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Topics tagged with 'Agriculture'

More in: Agriculture
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Drought-ravaged California is feeling the pressure

11 Apr 2016

Scientists say that storms carrying desperately needed water to California are being diverted by a band of high pressure that coincides with rainfall and temperature extremes.

Banks threaten to unleash infrastructure tsunami

8 Apr 2016

We are living in the most explosive era of infrastructure expansion in human history. The G20 nations, when they met in Australia in 2014, argued for between US$60 trillion and $70 trillion in new infrastructure investments by 2030, which would more than double the global total value of infrastructure.

Why water footprinting should be used with caution

7 Apr 2016

It seems logical that crops and goods that need lots of water should not be produced in water-scarce countries.

John Key

INDEFENSIBLE! Scientists slam Key's climate change attitude

6 Apr 2016

Scientists are calling the Government’s lack of leadership on climate change indefensible, after Prime Minister John Key said that science would solve the problem.

Dr Neil Mitchell

Depending on how you do the sums, we could be carbon neutral right now

5 Apr 2016

Restoration ecologist and carbon sequestration expert Dr NEIL MITCHELL expands on his claim that New Zealand should be using native forests to offset greenhouse gas emissions

GM crops can thrive as climate warms

5 Apr 2016

Plants genetically modified to take advantage of hotter temperatures and increased carbon dioxide could cut fertiliser use and raise yields to alleviate global food shortages.

Science grapples with climate conundrums

1 Apr 2016

New research illustrates that reactions of people, plants and animals to the changing climate are a key factor in unravelling the complexities of global warming.

Storing carbon could help to meet climate goals

31 Mar 2016

Australia's agricultural lands help to feed about 60 million people worldwide, and also support tens of thousands of farmers as well as rural communities and industries.

LanzaTech signs first US biofuels deal

30 Mar 2016

New Zealand-founded LanzaTech has signed its first North American deal, giving United States biofuels and biochemicals maker Aemetis exclusive rights to its patented technology to convert various types of waste gas to ethanol in California.

Cuba’s sustainable agriculture at risk in US thaw

29 Mar 2016

President Obama’s trip to Cuba this week accelerated the warming of US-Cuban relations. Many people in both countries believe that normalizing relations will spur investment that can help Cuba to develop its economy and improve life for its citizens. But in agriculture, US investment could cause harm instead.

What will Turnbull’s $1b energy fund actually do?

24 Mar 2016

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has announced the creation of a A$1 billion Clean Energy Innovation Fund, to be jointly managed by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation and the Australian Renewable Energy Agency.

John Key

No worries, says Key, science will save the world

23 Mar 2016

Prime Minister John Key says that science will save the world from climate change.

Are vegetables really the most low-carbon diet?

23 Mar 2016

It is often claimed that a vegetarian diet is better for the environment, because grazing animals such as cattle and sheep produce a lot of methane, a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

Goodies v baddies ... why labelling is holding farming back

22 Mar 2016

It’s hard to keep wild animals out of farms. Birds, mammals and insects all affect crop yields, in positive ways (such as flies pollinating flowers) and negative ones (such as when birds damage fruit).

Energy efficiency in itself can become a market

21 Mar 2016

New research by the European Commission suggests that energy efficiency can become a “niche” market that will attract investors away from fossil fuels.

Brian Stanley

Give ETS strength, pleads forest industry chief

17 Mar 2016

The Emissions Trading Scheme is a eunuch that needs to have its vasectomy reversed, the head of the forestry industry says.

Clean energy is a win-win for the US

16 Mar 2016

Simply implementing its Paris climate conference commitments on reducing greenhouse gas emissions could save the US billions of dollars – and save hundreds of thousands of lives.

Why Conservation officers feel left out of RMA

15 Mar 2016

The Department of Conservation could be cut out of some planning applications that could affect wildlife or conservation land, documents released under the Official Information Act say.

