be learned from both negative and positive experiences of past disasters. For example, poor planning of some reconstruction projects after the Indian ocean Tsunami (2004) in Sri Lanka made the communities vulnerable again to coastal hazards within a few years. On the other hand, the community-led reconstruction approach followed after the Bhuj earthquake, India (2001), has resulted in safer and more socio-economically robust settlements, standing the test of 24 years.

As an integral part of the “build back better” approach, authorities must include strategies for environmentally and socially responsible management of building materials. These should encourage engineers, architects and project managers to select safe sustainable materials for reconstruction projects.

At the national level, regulatory barriers to repurposing disaster debris should be removed, whilst still ensuring safe management of hazardous materials such as asbestos. For example, concrete from fallen buildings was successfully used as road-base and as recycled aggregate for infrastructure projects following the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia and 2011 Tohoku Earthquake in Japan.

This critical issue demands urgent public and political attention. Resilient buildings made with safe sustainable material will save lives in future disasters.

The Conversation

Missaka Nandalochana Hettiarachchi receives funding from WWF, an environmental NGO, through his role in disaster management

ref. Disaster after disaster: do we have enough raw materials to ‘build back better’? – https://theconversation.com/disaster-after-disaster-do-we-have-enough-raw-materials-to-build-back-better-265682

Scammers won’t take a break over Christmas. Here’s how to make a plan with your family to stay safe

Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Cassandra Cross, Associate Dean (Learning & Teaching) Faculty of Creative Industries, Education and Social Justice, Queensland University of Technology

Mart Production/Pexels, The Conversation, CC BY

With Christmas just around the corner, it can be a very busy and stressful time of year. Between festive gatherings, ticking off what’s left on your yearly to-do list and shopping online for that perfect gift, it can be easy to let your guard down against fraudsters.

Australians lost more than A$2 billion to scams in 2024. This year, losses are likely to be similar.

Often, scammers will try to create a sense of urgency, pushing their intended victims to act now. As we prepare our shopping lists and festive lunches, now is also the perfect time to be alert to scams.

Here’s how to prepare yourself – and your loved ones – for a safe and scam-free Christmas and New Year.

The current wave of scams

Online shopping scams are particularly rife at this time of year, with sales season well under way. They can take many forms.

Scammers will create fake online stores, create advertisements for products that don’t exist or send products that are inferior in quality to what was expected.

Many people are expecting more packages than usual to arrive at this time of year. Taking advantage of this, scammers send phishing text messages and emails pretending to be from from the postal service and couriers.

Mobile phones showing various examples of package delivery scam texts
Scammers may pose as delivery companies, claiming to have information about a package for you.
synthetick/Getty

Investment scams occur year-round and Christmas is no different. Scammers may target you through phone calls, text messages, emails and social media posts.

Scams involving cryptocurrency are particularly common this year, and any unsolicited “investment opportunities” should raise immediate suspicion.

Romance scams: Christmas can be difficult time of year for many people. Loneliness hits a bit harder for some, and singles may be looking to start the new year in a new relationship.

Romance scams exploit our desire for a relationship. If your “partner” is asking for money under any circumstance, particularly one you have only ever met online, it should be a warning sign.

Seeing and hearing is no longer believing

The evolution of technology is rapidly changing the ways we conduct our personal and professional lives. Scammers have embraced this opportunity.

Fraudsters will use whatever tools possible to persuade and manipulate unsuspecting victims. And artificial intelligence tools have changed the game.

Deep fakes: it is easier than ever to generate high quality and realistic images and videos. Offenders will use these to help support their stories and garner your trust. Just because you have seen something does not mean it is real.

Voice cloning: as with images, scammers can now create realistic impersonations of a person’s voice with relatively small amounts of material. The distressed phone call you receive from a loved one may not be them at all, but just an scammer trying to get your money.

Drafting scripts: while large language models, such as ChatGPT and Claude, may be useful for helping you draft an email or report, scammers are using these tools to help script their fraudulent pitches. It can help offenders tailor specific ways to target potential victims.

The 3-step plan you should make now

While the threat of scams may seem overwhelming, there are three positive steps you can take right now, to reduce your risk of being a victim.

1. Do your own self-assessment

Everyone has a weakness or vulnerability that makes them open to scams. And each one is going to be different. Scammers are ruthless and systematic in their targeting.

Think about your own situation, your personality and your routines. What types of approaches might you be vulnerable to? How might you enact measures to counter these?

2. Conduct a digital audit

Ensure your accounts and devices are secured properly, with strong passwords, updated software, and multi-factor authentication where available.

Make sure you are comfortable with your privacy settings across any social media accounts. While this may seem obvious, it is still important to get the basics right and to have control over your digital footprint.

3. Create a family password

As a family, choose a word or phrase that is not obvious but is significant to you and easy to remember.

Think of it as a family password. Use this family code word or pass phrase to verify any communications that purportedly come from family members.

Staying connected

Also, make it part of your routine to talk to family and friends about the texts and emails you receive, as well as what you have seen in the news. Talking openly about the ways you are being targeted helps others recognise when it happens to them.

Analyse the different approaches you get and try to unpack what the offender is hoping to achieve and why they might be successful.

If you or someone in your family is a victim of a scam, know who you can talk to. If you are unsure of something you receive, feel confident to step back and get advice or talk to someone you trust.

Offenders rely on us acting in the moment and will instil a sense of urgency. Know that it is OK to hang up, not respond or walk away.


If you or someone you know has been a victim of a scam, you can report it to ReportCyber as well as your bank or financial institution. For support, contact iDcare. For further prevention advice, consult Scamwatch.

The Conversation

Cassandra Cross has previously received funding from the Australian Institute of Criminology and the Cybersecurity Cooperative Research Centre.

ref. Scammers won’t take a break over Christmas. Here’s how to make a plan with your family to stay safe – https://theconversation.com/scammers-wont-take-a-break-over-christmas-heres-how-to-make-a-plan-with-your-family-to-stay-safe-269934

Gordon Walker resigns as Canoe Racing NZ head coach

Source: Radio New Zealand

Coach Gordon Walker and Dame Lisa Carrington. Steve McArthur / @RowingCelebration / PHOTOSPORT

Gordon Walker, one of New Zealand’s most successful coaches, has resigned as head coach for Canoe Racing New Zealand.

The 53-year-old has coached Dame Lisa Carrington, New Zealand’s most successful Olympian, since 2010. During that time, Carrington has won eight Olympic gold medals and 15 World Championship titles.

Walker has won Coach of the Year at the Halberg Awards six times and was named Coach of the Decade in 2021.

Since 2016, he has also overseen the women’s sprint programme and guided the K4 to World Championship success in 2023 and Olympic gold in Paris in 2024.

He said the decision to walk way wasn’t easy.

“It’s hard to name a single reason for stepping aside, other than knowing in my heart that this is the right moment,” Walker said.

“Since 2010, I’ve given everything I have to this sport, because that’s what it demands if you want to succeed at the Olympic level. For the past sixteen years, there hasn’t been a single day when kayaking hasn’t been on my mind, how to be better, how to win, how to dream further. This has never been a nine-to-five job, it’s been a life commitment.”

“I’m deeply grateful for everything this sport has given me. I know how fortunate I’ve been. I’ve loved every part of it, especially the people, and the relationships I’ve built run deep. I’ll always feel connected to the athletes and staff, and I’ll be right behind them, cheering them on in whatever comes next.”

Gordon Walker and Lisa Carrington at the Halberg Awards. Brett Phibbs / www.photosport.nz

Dame Lisa Carrington said Walker, who will stay with CRNZ until March, played an instrumental role in her success.

“Being coached by Gordy for the past 15 years has been both an honour and a privilege. He is without question one of New Zealand’s greatest coaches and I can’t thank him enough for his vision, commitment and belief,” Carrington said.

“I also want to acknowledge the role Gordy’s family played during this time with CRNZ. His wife Viv and their children Stella, Lola and Freddie have been a constant source of support.”

Canoe Racing New Zealand CEO Graham Oberlin-Brown said Walker’s contribution to the sport has been immense.

“Gordon has been an integral part of CRNZ’s success story, guiding our athletes to world-leading performances and helping establish New Zealand as a global powerhouse in canoe sprint. His dedication, expertise, and leadership have left an enduring legacy that will continue to inspire future generations,” Oberlim-Brown said.

“Whilst Gordon is resigning from the Head Coach position, we know he is keen to ensure a smooth transition through the next few months before the trials next March.”

“Our coaches, particularly Chris Mehak have worked very closely with Gordon and the women’s team in 2023 and 2024. Chris and the wider team have proven capability to coach Olympic, World Cup, and World Championship gold medal-winning athletes and crews. During this transition, we’re focused on maintaining stability and continuity and ensuring our athletes including Lisa Carrington, have the best possible support. We will be recruiting for an additional coach to increase the capacity of the coaching team following Gordon’s departure.”

“Our high-performance programme is incredibly strong. We have a clear roadmap to the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. This is a change in leadership, not a change in direction. Our athletes and programme remain focused on LA 2028 success.”

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

White Ferns star Suzie Bates out of action for three months

Source: Radio New Zealand

Suzie Bates of New Zealand Andrew Cornaga/www.photosport.nz

White Ferns batter Suzie Bates has sustained a quadricep tear which has ruled her out of all cricket until March.