Climate needs Africa’s farmers to change fast

15 Mar 2016

Climate change could soon begin to make dramatic impacts on Africa’s agriculture. Up to 60 per cent of land now used to grow beans could become unviable by the end of the century – and in some places, farmers will need to change their ways within the next 10 years.

Food production threatens to overwhelm climate efforts

14 Mar 2016

Each year our terrestrial biosphere absorbs about a quarter of all the carbon dioxide emissions that humans produce.

Plastic-munching bacteria could fuel recycling revolution

14 Mar 2016

More than 300m tonnes of plastics are manufactured each year for use in everything from packaging to clothing.

Jan Wright

ETS needs a price floor, says environment watchdog

11 Mar 2016

The Emissions Trading Scheme price cap should stay – but it should be balanced by a price floor, says Environment Commissioner Jan Wright.

Euan Mason

Give farmers a reason to join ETS, says academic

11 Mar 2016

Agriculture could do a lot to cut New Zealand’s greenhouse gas emissions if it had an incentive to, a forestry expert says.

Dr Hinrich Schaefer

New methane probe points finger at agriculture

11 Mar 2016

New research showing that agriculture, and not fossil fuels, is responsible for rising methane levels is especially important for New Zealand, says the lead researcher.

Climate denier Ian Macdonald

How climate denial gained a foothold in the Liberal Party

11 Mar 2016

It seems the Liberal Party is still having trouble letting go of climate denial, judging by the New South Wales branch’s demand that the Turnbull government arrange a series of public debates on climate science.

Clean, green report card shows we're woeful

9 Mar 2016

Clean, green New Zealand has one of the worst records in the world when it comes to the impact of agriculture on the environment, a new report shows.

Marjan van den Belt

Dairy dive has message, says eco economist

8 Mar 2016

Collapsing dairy prices are a warning of what can happen when businesses live beyond their ecological means, says an expert in ecological economics.

Foresters laud Landcorp's change of mind

8 Mar 2016

Landcorp’s decision to go forestry instead of dairy on land in the central North Island is a sign that some landowners are starting to question the viability of dairy conversions, the Forest Owners’ Association says.

What the White House hopefuls think of new energy

7 Mar 2016

The long-term global transition away from fossil fuels will deliver many benefits, including jobs, reduced air pollution, lower greenhouse gas emissions and less exposure to the volatility and risks of extracting, storing and transporting fossil fuels.

OIO-action company sells NZ carbon assets

3 Mar 2016

An Australian company being prosecuted by the Overseas Investment Office has sold its New Zealand carbon assets.

Clever machine measures soil gases

3 Mar 2016

Finnish researchers have invented a portable machine that measures greenhouse gases coming off soil.

How Africa could leapfrog fossil fuels to clean energy

3 Mar 2016

Revolutions are, as a rule, rare and momentous processes. But across the African continent the potential is ripe for a clean energy revolution that upsets and leapfrogs the old fossil-fuel order.

Recycled water could help to cut the food bills

3 Mar 2016

Australians eat a lot of water – the water that is used to produce food. New findings from the Foodprint Melbourne study estimate that more than 475 litres of water is used to grow each person’s food every day.

Watch ag emissions, Treasury tells Government

29 Feb 2016

Treasury officials have told the Government that it should be investigating just how well its strategies to reduce New Zealand’s agricultural emissions are working – even though agriculture has specifically been excluded from the current review of the Emissions Trading Scheme.

Highly flammable ... gorse

Scientists study slow-burning trees

29 Feb 2016

Planting less-flammable trees on farms might help to stop the spread of wildfires in New Zealand as the planet warms.

Carbon budget is only half as big as we thought

26 Feb 2016

Fossil fuel use will have to fall twice as fast as predicted if global warming is to be kept within the 2deg limit agreed internationally as being the point of no return, researchers say.

Scientists calculate our debt to the Earth

26 Feb 2016

Researchers in the US have found a way to put a monetary value on the multitude of vital services and assets we rely on nature to provide us cost-free.

Urban sprawl is threatening Sydney’s foodbowl

26 Feb 2016

Sydney loves to talk about food, and the housing market. But rarely does the city talk about the threat that housing poses to the resilience of Sydney’s food system.

NZ and China best friends under carbon pact

25 Feb 2016

New Zealand and China are working together closely on carbon trading, after signing a bilateral agreement on carbon markets.

Z Energy wishlist: Everybody must be in ETS

25 Feb 2016

Fuel retailer Z Energy wants every sector in the Emissions Trading Scheme, a realistic price on carbon, political stability and an end to carbon subsidies.

Glen Mackie

OPINION: Our forest industry is heading south

23 Feb 2016

New Zealand’s third-largest export industry, forestry, is steadily shrinking.

British power stations burning biomass from America

23 Feb 2016

Last year, 6m tonnes of wood pellets harvested from forests in Louisiana, Georgia, Florida, Alabama and Virginia were shipped across the Atlantic, to be burnt in renewable biomass power plants.

Climate change is killing off India’s giant bees

23 Feb 2016

A warming climate and the loss of natural areas to meet the demands of tourism are driving Indian bee colonies to the brink, imperilling an essential food source.

Paula Bennett

New minister pushes for carbon price rise

22 Feb 2016

Carbon prices must rise, says new Climate Change Minister Paula Bennett.

Suzi Kerr

Why ETS examination should take the long view

22 Feb 2016

Motu Economic and Public Policy Research Trust senior fellow SUZI KERR answers the key question posed in the Emissions Trading Scheme Review – should the carbon price cap and the one-for-two provisional measures be scrapped?

Catherine Leining

ETS ... we're hitting the target but missing the point

22 Feb 2016

Ministry for the Environment officials have been blunt about the Emissions Trading Scheme’s impact to date: “Research for this evaluation, and evidence from the interviews, found no sector other than forestry made emissions reductions over the Kyoto Protocol Commitment Period One (2008-12) that were directly caused by NZ ETS obligations.”

Better water use can cut global food gap

22 Feb 2016

Scientists say that forecasts of a world food shortage need not prove as disastrous as previously thought if humans learn to use water more effectively.

Planting rate drops by a million seedlings

15 Feb 2016

Latest Government figures show that planting rates of exotic forests last year were even lower than they were in 2014, when nurseries destroyed hundreds of thousands of seedlings because foresters weren’t planting.

Organic farmers win better base for milk price

15 Feb 2016

Fonterra is offering organic farmers an independent milk price reflecting consumer demand.

Effluent reduction model could change dairying

15 Feb 2016

A Northland farmer's determination to secure the resource consent compliance that had been eluding him has seen him play a key role in a potentially game-changing effluent reduction model for the dairy industry.

Adaptation
More >
Dr Rod Carr working in his previous role as Climate Change Commission chair

Ticking time-bomb in Govt’s failure of leadership on climate – Carr

Tue 9 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | The coalition Government’s failure to slash emissions is like pulling the pin on a grenade, handing it to a kid, and saying “hold on tight, she’ll be right”, says former Climate Change Commission chair Rod Carr.

Airlines
More >

NZ’s government wants tourism to drive economic growth – but how will it deal with aviation emissions?

22 Oct 2025

By Robert McLachlan, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey University | Following a brief dip during the COVID pandemic, aviation is back in a growth phase.

Aviation
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Air NZ inks deal for its first internationally verified carbon credits

9 Oct 2025

By Liz Kivi | Air New Zealand has committed to buying 8000 tonnes of carbon removals by 2030, in partnership with local native forest investment platform My Native Forest.

Biodiversity
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Second fire tears through Tongariro National Park

Tue 9 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Fire crews have returned to Tongariro National Park this morning as a fast-moving fire that started yesterday threatens unburnt vegetation and nearby communities, just a month after a major blaze scorched 3000 hectares in the same area.