Bates suffered the injury last month when fielding during a Hallyburton Johnstone Shield match.

Subsequent scans revealed that due to the severity of the tear she will require three months of rehabilitation.

Suzie Bates plays an attacking shot during the White Ferns’ T20 international against Sri Lanka at Hagley Oval, 16 March, 2025. Photosport

The recovery timeline means Bates will be unavailable for Otago for the remainder of the domestic home summer and for the White Ferns home series against Zimbabwe in February.

Bates said she was committed to being available for New Zealand’s T20 and ODI series against South Africa in March.

“I’m gutted to be missing out this summer, I was really looking forward to another season with the Sparks, especially the Super Smash,” said Bates.

“I’m determined to get back on the field with the White Ferns in March so that’ll be my focus for now.”

The Super Smash starts on Boxing Day at Seddon Park with Northern Districts hosting the Auckland men’s and women’s teams.

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

Movies coming out this summer worth seeing

Source: Radio New Zealand

We were told off recently for having too much summer holiday, so it’s our responsibility to use that time as wisely as possible which, of course, means going to see lots of movies.

From the week before Christmas all the way to Waitangi Day, here is a selection of new films arriving in cinemas that I am looking forward to.

If you need to escape the heat

Avatar: Fire and Ash

This video is hosted on Youtube.

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

Auckland mayor Wayne Brown says it would be better for council to run police

Source: Radio New Zealand

Auckland’s mayor Wayne Brown. MARIKA KHABAZI / RNZ

Auckland’s mayor says it would be better if council were running the police in the city, but is adamant it’s a safe place to be.

There’s been considerable effort to increase safety in the central city.

Community Patrols NZ opened a base in the central city in September, after the launch of police’s public facing CBD counter two months prior.

Police beat teams and community patrollers have also been out watching the streets.

Mayor Wayne Brown is hoping Aucklanders get out and enjoy the city over the summer, though safety concerns loom.

He and Auckland Minister Simeon Brown released a city centre action plan in November which they hoped would benefit families, workers, visitors and businesses.

RNZ met the mayor on the city’s waterfront to talk summer and safety.

The mayor said he loved being on the North Wharf part of the city’s waterfront.

“You can get involved with the water here and around at Westhaven, fantastic places to walk, people walking around it’s really great.

“But there’s been some problems in the CBD with some poor behaviour.”

The mayor began by making his position on the issue clear.

“Council’s responsibility is places, government’s responsibility is people and behaviour,” he said.

“I’m not the Minister of Police, although I think it would be better if the council ran the police like it does in a lot of cities.”

Brown said there needed to be more of a police presence, and wanted the government to spend more time addressing issues around mental health issues.

“The government has the responsibility with some form of mental health,” he said.

“I’ve put quite a bit of my own mayoral budget into having some of our staff out there, and I’ve been out with them, but some of the people there are so aggressive and frightening, and they all know that my staff can’t arrest them or even touch them.”

The mayor pointed to the council bylaws, saying they didn’t work without enforcement powers.

“It only works when people are behaving well, we pay taxes to fix those things not rates.”

The action plan was supported by the Ministry for Housing and Urban Development, the Ministry for Social Development, Police, Health New Zealand, the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment, Auckland Council, businesses, and social services.

It also included outreach teams connecting rough sleepers with mental health, addiction, and housing support, adding to the already increased police visibility in the CBD, and police and safety wardens focusing enforcement on areas linked to criminal activity and antisocial behaviour.

It hoped to ensure public spaces, like Pocket Park at Queen Street and Fort Street, were designed to be safe and welcoming, which it said reduced crime.

Litter and graffiti removal teams were set to operate “at pace”, and targeted safety patrols were slated to continue.

The action plan would review bylaws to make sure they were fit for purpose.

Part of the action plan also focused on rolling out 207 additional houses for Housing First, and 100 social houses being made available by more efficient use of existing Housing First contracts.

Wayne Brown said council wasn’t paying for it.

“We’re not funding those,” he said.

The mayor said Auckland was a safe city.

“The people that are going to cause you trouble, they’re quite clearly there, don’t go near them.

“I think the omelette has been over egged,” Brown said.

He hoped Aucklanders would get out and make the most of the city over Summer, especially the beaches and parks.

“It’s a city to be involved with the harbours and the water, and it’s fantastic, we’re lucky for having that,” Brown said.

“Very few cities can boast this.”

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

New way to get nitrates out of wastewater found by Auckland scientists

Source: Radio New Zealand

A wastewater treatment plant in Akaroa. Supplied/Christchurch City Council

University of Auckland researchers have discovered different microbes can be used to reduce the carbon footprint of treating wastewater.

Associate Professor Wei-Qin Zhuang and his team from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering have been tackling the problem of reducing the carbon footprint of removing nitrates from water.

Nitrate removal needed to occur before the treated water can be discharged into the environment, Zhuang said, as it encouraged the growth of algae and caused other problems for the natural environment.

In domestic wastewater, the main source of nitrate was human urine.

The kind of microbes commonly used to turn nitrate into nitrogen gas fed on organic carbons for energy, in order to process nitrates – and they released by-products like carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide, which contributed to the carbon footprint.

Carbon emissions from wastewater treatment were thought to make up a small, but preventable percentage of many countries’ overall carbon footprints.

Zhuang said his team had discovered two different kinds of microbes that existed in wastewater already and could be used to remove nitrate. One used hydrogen gas as fuel to turn nitrate into harmless nitrogen gas and water, and the other fed on sulphur, turning nitrates into sulfate and nitrogen gas.

These microbes weren’t as common, so they needed to be duplicated and re-introduced into bioreactors to do the job.

“When wastewater flows through, we provide hydrogen or sulphur for these microbes to use, and then they will reduce nitrate to nitrogen gas.”

Zhuang said both systems created less waste than their organic carbon-eating alternatives, avoided greenhouse-gas-intensive chemicals and reduced the need for trucked-in chemicals, making them well suited to local communities.

They could also be suitable methods for treating drinking water, he said.

Earlier this year, the country’s largest-ever drinking water survey found tens of thousands of rural New Zealanders [https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/country/574594/country-s-largest-study-into-drinking-water-nitrates-reveals-rural-freshwater-at-risk could be drinking water with harmful nitrate levels, with 5 percent of the private bore samples tested exceeding the national maximum nitrate guidelines.

Health data has shown high nitrate levels can be dangerous for babies and can affect people’s health over time.

According to Zhuang, these microbe set-ups could be useful for small communities or private land owners to treat their own drinking water supplies.

“Using microbes to clean water on-site gives communities a safety net, while long-term solutions, like better land management, are put in place,” he said.

Zhuang and his team were now testing these systems in real-world trials with water utilities and industry partners, aiming to make them easy for councils and communities across the country to use.

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Summer holiday finance lessons from dispute resolution schemes

Source: Radio New Zealand

the Banking Ombudsman and Financial Services Complaints Ltd (FSCL) say they see complaints about disputed or incorrect transactions, commonly at hotels, bars, online retailers and overseas lounges. RNZ

When you’re on summer holidays, you might not be thinking much about your banking, insurance or other financial products – unless something goes wrong.

The three external dispute providers that deal with complaints that can’t be resolved between financial services providers and their customers say there are a number of things that can catch people out at Christmas and New Year.

Here are a few to watch for and how you can avoid them.

Disputed transactions

Both the Banking Ombudsman and Financial Services Complaints Ltd (FSCL) said they saw complaints about disputed or incorrect transactions.

FSCL said it was common to see them at hotels, bars, online retailers and overseas lounges where cards were used for tabs, pre-authorisation or to place a security hold, if the amount was then more than expected.

FSCL said it also heard about delays or disagreements when card issuers declined to reverse a transaction or chargeback, especially where the merchant argued a charge was legitimate or where the cardholder has not closely followed card terms and conditions.

“Avoid open tabs where possible, check pre authorisations, keep your card with you at all times, be careful not to be overlooked if entering a PIN, keep receipts and monitor accounts frequently,” FSCL ombudsman Susan Taylor said.

“Report suspicious or incorrect transactions promptly, consider cancelling your card if used without your authority, and follow your provider’s dispute process; escalate to a dispute resolution scheme such as FSCL if unresolved.”

In one case the Banking Ombudsman scheme investigated a man who tried to book an Auckland hotel room and found one that was $201 with free cancellation.

But when he confirmed the booking, it changed to two rooms in US dollars, which came to NZ$481.85. He asked his bank to block the transaction and disputed the payment.

He was told to contact the hotel and booking site but could not reach either.

He was then asked for supporting documents, which he supplied, but the bank did not proceed with a chargeback because it said he had confirmed the booking.

He argued the details in the booking confirmation were different to those shown in the terms of sale and appeared only after clicking “confirm”.

“We found the bank failed to consider the terms [he] saw before confirming the booking, instead concentrating only on what showed after clicking the confirm button,” the ombudsman said in its case note.

“It did not ask for evidence of those initial terms, despite [his] consistent explanation. The bank also overlooked a valid chargeback ground under the card’s misrepresentation rules. These state that a customer can seek a chargeback if the merchant has misrepresented the terms of sale.”

Scams

Scams can be common over Christmas.

Through the year, there have been a number of fake retail websites operating.

Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said there were fewer complaints to her scheme this year, suggesting banks’ efforts and growing public awareness were making a difference.

“That said, the financial impact of scams remains significant, with losses continuing to rise – reminding us that scammers are adapting quickly, and we must stay vigilant.”

In one case a woman was told her account had been compromised and transfered $155,000 into another account that could be accessed by a scammer. 123RF

In one case FSCL dealt with, a woman was contacted by a scammer who told her he worked in the bank’s fraud team and her account had been compromised.

She was told to transfer her money to another account where it would be safe.

He gave her his bank staff photo and ID number before helping her load software on to her phone to give remote access to her bank account. He then helped her open a “special account”.

She transferred $155,000 into that account in four instalments.

“[She] believed the ‘special’ account was just a holding account until the bank resolved their security issues, and she would be able to transfer the money back into her regular bank account,” FSCL said.

“When she later viewed her ‘special’ account, she discovered all the money had gone and alerted the police.”

The account had been with an international money transfer service and the money had been shifted offshore.

She was referred to the money transfer service’s complaints process and acknowledged that it had not done anything wrong. She withdrew her complaint.

Mongkol Chuewong

Financial difficulties

Sladden said her scheme was seeing more complaints from people experiencing financial hardship.

“These cases reflect the economic pressures many New Zealanders are facing and highlight the importance of helping them navigate difficult financial situations with their bank.”

In one case dealt with by the ombudsman’s office this year, a man complained about a credit card he took out in 2011. He fell behind on repayments in 2021.

“After two years, he applied for financial hardship assistance from the bank and complained that it should never have given him the card in the first place or allowed his adult daughter to have an extra credit card.

He said the bank’s communication with him about the debt was inadequate and it should have offered him hardship assistance earlier.”

The ombudsman could not look at whether he should not have received the card because it was too long ago.

The communication had been clear and effective, the scheme said.

“[He] said the bank should have sent him letters however it was not obliged to do so. The bank had sent him emails, as well as calling him and his daughter. However, we considered the bank should have sent him information about financial mentoring services – as required by the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act 2003 – when he fell behind in his payments.”

The bank offered to wipe the $2800 in debt he had left, in light of its failure to send him information about the mentoring.

“We considered the bank’s offer to be more than we would have recommended as compensation because we doubted [he] would have taken up a suggestion by the bank to see a financial mentor – a doubt reinforced by the fact he did not seek help when the bank did tell him about such a service.”

FSCL said summer and Christmas spending could also lead to more complaints about credit and loans, including concerns about responsible lending if people took on short term or high cost credit for gifts, holidays or travel, then struggled with repayments in the new year.

“Consumers may also complain when they feel fees or contract terms were not clearly disclosed, or when they did not fully understand the long-term cost of a quick holiday top up loan.”

Taylor said people should be cautious about taking on new high-cost credit for discretionary spending.

“If you get into trouble, talk early to the lender about hardship options and keep records of all discussions. Consider contacting a financial mentor for help with your budget. Seek external dispute resolution help if you cannot resolve things directly with the lender or card provider.”

Leaving house secure

Insurance and Financial Services Ombudsman Karen Stevens said people could sometimes be caught out if they did not meet insurers’ requirements for securing their belongings.

“If people fail to take care of their belongings, they are likely to be disappointed with an insurer’s response to their claims,” Stevens said.

That could mean leaving things visible in a locked car, leaving items on the beach, or leaving a house unsecured when they went away, she said.

In one case IFSO dealt with, a couple returned from holiday to find their house had been burgled.

They were declined by their insurer because they had left a window open on a security stay.

Upon examination, the IFSO Scheme found that the insurer had introduced a policy in 2020, imposing a new condition on the insured to ensure their house was securely locked when “unattended”.

The IFSO Scheme said it was an unusual requirement and as such, they should have had their attention drawn to it.

The IFSO Scheme said the insurer was unable to rely on a failure to meet this condition to decline the claim, and the complaint was upheld.

In other cases, people had their claims turned down for items stolen hat they had left on the beach.

One person whose 19-year-old daughter was looking after the house while they were away and had friends to stay, had their insurance claim for stolen valuables turned down because one of the guests was a likely suspect.

Exclusions

Stevens said there were often complaints about insurance for overseas travel if people found their pre-existing conditions were not covered.

FSCL said it saw the same. It said common triggers for complaints about travel insurance were claims declined because something was excluded, for example, pre existing medical conditions, civil unrest, or loss of enjoyment not being covered, and disputes over how much would be paid, poor communication in claims handling.

“Consumers often assume the whole trip is covered when policies only cover specific booked components or defined events, leading to disappointment if a trip is disrupted but not strictly ‘cancelled’ under the policy wording.”

Taylor said people should read their policies before they booked and travelled, paying close attention to exclusions for pre-existing medical conditions, adventurous activities, civil unrest or pandemics.

She said they should also check what counted as a cancellation or additional expense.

“If the policy is complimentary with your credit card, make sure you have checked the activation criteria before travelling. Ask the insurer to explain if you have any questions. Keep evidence (receipts, medical reports, airline notices) and contact the insurer as soon as something goes wrong.”

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

Car fleeing burglary crashes into two other vehicles

Source: Radio New Zealand

File photo. RNZ / REECE BAKER

Three people have been arrested, following a burglary south of Auckland and a dramatic failed escape from police on Sunday afternoon.

Officers were called to a burglary at a business on Great South Road in Drury just after 5pm.

Police said the three alleged offenders got into a vehicle waiting nearby and left the scene.

They were spotted by police and signalled to stop, but fled from police at speed.

The vehicle crashed into another vehicle as it left Drury and a bus on Scott Road in Papakura.

“Miraculously, nobody was hurt,” a spokesperson said.

It was tracked by Police Eagle helicopter travelling north on State Highway One.

The vehicle reportedly travelled one-and-half times over the speed limit at times, as it hurtled along Auckland’s Northern Motorway.

It stopped on the motorway, north of Puhoi Road, just before 6pm.

Police say the occupants were taken into custody and charges were being considered.

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Australia’s law enforcement and intelligence agencies to be reviewed post Bondi

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

Australian law enforcement and intelligence agencies are to be reviewed, in the Albanese government’s latest responsle in the wake of the Bondi tragedy.

But Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is still resisting calls for a national royal commission.

Albanese said in a statement after a meeting of cabinet’s national security committee that the review would be done by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet. It will be led by Dennis Richardson, a former secretary of the defence and foreign affairs departments, as well as a former head of ASIO.

There have been questions about the adequacy of ASIO’s performance. It checked out Naveed Akram – the younger of the father and son gunmen – in 2019, because of his radical contacts, but did not later keep tabs on him.

Albanese said the review would “examine whether federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies have the right powers, structures, processes and sharing arrangements in place to keep Australians safe in the wake of the horrific antisemitic Bondi Beach terrorist attack”.

But critics inside and outside the Jewish community, including former treasurer Josh Frydenberg and former prime minister Scott Morrison, say the review is an inadequate response and continue to call for a federal royal commission.

New South Wales intends to have one. Premier Chris Minns said at the weekend: “We need a comprehensive look at this horrible terrorism event. Right now, we’ve got bits and pieces of the jigsaw puzzle, but until we’ve got a full and accurate picture of how this happened with a plan to ensure it doesn’t happen again, then I don’t have the answers to the people of NSW about what happened on Sunday.”

Albanese said he would support whatever NSW did but has pushed back on the calls to establish a royal commission himself, claiming it would slow responses to the tragedy.

Frydenberg, a leader in the Jewish community, said the review was a weak response. He said it “will not go to the heart of the issues and the radicalisation within our country”.

“Prime Minister what are you afraid a Commonwealth Royal Commission will uncover?” Frydenberg said.

“The Commonwealth must take the lead with the most comprehensive, powerful Royal Commission possible. You supported Royal Commissions into the banks, veterans, aged care and welfare system.

“Now 15 innocent souls including 10 year old Matilda have been murdered by radical Islamists and all you are prepared to commit to is an internal departmental review? It beggars belief and is the latest failure in federal leadership.

“It’s not good enough to pass the buck to NSW whose Premier has already indicated he will hold a Royal Commission. Why is a Royal Commisson good enough for NSW but not the Federal Government?

“The threat is national,” Frydenberg said.

The prime minister said in his statement: “The ISIS-inspired atrocity last Sunday reinforces the rapidly changing security environment in our nation. Our security agencies must be in the best position to respond.” The review will be finished by the end of April and made public.

Both Minns and Albanese said anti-immigration rallies organased for Sunday – designated as a day of reflection for the Bondi victims – should not go ahead and urged people not to attend them. Barnaby Joyce, now with One Nation, addressed the Sydney rally.

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. Australia’s law enforcement and intelligence agencies to be reviewed post Bondi – https://theconversation.com/australias-law-enforcement-and-intelligence-agencies-to-be-reviewed-post-bondi-272434

Football: Wellington Phoenix win for the third time this season

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington Phoenix celebrate a goal against Central Coast Mariners. Marty Melville/Photosport

Wellington Phoenix are off the bottom of the A-League table, after beating Central Coast Mariners 3-1 in Wellington.

Midfielder Corban Piper scored the first goal in the 31st minute, after Kasuki Nagasawa pounced on a poor pass from a Mariners defender.