Biofuels
More >

Govt launches strategy backing wood-based heat sector

23 Oct 2025

By Pattrick Smellie | Forestry biomass could replace as much as 40% of fossil fuel-generated process heat by 2050, but access to supply, regulatory settings and business cases for converting to wood-based heat sources are required, the Government says in a series of documents released yesterday.

Carbon Credits
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts at this year's EU-NZ Business Summit

Minister not concerned about potential economic impacts of ruling out offshore mitigation

Today 12:15pm

By Liz Kivi | Climate Change Minister Simon Watts isn’t worried that ruling out using offshore mitigation is effectively reneging from the Paris Agreement with potential to damage New Zealand’s economy and access to export markets.

Carbon News world
More >

Still possible to divert from disastrous climate path to sustainable, healthy planet, says UNEP

Today 12:15pm

A baby born today will turn 75 in 2100, and the world that child will inherit as an adult – if governments don’t act in the next five years – could be 3.9°C hotter, economically shattered, and ravaged by pollution. But there is still a choice, a new United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report demonstrates.

Carbon prices
More >
Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment  Simon Upton

Is Govt rushing through changes to climate framework to avoid litigation?

Today 12:15pm

By Liz Kivi | The Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment says the Government’s motivation for proposed changes to the country’s climate framework law are unclear: “The only reason I can think of is one grounded in potential litigation risk.”

Coal
More >
Kommi performing on Saturday

KiwiRail pauses coal trains amid rising climate protests

Tue 9 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Climate activists are ramping up actions this week, with a Christchurch protest leading to KiwiRail pausing some coal train operations on Saturday, and another protest against the Fast-Track Amendment Bill planned for parliament today.

Comment
More >
Rob Campbell

Investors must support positive climate-tech

28 Nov 2025

OPINION: We need better leadership than the current ‘climate opportunism’ that is rife in the Beehive, and we need to back a marketplace that will make it happen, writes Rob Campbell.

Construction
More >
Waimauku flooding during Cyclone Gabrielle

$235 billion worth of NZ buildings exposed to flooding

30 Oct 2025

More than 750,000 New Zealanders live in locations exposed to one-in-100-year floods, according to a nationwide study which shows escalating flood risk.

COP
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India at COP30: A mismatch between grandstanding and climate action

Today 12:15pm

Despite India’s attempt to anoint itself as the leader of the developing world, at the COP30 summit, New Delhi’s track record remains contradictory.

Emissions trading
More >

Govt warned that scrapping ag emission pricing comes with risks

Today 12:15pm

By Liz Kivi | The Government’s move to halt plans for agricultural emissions pricing without replacing it with any other action will leave New Zealand facing a bigger gap to meet its third emissions budget, Environment ministry officials have warned.

Energy
More >

Oil and gas majors would create $78bn more value by stopping exploration

Today 12:15pm

Media release | Ten of the world’s largest oil and gas companies would create significantly more shareholder value by ending exploration and sharply curtailing upstream development, according to new analysis released today by ACCR.

Extinction
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Conservation Minister Tama Potaka

DOC trims costs and winds down jobs for nature

10 Nov 2025

The Department of Conservation (DOC) is entering a new phase of tighter budgets and structural change as it winds down the pandemic-era Jobs for Nature programme and reshapes its operations to absorb long-term cost pressures.

Extreme weather
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NZ just had its hottest spring in at least 116 years

Wed 10 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | This year New Zealand had its hottest spring since records began, with widespread heat, rainfall extremes and destructive wind driven by sudden stratospheric warming.

Fishing
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Transport dominates NZ’s rising consumer emissions

Wed 10 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Transport pollution was the biggest contributor to an increase in New Zealand’s consumption-based emissions in 2023, with emissions from household travel up 12%, and consumption-based emissions totalling 58.3 million tonnes – up 1.6% from the previous year.