Nagasawa surged forward, finding an unmarked Piper, who neatly tucked away the opening goal.

The Phoenix lead lasted until just before halftime, with the Mariners equalising through Sabit Ngor, after replacement goalkeeper Eamonn McCarron failed to cleanly stop a Miguel Di Pizio shot from long range.

McCarron had come into the game, after starting goalkeeper Josh Oluwayemi left in the 11th minute, with an ankle injury.

The Phoenix re-established themselves early in the second half, after video review ruled a Mariners handball inside the area, which Manjrekar James converted from the spot.

A third goal followed three minutes later, courtesy of winger Carlo Armiento.

The win is the third from nine matches this season for the Phoenix and moves them up to seventh place in the 12-team competition on 11 points, nine points behind leaders Auckland FC.

The win, which was the biggest Phoenix home win since April last year, completes a solid weekend for the club, after their women’s team posted a record 7-0 win over Sydney FC yesterday.

Both teams now break for Christmas, with their next matches just before the New Year.

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Man impersonating police accidentally pulls over mufti cop car

Source: Radio New Zealand

The 38-year-old man is due to appear in court on Christmas Eve. 123RF

A man driving a car equipped with flashing police lights pulled over the wrong vehicle in south Auckland on Saturday night.

Two officers driving an unmarked police car were puzzled, when a stationwagon following them turned on a set of red-and-blue lights, indicating they should pull over.

“Our officers were perplexed and quickly clocked the car was not police-official,” Inspector Kerry Watson said.

When the legitimate officers stopped their vehicle, the man in the stationwagon quickly realised he was facing the real McCoy and unsuccessfully tried to make a run for it.

“It’s bad enough that this person thought it was OK to impersonate a police car,” Watson said. “It’s even worse to see impaired and dangerous driving.”

The 38-year-old is due to appear in court on Christmas Eve, charged with impersonating a police officer and excess breath alcohol.

Impersonating police or representing a vehicle as a police vehicle is an offence under the Policing Act 2008.

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Man has some sexual abuse charges acquitted, others ended with hung jury

Source: Radio New Zealand

Michael Mclean. RNZ / Finn Blackwell

A man accused of sexually abusing a boy into his teens has been acquitted on some charges, while others left a hung jury.

Michael Mclean has been on trial in the Auckland District Court, with his defence calling the allegations nonsense and claiming they never happened.

Mclean originally faced 33 charges, including performing indecent acts on a person under 16, grooming and sexual violation.

One of the lawyers for Mclean told RNZ the Crown pulled a number of charges early in the trial, including all but one of the sexual violation charges, leaving Mclean to face 25 charges.

Jurors entered deliberation last Wednesday and came back on Friday, acquitting Mclean on six charges.

The jury was hung on the remaining 19.

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Woman arrested after stabbing, witnesses sought

Source: Radio New Zealand

Bar staff stepped in to help when a man was allegedly stabbed in the stomach at Wellington’s Ace of Spades Bar. Supplied/ Google Maps

A woman has been arrested, as police continue to investigate a stabbing in a central Wellington bar, and they have renewed a call for anyone who saw what happened.

Emergency services were called to the Ace of Spades Bar in Allen Street, about 1.30am Saturday, 13 December, where they were told a man had been stabbed.

As a result of investigations, a 34-year-old woman has now been charged with wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

“The stabbing allegedly occurred during an altercation involving a small number of patrons,” Detective Sergeant Graeme Muir said. “The victim was stabbed in the abdomen and sustained serious injuries.”

Police believe other people were present when the incident happened and would like to speak to them. They have also asked for anyone who has footage from the bar on the night to come forward.

Police earlier said bar security staff intervened when the altercation broke out and separated the groups involved.

Staff then helped the stabbed man, who was taken to Wellington Hospital, where he was in a stable condition on Monday.

The woman arrested is now scheduled to appear at Wellington District Court on Monday, 22 December.

Anyone with information was asked to call Police on 105, or visit their online page at 105.police.govt.nz and to quote file number 251213/4525.

Information could also be provided anonymously through Crimestoppers by calling 0800 555 111 or on their website.

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ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for December 21, 2025

ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on December 21, 2025.

ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for December 20, 2025
ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on December 20, 2025.

New research project uses sound to protect native birds from cats

Source: Radio New Zealand

Feral cat caught in a live trap in Fiordland National Park. RNZ / Cole Eastham-Farrelly

A research project has discovered a way to use sound as a harmless deterrent to keep cats away from nesting native birds.

Senior scientist at the Bioeconomy Science Institute (formerly known as Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research) Patrick Garvey told RNZ the aim was to create a non-lethal deterrent for cats – both feral and domestic.

Feral cats were recently added to the Predator Free 2050 target species list, but domestic cats remain a treasured part of many New Zealand households.

There is no official estimate of how many feral cats live in New Zealand. While 2.4 million is often cited, some believe the true number is far higher.

Garvey said the idea for the research was born from a similar trial by a collaborator in Canada in 2016, who used the sound of dogs barking to successfully deter raccoons.

Garvey’s own group was granted funding many years later, through the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, to carry out similar tests here, targeting cats.

Through trial and error, they found feral cats were most averse to the sound of human voices and domestic cats were most averse to the sound of other cats.

The tests involved placing 22 feral cats – all caught by the research group from the wild – inside a fenced enclosure, along with four samples of mince, one in each corner. One would be randomly selected to be ‘protected’ by a specific sound and when an approaching cat was detected by a camera, a sound played through a speaker.

Garvey said the results showed 40 percent of cats avoided food protected by the sound of other cats and dogs barking, but 70 percent avoided the sound of human voices.

By contrast, testing in urban environments showed domestic cats were most averse to the sound of other cats and didn’t mind human voices.

The sounds were played at 60 decibels – for a human, Garvey said, you’d need to be about 20 metres away, before you heard anything – and featured non-aggressive human speech, including a storybook reading and an interview with famed jazz musician Dizzy Gillespie.

Anything too aggressive or controversial might alarm passers-by, Garvey said, as well as becoming quite grating for the person charged with setting it up.

The next step for the researchers was to try to protect colony breeding birds near braided rivers from feral cats and they also worked with Auckland Council to put out speakers in another reserve.

More research was needed to determine just how effective it could be in practice.

“It’s a tool in the toolbox,” Garvey said, a way to engage the community and educate them on the damage roaming cats could do.

“The sound cues will deflect a proportion of the cats – it’ll be more than a third of them, but it’s not going to do all of them,” he said.

“It can provide a tool to engage with the community and show people what’s happening, and maybe they might consider when they let their cats out at night.”

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Did New Zealand shortchange Samoa over HMNZS Manawanui wreck compensation?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Diesel fuel slicking out from the wreck of the HMNZS Manawanui, in late 2024, after the navy shift grounded on a reef near the village of Tafitoala in Samoa. Ministry of Works Transport and Infrastructure Samoa

Concerns are being raised that the New Zealand government has shortchanged Samoa since HMNZS Manawanui sank off the south coast of Upolu last year.

Letters released under the Official Information Act show the Samoa government has agreed it will not seek further compensation from New Zealand.

The letters, released by Winston Peters’ office, show Samoa’s Foreign Affairs Ministry proposed compensation of 10 million tala – about $NZ6m – which the then- Prime Minister Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa signed off.

The $10 million tala was paid “in the context of the friendship between New Zealand and Samoa” and the letters include “New Zealand’s deep regret regarding the sinking of the HMNZS Manawanui and New Zealand’s gratitude to Samoa for search and rescue efforts that helped avoid loss of life.” They say New Zealand will “work with Samoa to assess and address any environment risks.”

In his letter to Fiamē on 19 May 2025, Winston Peters explains the compensation “resolves all issues arising from the sinking of the HMNZS Manawanui between the government of New Zealand and the government of Samoa” and “the government of Samoa will not seek further payment from New Zealand”.

The New Zealand government announced the $NZ6m/ $SAT10m compensation on the first anniversary of the sinking of the HMNZS Manawanui on 6 October.

Read the documents:Letters released from the office of Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Peters under the Official Information Act 1982.

(Peters’ office noted the letter dated 19 May 2025 from New Zealand was bound and printed on parchment, which is why it is not on letterhead here.)

Auckland University of Technology law professor Paul Myburgh thought this amount was a “first down payment” to look after impacted villages: “But reading these letters it becomes apparent that they are attempting to ring-fence all of their liability, apart from a reference – a fairly obscure reference – to ongoing reef assessments, whatever that might mean.”

It was difficult to say what an appropriate compensation amount would be, he said.

  • Read more: NZ strikes compensation deal with Samoa over Manawanui sinking
  • “I’m not across all the details, but one thing I’ve learnt from comparative collisions and groundings etcetera is that it is very difficult to assess and cap the damages because they tend to be ongoing. In other words, while that wreck is still on the reef it will continue to cause damage, so any sort of legal attempt to cap the damages indefinitely means that somebody along the line is going to be short-changed.”

  • Read more: ‘The job hasn’t been completed’ – Manawanui wreck still causing concerns one year after sinking
  • The wreck of the HMNZS Manawanui lying on its side under about 30m of water (about 98 feet) on the Tafitoala Reef, on the south coast of Upolu, in August. New Zealand Defence Force

    Senior lecturer and Pacific Security Fellow at Victoria University’s Centre for Strategic Studies, Dr Iati Iati, was surprised that the letters reference Samoa’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs as having set the compensation figure at 10m tala.