Forestry
More >

Australia has new laws to protect nature. Do they signal an end to native forest logging?

Today 12:15pm

Reforms to Australia’s nature laws have passed federal parliament. A longstanding exemption that meant federal environment laws did not apply to native logging has finally been removed from the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act.

Gas
More >

Media round-up

Fri 5 Dec 2025

In our round-up of climate coverage in local media: Labour’s chronic evasiveness as the Government reneges on climate change; newly released documents reveal the country's new methane target is associated with 'perilous' 2.7C of warming; and New Zealand's 'pitiful' decision on emissions targets comes with costs.

Geothermal
More >

RMA to speed up fossil fuel consents

18 Aug 2025

By Liz Kivi | An energy lobby group has welcomed a last-minute amendment to the RMA that puts fossil fuels on the same footing as renewables, however a sustainable energy expert says the move “beggars belief.”

Green finance
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Analysis: Why COP30’s ‘tripling adaptation finance’ target is less ambitious than it seems

Fri 5 Dec 2025

One of the headline outcomes to emerge from COP30 was a new target to “at least triple” finance for climate adaptation in developing countries by 2035.

Greenhouse Effect
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts

Govt ‘scaremongering’ over co-operation – former climate ambassador

Fri 5 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | New Zealand’s former top climate diplomat, Kay Harrison, says the Government’s recent comments ruling out buying climate mitigation offshore amount to scaremongering, and the country is missing a chance to give our businesses a boost.

Greenwashing
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TotalEnergies loses in Paris court, marking a turning point for fossil fuel truth-in-advertising

5 Nov 2025

TotalEnergies was found to have misled consumers about its role in the energy transition.

Hydro power
More >

Tribunal warns govt geothermal strategy risks Treaty breach

2 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The government's geothermal development strategy risks breaching the Treaty of Waitangi, according to a report from the Waitangi Tribunal released last week.

Hydrogen
More >
Hiringa chief executive Andrew Clennett

Hiringa eyes green methanol plant near Whanganui

29 Jul 2025

By Pattrick Smellie | Green hydrogen pioneer Hiringa Energy is deep in planning to develop an “eight-to-nine figure” methanol plant near Whanganui, using a combination of biomass and hydrogen produced using renewable energy.

Insurance
More >

Insurers welcome govt decision to keep NHC levy unchanged

21 Nov 2025

Media release |The Insurance Council of New Zealand | Te Kāhui Inihua o Aotearoa (ICNZ) has welcomed the Government’s decision to leave the Natural Hazards Commission levy unchanged, amid ongoing concerns around the cost-of-living.

Kyoto
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Prime Minister Christopher Luxon with US President Donald Trump in South Korea last week.

Why I’m not outraged at the Govt’s latest climate backsliding

7 Nov 2025

COMMENT: The Government’s latest climate rollbacks underline New Zealand’s long history of a lack of genuine desire to cut emissions, writes Geoff Bertram.

Litigation
More >
The International Court of Justice delivers its landmark advisory opinion on states’ legal obligations to address climate change.

NZ’s rejection of emission targets fuels risk of international law breach

Mon 8 Dec 2025

By Karen Scott, Professor in Law, University of Canterbury | The New Zealand government’s decision this week to reject all of the Climate Change Commission’s emission target recommendations was just the latest in a string of policy statements that weaken the country’s action on climate.

Low carbon
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts (right) with the Prime Minister of Niue, Dalton Tagelagi.

NZ fails to back ‘roadmap’ to phase out fossil fuels at COP

24 Nov 2025

By Liz Kivi | Eighty-six countries including Australia, the UK, Germany, and Ireland backed a proposal at COP30 for national plans on how to quit oil, gas and coal – but New Zealand wasn’t one of them.