    “I hadn’t heard of any process for an independent inquiry for how much the costs would be,” he said.

    “I was a little taken aback by the figure of 10 million tala only because I’ve seen a study done by Massey University over the Rena, and it was done I think around 2021 and they estimated costs for the Rena – direct costs that is – around 46 million (NZD). That wasn’t including indirect costs.”

  • Read more: Ten years on from the Rena disaster
  • Iati noted the Rena had sunk much further out at sea in comparison to the Manawanui, and the impact would have been different and probably less than what was experienced in Samoa.

    “So it’s left me with a lot of questions as to how they determined that $10 million tala figure,” he said.

    The ship sank in early October 2024, after running aground on a reef. All crew escaped to safety, with locals helping the rescue efforts. Supplied / Profile Boats

    Winston Peters’ letter to then- Samoa Prime Minister Fiamē Naomi Mata’afa, dated 19 May 2025, refers to “the long established and respectful bilateral relationship between New Zealand and Samoa founded upon sovereign equality and governed by a spirit of close friendship, underpinned by the significant Treaty of Friendship.”

    “To be honest it leaves me with more questions than answers. This looks like to me just a very diplomatic way to bring this situation to an end without addressing alot of issues that should have been addressed,” Iati said.

    “I’m curious as to whether there’s more to this than just New Zealand sending the Manawanui to do some kind of reef surveying. I’d be interested to know if there were any other actors involved and what their reasons were for the Manawanui to be conducting these exercises on the coast of Samoa, especially given that the order for the Manawanui to conduct this exercise was finalised just as it was leaving port so it seems to me like there’s a wider story here that hasn’t been looked at.”

  • Read more: Samoan villagers still waiting for compensation more than a year after Manawanui disaster
  • Iati questioned whether other parties should also be liable for some part of the cost of the impact of the Manawanui that was born by the Samoan people.

    With 40 years experience as an oil spill response scientist, Paul Irving was in Samoa soon after the Manawanui sank, for SPREP – the Secretariat of the Pacific Environment Programme.

    “My role and function was to work with and for the Samoan government as much as possible. I was effectively loaned to them by SPREP to provide, to organise advice, to seek international support and to give them the best advice possible given that they were not the spiller, their country was the victim.”

  • Read more: ‘We’re eating tinned fish’ – Samoa villagers plead for Manawanui wreckage compensation
  • Irving said the correspondence between Winston Peters and Fiamē was diplomatic, rather than a letter of compensation or insurance usually associated with one country causing another country injury or harm due to the actions of its sovereign citizens.

    “I think six million New Zealand dollars – ten million tala – is a relatively small amount given that the estimate to remove the vessel from the area was around, between 75 and 100 million New Zealand dollars, so I think New Zealand got away with about 10 percent of the cost of cleaning up,” Irving said.

    “The New Zealand government certainly was not thinking the same way when it required more than 500 million dollars to be spent by the owners of the Rena to clean up the reef in the Bay of Plenty.”

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Fiery crash blocking lanes on State Highway 1

Source: Radio New Zealand

(File photo) RNZ / REECE BAKER

Emergency Services are working at the scene of a fiery crash, and police warn it has closed State Highway One lanes near Hampton Downs.

No one was seriously injured in the crash on Sunday, police said in a statement.

However the vehicle had caught fire after the crash.

Northbound lanes of the Waikato Expressway were closed while the crashed vehicle and response teams were blocking the road.

They asked motorists to stay away from the area.

The Transport Agency said a detour was in place by exiting SH1 onto Te Kauwhata Road and rejoining the highway at the Mercer on-ramp.

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Officials say transparency key to build trust in govt data system, release heavily redacted docs

Source: Radio New Zealand

Officials say transparency is critical to build trust in the government’s most important data system, but the business case for expanding it is mostly blanked out (File photo). RNZ

Officials say transparency is critical to build trust in the government’s most important data system, but the business case for expanding it is mostly blanked out.

Over two-thirds of the 95 pages in the business case to overhaul the Integrated Data Infrastructure, or IDI, are entirely (or a few almost entirely) redacted.

The black pen has been swept over all the options the government is looking at, all the costs to the taxpayer and the cost-benefit analysis.

Yet the business case report stated, “Transparency was highlighted as critical to building trust, with calls for clearer communication about data use, access, and safeguards.”

This was after holding five workshops with iwi, industry and non-government organisations a few months back.

Some groups really did not trust what government was doing with data, the report noted.

Referring to feedback from the Data Iwi Leaders Group, Stats NZ said, “Trust and reciprocity were identified as foundational to any future data system.”

A much more powerful IDI is crucial to the government’s social investment approach, but there were barriers.

“The social license for expanded social investment is untested,” said the report.

“There is a need to build robust data ethics practices and safeguards into the social investment approach (especially as this approach expands). This is important to maintain public trust in how government uses data and to ensure individuals and communities are comfortable sharing their data with government.”

Both the indicative business case and a Cabinet paper in October – which was when the interim business case was approved and a detailed business case ordered up – had a lot to say about how urgent it was to transform the “clunky and slow” IDI.

It was the tool that “that brings it all together”.

“The IDI is the only integrated data tool available to support the government’s social investment approach,” said the proactively released Cabinet paper.

Stats NZ says it needs to balance transparency with Cabinet rules and guidelines, government information management guidelines and with legal frameworks (File photo). RNZ /Dom Thomas

Why so much was blanked out

The mass blanking out of the report was to “maintain the constitutional conventions for the confidentiality of advice tendered by ministers and officials” to Cabinet, Stats NZ told RNZ in its response to an Official Information Act request (OIA). This is one of the grounds allowed under OIA law.

Business cases for government projects typically lay out the options and how they compare, and often they recommend one or the other.

Both the long-listed options and the short-listed ones are blanked entirely in the IDI report, as are the critical success factors.

If you wanted to read the “detailed analysis of long list options”, too bad.

The “Economic Case” section was 19 pages long but only one page and two paragraphs of that survive for the public to read, and these illuminated little, other than to say doing a cost-benefit analysis was tricky.

A suggestion from a UK approach was that for every dollar invested you got $4 back. How does it pay off? For instance, in NZ data research inside the IDI helped spur more investment in driver training for young people, which was shown to cut how many ended up in court and costing society more.

The “Commercial Case” and the “Financial Case” in the business case were both entirely blanked out. The index showed these considered the funding model and “overall affordability”.

Missing from view too, were the main risks anticipated from implementation, and the key constraints, dependencies and assumptions.

Uncharted territory

The scope of the “transformation” of the IDI could take it into uncharted territory, as the report briefly noted.

“All data in the IDI is de-identified, so while it can be used to analyse ‘cohorts’ of people, it cannot be used for case management or targeting services to individuals,” it said.

“Any shift in how the IDI is used – for example, towards targeting services to individuals, would require significant legislative change and building strong social license for such a change.”

Most of what is left unredacted and readable in the business case are the reasons why the overhaul was required, for instance, as the key testing ground for how to spend the $190 million Social Investment Fund.

The IDI has 15 billion rows of data, but can be refreshed only three times a year because it takes so long – 12-14 weeks per refresh. It underwent its biggest refresh in June this year that required 90 hours of staff overtime to complete on the final day before deadline.

“Data integration is labour-intensive, access is limited, and data coverage and quality are patchy,” said the business case.

The Cabinet paper said demand was “increasing rapidly” particularly as the government expanded the so-called “Outcomes-Based-Contracting” model and the fledgling Social Investment Agency, and Whānau Ora commissioned more contracts through Te Puni Kōkiri.

The 15-year-old system was no match for this. “A single complex analysis within the IDI Data Lab can slow the system down for all users, turning a simple query from another user that would normally take seconds into a full day wait.”

The Te Puni Kokiri building on Wellington’s Lambton Quay. RNZ / DOM THOMAS

A concentration of labs

Data Labs are the only way to access and use the IDI which has no internet connection at all to protect its contents.

There are 40 labs, over half of those are in Wellington (22), while Auckland had nine. Sydney, Rotorua, Palmerston North and Hamilton had one or two labs each – but the South Island in total had just three.

The business case, what can be seen of it, does not talk about this geographical barrier to researchers.

It quoted them saying “real-time and on-demand access to integrated data was seen as critical” but little was said about how that might be tackled.

“Streamlining research approvals and improving access protocols were suggested to reduce barriers,” it said.

A trust in Tai Rāwhiti has told RNZ about how it had to get expert help just to draw up its application for research approval, let along get hold of the coding and technical knowhow to design ways to get the data it was after once it was inside the Lab.

The IDI overhaul has been slowgoing. The indicative business case report was delivered a year overdue.

Stats NZ, in its OIA response, said it had also been delayed in developing a multiyear data and statistical programme as had been ordered, due to “competing priorities, including modernising the census and social investment”.

Plus the dedicated data support team it was meant to have set up by October ran into problems signing contracts with other agencies, so instead it had been doing its own work improving the data flow in the IDI, among other things.

Stats NZ acting deputy chief executive – office of the chief executive Sarah Dwen said the agency “absolutely recognised” the need to build public trust and confidence in the work it does.

“Transparency and being open with communities are part of that, as are lots of other factors including reliability, visibility and accessibility.

“When it comes to transparency, we need to balance that with the requirement to keep some information confidential in order to comply with Cabinet rules and guidelines, government information management guidelines and with legal frameworks.”

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The Ashes live: Australia v England – third test, day five

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the cricket action, as the third in the five-test series between archrivals Australia and England continues at Adelaide Oval in Adelaide.

Australia currently has a 2-0 lead in the series, after successful campaigns in both Perth and Brisbane.

First ball is scheduled for 12.30pm NZT.

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Body pulled from water at Waiotapu, near Rotorua

Source: Radio New Zealand

(File photo) RNZ

A sudden death investigation is underway after a person was pulled from the water, at Waiotapu, near Rotorua.

At 6.15am on Sunday, emergency services were told a person had been “pulled from the water unresponsive” near Waiotapu Loop Rd.

“Enquiries are now underway to establish the circumstances surrounding the death, which is being treated as unexplained,” police said.

A person was helping with the investigation, a spokesperson said and a scene examination was about to be done.

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Live: Black Caps v West Indies – third test, day four

Source: Radio New Zealand

Follow all the action on day four of the Black Caps’ third test against the West Indies at Bay Oval in Mt Maunganui.

First ball is scheduled for 11am.

Black Caps squad: Tom Latham (captain), Tom Blundell (wicketkeeper), Michael Bracewell, Kristian Clarke, Devon Conway, Jacob Duffy, Zak Foulkes, Daryl Mitchell, Ajaz Patel, Glenn Phillips, Michael Rae, Rachin Ravindra, Kane Williamson, Will Young

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Kemar Roach Andrew Cornaga / www.photosport.nz / Photosport Ltd 2025

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

Parliament’s year in numbers

Source: Radio New Zealand

VNP / Phil Smith

Analysis – The 2025 Parliamentary year has ended and it was a monster.

In MPs’ final hurrah-the adjournment debate-David Seymour announced “this government has passed more legislation in the first two years of its three than any MMP Parliament has passed in its whole three years.”

Previous to this 54th Parliament, experts have said New Zealand passed too many laws; heaven knows what those folk would think now.

Parliament is breaking records both for bills passed and for a lack of careful process.

Here are a few numbers from this completed year and this parliament (so far). Where possible the current numbers are compared to previous years or parliaments.

The fun stuff

The vast throughput has chemical drivers and consolations. In his own summary of the year, the Speaker Gerry Brownlee revealed that the Beehive’s in-house cafeteria, Copperfields, sold “60,000 hot drinks-mainly coffee”.

Chris Bishop responded “I think I’ve taken quite a few thousand”, and Nicola Willis piped up, “half of them were for me”.

In a depressant mirror to the Beehive’s stimulants, the in-house bar has moved from the Beehive to Parliament House. It is now further away from the Ministers causing the workload and closer to the backbenchers suffering under it.

The golden throat lozenge awards

Working with Hansard data for the whole Parliament (up until mid-October 2025), I have squeezed out some very rough numbers to find who has done all the talking.

These numbers are for House debates but not question time. Note though: Hansard’s data is not well structured for careful statistical torture, so take the results with a pinch of numerical salt.

The easy winner of the Golden Throat Lozenge Award (for time on their feet) is Green MP Lawrence Xu-Nan who spoke 396 times, uttering roughly 194,000 words.

He won the gong despite joining this parliament a few months late (arriving in March 2024 after the sad death of Efeso Collins). Xu-Nan’s tactical pleonism explains the following from Parliament final day:

Xu-Nan: “Thank you, Mr Speaker. It’s actually not that common that I get two speeches back to back-what a treat!”. Speaker: “Well, why don’t you give us a treat and make it short.”

He didn’t.

Gerry Brownlee spoke twice more than Xu-Nan (398 times), but presiding officers are brief. Opposition MPs use their full 10 minutes every call if at all possible.

Winner of the Golden Throat Lozenge Award for most words spoken, Green MP Lawrence Xu-Nan. VNP / Phil Smith

The top ten MPs for words spoken are all from the opposition (see below).

Government backbenchers say very little to defend their own bills (to save time), while opposition are wordy to slow things down (and give bills the fullest possible consideration), especially when bills skip select committees or are being considered under urgency.

MPs who have done the most talking in Parliament this year. RNZ/ The House – Phil Smith

MPs at the ‘vow of silence’ end of the list are mostly from National.

Other than recent arrivals the most taciturn were Melissa Lee (just 15 speeches) and Shane Reti (20). Both offered between 6000-7000 words.

The quietest opposition MPs are 13 and 15 places from the bottom. They were Adrian Rurawhe (25 speeches for nearly 14,000 words) and Jenny Salesa (30 speeches for a little over 12,281 words).

Major party leaders spend little time in the House, other than from question time and set-piece debates like the budget.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon managed just 18 speeches, but some were very long so his total words spoken (c. 27,000) raises him to 78th of 123 MPs. Labour leader Chris Hipkins beats him with 47 speeches for 38,000 words.

Minor leaders appear more often. David Seymour made 68 calls for 64,000 words, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer 87 for 62,000, Chloe Swarbrick 82 or 54,000, Winston Peters 47 for 36,00 and Rawiri Waititi 48 for 31,000 words.

Green co-leader Marama Davidson is not included, as multiple MPs named Davidson muddy the waters.

The most loquacious of the government ministers was Chris Bishop (208 speeches and 86,000 words). He has had a number of complex bills spend lengthy periods in the Committee of the Whole, and is a minister happy to answer questions and engage in that stage of deliberation.

As well as fronting a number of portfolios, Chris Bishop is Leader of the House, which can involve negotiating with other parties and fronting government actions like Urgency motions. VNP/Louis Collins

Party speaking time

The largest parties get more allocated speaking slots, but only the opposition make full use of theirs.

As noted, the opposition also speak a lot during the unallocated Committee of the Whole stage. Whole days can go by when government backbenchers offer nothing except repeating “I move that debate on this question now close”, which is parliamentese for ‘please stop already’.

RNZ/ The House – Phil Smith

Public engagement

Gerry Brownlee reports: “73,000 people went through Parliament in tours this year-quite a large number. If you include visitors who came here for various meetings, that number goes up to 122,000. When you think about the number of people visiting here, it means that, I think, we have a strong democracy, and we’ve got to make sure that this place remains as open as it possibly can.”

The public have been visiting electronically as well.

The bills under debate have attracted an avalanche of public feedback that stretched Parliament’s secretariat until the poor clerks drowned in e-paper. Committees even found it necessary to restrict the extent of some of their reports back to the House (a core function).

It has been suggested to me that the quality of ministerial officials’ advice to committees (and presumably also to government) has degraded with so many different legislative plans for departments to consider.

Clerk of the House of Representatives David Wilson told the Standing Orders Committee, “Two Parliament ago there were 95,000 submissions which we thought was a lot. Now there are over 600,000 in this one.”

The most written submissions for this Parliament (or any Parliament) was the massive new record of 295,670 written submissions on the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi Bill.

Legislative process and urgency

The table below outlines the process of non-budgetary government bills over six parliaments (most recent on the left). Each parliament’s figures are truncated at a matching point in the Parliament’s progress. None are for a full three years.

RNZ/ The House – Phil Smith

The current government has introduced far more bills and skipped more select committees than any of the previous five.

The bills that did go through committees had their committee consideration time curtailed more than in any parliament except during John Key’s first government.

For more granular detail on the use of urgency by stage, the chart below is data from The Newsroom’s journalist Marc Daalder. In this case, numbers for previous parliaments are truncated to match the same number of calendar days as the current term has taken.

The House/ Data from Newsroom – Marc Daalder

The 2025 sitting year included 87 sitting days and two weeks of full-time committee scrutiny of government in lieu of the House sitting.

Of the 87 sitting days, 13 did not start afresh, but were just continuations of the previous day. The 87 days broke down to:

RNZ/ The House – Phil Smith

Oversight of government

One of any parliament’s core roles is keeping a check on the government that is a subset of itself. This is possible because, constitutionally, governments are subservient to parliaments, though governments often try to eschew this relationship.

Oversight happens in various ways in the House and committees. Most are hard to measure, except the asking of formal questions of ministers.

Oral questions can be a key tool, but when ministers are allowed by Speakers to avoid answering questions they lose all potency, and written questions (which are harder to ignore) gain importance.

Formal questions put to ministers, during 2025. RNZ/ The House – Phil Smith

See this article for a more detailed, recent look at numbers around Select Committee workloads.

Thanks to The Office of the Clerk, Hansard and Marc Daalder for data.

RNZ’s The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament’s Office of the Clerk. Enjoy our articles or podcast at RNZ.

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

Study shows the experience of Māori grappling with ‘te reo trauma’

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Mark Papalii

A new report published by Te Mātāwai has highlighted the narratives of Māori individuals grappling with language loss and trauma.

An earlier study by Dr Raukura Roa and Professor Tom Roa (2023), defined te reo trauma as ‘the emotional, psychological, physical and spiritual harm and distress experienced by Māori individuals due to a lack of proficiency in te reo Māori.’

The new report noted that this can manifest in various ways “including language anxiety and feelings of shame (whakamā) for not being able to speak te reo Māori. Language anxiety can lead to withdrawal from cultural contexts, impacting social interaction and mental health.”

‘Everyday Experiences of Te Reo Māori Trauma’ by Dr Mohi Rua saw five whānau selected for the study, and the report provides a critical analysis of three participants, all Generation X (born between 1965 and 1980) and from the first generation raised after the mass urbanisation of Māori.

In this context, their intergenerational transmission was severely disrupted, and te reo was not passed onto them. As such, these whānau stories of reconnection to, and reclamation of, te reo Māori is fraught with whakamā, challenges, and how they understand their own cultural identity.

One interviewee said that a common thing his parents shared was that they were from a generation that got a hiding, got strapped from the teachers of that time.

“If they were to speak te reo Māori or even spoke single words at school, they got a hiding… so, you can understand I guess the trauma that my parents went through and what they wanted for us. What they saw then, they thought that was the right thing, so I guess English was the way to move forward,” he said.

Another interviewee recalled when he asked his father why he never spoke te reo Māori to him and his siblings, his father shared the trauma he experienced and questioned the relevance of te reo in contemporary society.

“He shared with us that he was part of that generation that had it beaten out of them… and this is how he put it to us, he thought ‘it was a waste of f…ing time’ us learning. That’s how he put it, which is why he never spoke it to us.”

Dr Rua said te reo Māori trauma is a multifaceted issue rooted in the colonial history and injustices that contribute to socio-cultural and economic disparities for Māori today.

“The three interviewees all illustrate the profound experiences of trauma associated with the absence of te reo Māori in their upbringing, fears of making mistakes and the pressure to be proficient in te reo Māori. They share their real stories but remain anonymous,” he said.

But at the same time all three of the interviewees have pushed through the reo trauma to continue learning to speak, although to different degrees.

One emphasised her desire for her children to feel comfortable in their cultural environment. “I don’t want our kids to be sitting at the marae and go, ‘what are they talking about? What are they laughing at? What they say when everyone’s laughing?’”

“I’ve learnt a lot more in the last six months than I have in my whole reo journey, and it’s been massive. Our kaiako is awesome but it’s shifted our mindset from a colonised and trying to decolonise and put us into a space where we don’t think Pākehā, think Māori first and it’s been a mean shift,” another interviewee said.

Te Mātāwai Hoa-Toihau Mātai Smith said the research moves understanding of this complex topic forward, and emphasises the critical importance of te reo Māori in preserving cultural identity.

“It highlights the various barriers caused by trauma that prevent the effective revival of te reo Māori. These participants provide good examples of successfully working through trauma in their whānau.

“Their stories can be a source of inspiration for other whānau to combat the ‘whakamā’ many feel with learning te reo.”

“Any initiative to overcome te reo Māori trauma needs to be interconnected with whānau, hapū, and iwi – their community and context is important for their own reo journey,” he said.

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

Auckland owners warned to control dogs after attacks on little blue penguins

Source: Radio New Zealand

Kororā found on Tiritiri Matangi island with neck twisting symptoms. BirdCare Aotearoa

The Department of Conservation says there have been ongoing dog attacks on little blue penguins around Auckland’s coastline.

The attacks have prompted DOC, conservation organisations, Auckland Council and mana whenua to urge dog owners to keep their pets under control, and well away from the rocky coastline, dunes and pest-free islands where kororā are found.

A recent spate of dog attacks at Piha and Te Henga have seen seven birds found dead in the last month.

DOC said it was a further blow to the species, which is already at risk of becoming threatened, due to a declining population.

DOC principal ranger in Auckland David Wilson said every year penguins and other wildlife were killed by dogs, but the seven penguins killed in the last month were “more than usual”.

“There’s too many dogs on the beaches,” he said. “There’s too many irresponsible owners, who aren’t supervising their dogs properly, and it’s just not acceptable for dogs to be killing wildlife in this way.”

His message to dog owners: “Don’t take your dogs where they’re not allowed.

“Know what the regulations are and keep your dogs under tight control at all times, and within your sight and supervision.”

He encouraged people to call DOC, if they saw an attack, and the council, if they saw a dog where it shouldn’t be.

Following rules not optional

Auckland Council animal management manager Elly Waitoa said bylaws restricted dog-walking in some areas and protected wildlife at certain times of the year.

“This is not optional. It isn’t just about bylaws – failure to control dogs and respect restricted areas puts vulnerable coastal wildlife at risk.

“Auckland Council’s animal management team will be patrolling the west coast beaches throughout summer and will issue infringements without hesitation to anyone who chooses to ignore the bylaws.”

Injured penguin put to sleep

Little blue penguins are a protected species, found on both the east and west coasts of Auckland, with colonies at Piha, Muriwai and Te Henga, and on many Hauraki Gulf/Tīkapa Moana islands, including Waiheke.

Earlier this month, DOC said a paddleboarder brought his dog illegally to Tiritiri Matangi island – a predator-free native wildlife sanctuary – where a penguin was found needing veterinary care just metres away on the beach.

Dr Rashi Parker, who is the fundraising manager for BirdCare Aotearoa – a native wildlife hospital and rehabilitation centre – said, while the dogs were just displaying dog-like behaviour, their owner’s actions led to incredible pain, distress and often irreversible injuries for the tiny penguins.

“The kororā rushed to us from Tiritiri Matangi was showing torticollis, a painful neck-twisting symptom, and we immediately administered pain relief,” she said. “Torticollis often comes about from ‘ragging’, when dogs bite and shake their prey.

“Although our clinical team tried to stabilise the patient over several days, it was no longer able to swim properly and had to be put to sleep.”

Parker said all their admissions this year were underweight and likely starving.

“The last thing these little penguins need are large predators roaming through their shelters and nests,” she said.

Te Kawerau Iwi Tiaki Trust chief executive Edward Ashby was angry dog attacks kept happening.

“Kororā are a taonga and all New Zealanders have a duty of care, as kaitiaki, to look out for them,” he said. “It’s part of our cultural capital to care for our environment and wildlife.”

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

People warned to check equipment, seaworthiness of boats

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington’s Harbourmaster Grant Nalder. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Wellington’s Harbourmaster says it’s important people check their equipment and the seaworthiness of their boats before heading on the water.

Maritime NZ’s latest annual report found in the 2024 to 2025 financial year there were 19 fatal recreational boating accidents.

The agency said the main factors included a lack of lifejackets and limited means of communication.

Grant Nalder told RNZ there were several ways people could alert people on land if they got into trouble.

“If you are on a paddle board or a kayak it could be like a rugby refs whistle, they are really good because people are going to hear them and start to investigate what it is.

“If you are going further afield a marine radio [or] a personal locator beacon.”

Nalder said the boats out on New Zealand’s waters were getting older, so people needed to maintain them.

“You know if you have got a car you can put it in a garage and change the battery, change the oil and you are away but a boat actually needs attention right throughout its life, and if it doesn’t get it, it starts getting difficult and expensive.”

He warned people of buying cheap old boats online.

“You get someone who might not know much about the boat but think they have just got a really good bargain and actually what they have got is a liability.

“Worst case is they get out somewhere on the water and it either takes on water or breaks down,” he said.

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

Inside the ‘mind-blowing’ world of competitive spreadsheeting

Source: Radio New Zealand

For some people, Excel spreadsheets are organisational heaven. For others, they’re more like hell.

For Giles Male, though, buzzing around a spreadsheet, fixing up rows and columns, is an exciting and “crazy competitive” live esport.

“You’ve got a room full of people cheering, watching others play around with spreadsheets on a screen. It’s pretty mind-blowing,” he tells RNZ’s Saturday Morning.

Giles Male (in the white suit jacket) salutes a competitor at this year’s Microsoft Excel World Championships.

Damian

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

Helping hands: Could care robots solve aged-care crisis?

Source: Radio New Zealand

Pepper is a robot designed by Aldebran to specialise in communication and interaction with humans for situations including providing companionship for elderly people. RNZ / Philippa Tolley

The global population is ageing, and New Zealand is no exception. Almost 20 percent of Kiwis are projected to be 65 or older by 2028, and like many other countries around the world, Aotearoa faces a shortage of healthcare and care workers to look after the elderly.

Could robots with the ability to perform everyday personal and household tasks help meet some of those needs?

Robots have some distinct advantages, robot designer Rich Walker tells Mihingarangi Forbes, speaking from London – but there’s some challenges and hurdles to overcome, and some big ethical considerations.

As the technology evolves, do we need to start asking ourselves how far we want it to go?

Walker is director of Shadow Robot, a UK company specialising in the design and manufacture of robotic hands. He is also an industry advocate for the ethical use of robotic technology.

Walker has played with robotics since being introduced to small robots at a computer camp as a child, where he tried to use them to move chess pieces around.

“I think if you grew up with science fiction, robots are a kind of natural lure, there’s a whole idea that you could build something that could be a companion, an assistant, a helper – a fun character to have in your life,” he says. “And then you find engineering, and you discover that it’s nothing like that, but it’s a lot more interesting in some ways.”

What robots can and can’t easily accomplish are widely misunderstood, because we look at it through our assumptions they will be able to behave like a human body.

Rich Walker, with a dexterous hand. Robotic hands are a particularly difficult technology to create. Charles Gervais

In Japan, robots have been used in aged care facilities for more than a decade. But even so, he says “we’re a long way away from the dream of a robot that can wander around your house and do everything.

“I think what happened in Japan is they said ‘let’s give this a try, let’s get robots into care, let’s see what we can do and see how well it works’. And as you might expect the results are mixed. There are some places where actually you can do something quite useful, quite powerful and quite important, and then there are other places where people are just scratching their heads…”

Care work needs sensitivity, touch, judgement and gentleness, which are difficult for a robot to match our human capabilities for.

“If you look at a factory, you see the machinery in there – the robots in there do amazing things, over and over again, exactly the same.

“But if you’ve ever tried to wipe someone’s mouth, that’s never the same twice, that’s never the same experience, it’s never the same person you’re doing that with,” Walker says.

“So that’s really the problem for us, is: What are the jobs where a machine can be really useful and help and free people up to do other things? And what are the jobs where honestly you want to feel that you are engaged with a person – you are interacting with a person there?”

Some areas of human capability and some tasks are particularly difficult for robots – controlled and measured touch is at the top of the list. For example, robots still cannot use scissors.

“Partly it’s because what we do with our fingers is such an innate part of our brain, we have huge trouble thinking about it.

“We have this joke in robotics that if you ask a person in robotics how they’re holding their pen they’ll drop it straight away, because when you think about how you’re holding your pen you can’t do it anymore because it’s completely unconscious.

“And the problem with that is we said ‘oh yeah, it’ll be really difficult to get computers to play chess’ – well actually it wasn’t that difficult, you just needed big computers.

“But it turns out it’s really difficult to get robots to make a chess board, or set up a chess board, or indeed work out where the chess board is in the house and go and get it and come back, because the world is a very complicated and unpredictable place and robots work best in places that are … simple and well organised – not like my house.”

Designs to meet real needs

When parsing out the needs of aged care there have also been some big surprises, Walker says.

“We have conversations with local councils … they say things like ‘our biggest problem is how do we get someone to your house’. It’s not what they do when they’re there, it’s the travel time to get from one person to another to another.

“If you have to have three or four care visits a day, and someone has to travel half an hour for each visit, that’s quite a lot of the day taken up in that.

Things that can make a big difference can sometimes be quite simple, he says.

For instance, a washing machine isn’t normally thought of as a robot, but it is – and appropriate design can make a big difference when it comes to washing clothes for people living with incontinence. Or televisions or cell phones designed to have only a few buttons and channels are much more accessible for people with dementia.

“And a lot of this work, it’s not about clever-clever technology. It’s about saying what can we do to give this person back the independence they are starting to lose.

“And then, when they have carers come round, how can we make it so the carer can spend the time on the human element, not doing a mechanical task that could be done by something else to actually engage with the person, to give them dignity.”

Globally, the need is huge, Walker says.

  • Hospitals short an average of 587 nurses every shift last year – report
  • Aged care sector in crisis
  • “This is a big challenge, it is a big problem. Almost every country in the world has the same problem, their populations are ageing, their infrastructure could be better. Robot technology will play a big part in that – and particularly … infrastructure.

    University of Auckland research tested using a robot called Bomy at two Auckland retirement villages, to help with daily routines. supplied by University of Auckland

    Things like: “Self-driving cars, robots that can repair bridges or build roads or repair railways or just inspect railways. These will make a huge difference. And some of these things will free up humans so they can do more human tasks.”

    Even with a belief that this is the direction things are going, the acceleration in commercial manufacturing of some robot appliances has been a surprise, he says.

    “We’ve been very surprised by how cheap the recent wave of robots coming out of China are – and we’d always said that robots are going to be very expensive, that they’ll be something that governments buy and councils buy, and companies buy.

    “But actually it’s starting to look like maybe when you manufacture them in very large quantities they don’t have to be super super expensive.

    “So I don’t know yet how we will end up having a society where people have robots in the homes – I mean we’ve seen robot vacuum cleaners, and we’ve seen robot lawn mowers, and there are robots like that, they do exist, so it is possible.”

    Caution warranted

    Despite the promise, it’s sensible to take a cautious approach on robots, he says.

    “If I tell you I’m putting something that weighs 150 kilos and will move at 7 miles an hour in your living room, you’re going to want to know that that’s not going to trap you up against a wall and stop, right. Because that would be very very difficult for you and possibly dangerous.

    “So people who are building systems have to go in and say: ‘How do we make these systems safe, and how can we make sure that people trust them? – And you can’t build trust by saying ‘I know better’. You have to build trust by saying ‘how can I show you that this is safe and reliable and robust?’

    One of the most impressive robots already being used in care environments is a small furry seal called Paro, which was designed as a companion for people who could no longer have a pet or handle one.

    Paro the seal, a robot companion animal.

    “It gets used in care for people with dementia. It’s a little thing, it sits on your lap, you stroke it. It’s quite warm and it has a couple of little movements it makes and it makes a thing a bit like a purr, and it’s very comforting, and it’s a robot.

    “No-one’s going to feel threatened by it, no-one’s going to feel scared by it, and there’s not much it can do to go wrong, but it has fantastic value to people’s well-being… this is something they can cope with.”

    Walker says any discussions about robotics for use in aged care need to include consideration that companies creating and selling robotics must earn trust – “it’s not an automatic”.

    Regulation is necessary, he says.

    “Particularly when we’re dealing with people who are vulnerable or in need of additional support or help, that we make sure that what they’re getting is right.

    “I’m not a fan of government, but I recognise that in this case you have to start by having legislation, regulation, laws that say these things must be safe, this is how they must be safe, they musn’t be deceptive – the robot shouldn’t pretend to be something [they aren’t].

    “There’s a whole package that needs working out, how we treat these things, because they will come into our lives and we need to make sure that we benefit from them.”

    Is it healthy for the lonely and isolated to develop a relationship with AI and robots? It’s a fascinating question, Walker says.

    “I don’t think any of us would have guessed how all-encompassing it’s possible to be with ChatGPT and with tools like that. There’s a long history of that in robotics, in artificial intelligence, where people make things you could chat to that seemed intelligent and people do get sucked in, people do really enjoy it.

    “And I think there’s a wider question there – it’s like false advertising, we have laws about advertising, you’re not allowed to promise things that are not true of your products. Are we being promised things that are not true around the chatbots like ChatGPT? – I’m not sure.

    “But if we are then we should definitely make sure that doesn’t happen. Because the last thing you do want is somebody who is sitting at home with a useful system that can help them, but is deceiving them, is playing mind games with them. Because it can, and it’s able to. And if we haven’t regulated that, that would be a great shame.”

    Technical challenges and milestones

    Shadow Robot’s Dexterous Robot Hand using a delicate grip to grasp blocks. Matt Lincoln

    Some of the Robotic hands Walker works with have more than 100 sensors and have reached the milestone of being able to solve a Rubik’s Cube using a single hand.

    The programming behind that is just as crucial as the physical design, and determines how it puts the physical capability to good use, he says. And after the programming there is one more step, training. That teaches the robot which of the things it is capable of are doing are things you want to happen, and details like what order to do something, or in what manner.

    Robots can be trained using reinforcement learning, Walker says.

    “You do the same as if you’re training a pet … you give it a reward when it does the thing right, and it gradually learns over time what things are right and what things are wrong.”

    Walker is taking part in the UK government’s ARIA Robot Dexterity Programme, a high risk, high reward swing at finding ways to solve challenges in robotic dexterity, to create more capable and useful machines.

    “Really, it’s the absolute cutting edge of materials science is trying to make things that behave like the muscles of the human body.”

    Skin is another fascinating problem, since human skin grows back if it’s damaged, or it can thicken and become more robust by forming calluses. He hopes new learning will come out of the intersections between biology, medicine and robotics.

    “Those processes through which things recreate themselves so we can continue to use them, that’s again one of those things where we go ‘wow, if we could do that, it would be transformative!’”

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Three car pileup closes SH1 south of Dunsandel

Source: Radio New Zealand

One person is reported to have serious injuries. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

A three car crash shut down State Highway One in the town of Dunsandel south of Christchurch.

The highway has since been reopened.

Emergency services were called to the collision near the intersection with Selwyn Lake Road just before 8pm on Saturday.

One person is reported to have serious injuries, two people have moderate injuries and one person has minor injuries.

Diversions were being put in place and motorists were asked to follow the direction of emergency services staff at the scene.

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Hundreds of lightning strikes lash Canterbury

Source: Radio New Zealand

The Canterbury region has been lashed by hundreds of lightning strikes.

MetService put out a warning earlier on Saturday about thunderstorms that could bring heavy rain and large dumps of hail to parts of the region south of the Rakaia River.

Areas near Ashburton have seen up to 25mm of rain in an hour.

MetService meteorologist Devlin Linden told RNZ there had been a lot of activity in the skies above Canterbury.

There are still active storms in the region, MetService says. Supplied/Megan Porteous

“Over the past wee while, there have been about 300-400 lightning strikes and, along with that, there’s been some heavy rain.”

Linden said hail stones of 2-3cm in diameter had been reported.

“Certainly large and potentially damaging, if your under that kind of hail.”

He said there were still active storms in the region, but the weather service did not expect to put out any more severe thunderstorm watches.

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