Mining
More >

Hello, foreign oligarchs and corporations! Please come and sue the UK for billions

3 Dec 2025

COMMENT: The case of a planned Cumbrian coalmine shows how governments around the world are being threatened by litigation in shadowy offshore courts.

NZ ETS
More >
Climate Change Minister Simon Watts

Govt rushes to pass climate law changes under urgency

Wed 10 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | Legislation to amend the Climate Change Response Act was introduced to Parliament on Monday, and the government intends to rush the changes through under urgency in the next two weeks, avoiding the usual public consultation.

NZ Market Report
More >

NZ's latest climate target 'weak' – Climate Action Tracker

24 Jun 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New Zealand's new international climate target to 2035 is weak, and could even allow for higher emissions than the 2030 target, according to a global scientific project that tracks government climate action.

Oceans
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Storms in the Southern Ocean are producing more rain – and the consequences could be global

Mon 8 Dec 2025

Storms in the Southern Ocean influence weather patterns across Australia, New Zealand and the globe.

Planetary boundaries
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Heatwaves, downpours and droughts – Auckland on track for more extreme weather

1 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New projections show Auckland will face more heatwaves, heavier downpours, worsening droughts and growing coastal threats as climate extremes intensify, according to a new report from Earth Sciences New Zealand.

Plastics
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Govt green lights rural recycling scheme

4 Dec 2025

The Government has approved new regulations to bring rural waste schemes under one unified framework.

Protest
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Shipping movements disrupted as climate change protesters block coal ships

2 Dec 2025

NSW police have arrested 141 people who attempted to block the shipping channel in Newcastle Harbour during Rising Tide protests, which began on Thursday.

Rare earth minerals
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New Zealand Minerals Council chief executive Josie Vidal

Straterra has a new name: the New Zealand Minerals Council

16 Apr 2025

Media release | Straterra has been renamed as New Zealand Minerals Council, says chief executive Josie Vidal.

Renewable energy
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Neighbours fume over plans to axe trees for solar farm

Today 12:15pm

Diane McCarthy, Local Democracy Reporter | Whakatāne District Council has thrown its support behind residents of a country lane distressed about Genesis Energy’s plans to axe their trees.

Science
More >

NZ and US studying "huge unknown" in Antarctic climate science

Today 12:15pm

Media release: Earth Sciences New Zealand | Scientists are measuring a huge unknown in climate science: how much heat Antarctica emits into space.

Tax
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Solar households to get little-noticed tax break

23 Sep 2025

A provision in the government’s latest tax bill would exempt households from paying tax on income they earn by selling excess electricity back to the grid.

Technology
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More than $2m up for grabs for low-emissions farming innovation

Wed 10 Dec 2025

The Ag Emissions Centre and AgriZeroNZ yesterday opened their 2026 innovation investment round.

The House
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Resources Minister Shane Jones

Last minute change to oil and gas legislation over cleanup costs

31 Jul 2025

By Liz Kivi | The government is expected to repeal the oil and gas ban today, with a last-minute amendment handing discretionary power to two ministers over the controversial issue of decommissioning.

Transport
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Seven EU countries pressure European Commission to rethink 2035 diesel and petrol car ban

Tue 9 Dec 2025

Pressure from EU countries, lawmakers and the automotive industry is likely pushing the European Commission to delay the revision of the bloc's ban on diesel and petrol cars by 2035.

United Nations
More >

UN environment report 'hijacked' by US and others over fossil fuels, top scientist says

Today 12:15pm

A key UN report on the state of the global environment has been "hijacked" by the United States and other countries who were unwilling to go along with the scientific findings, the co-chair has told the BBC.

Waste
More >

Kaicycle celebrates ten years of collective climate action in Pōneke

14 Nov 2025

Media release: Kaicycle | Since 2015, Kaicycle has grown from a humble pilot project growing kai and collecting compost on bicycles into the thriving urban farm and composting hub that Wellingtonians know and love.

Water
More >

Study provides a step-change in understanding NZ’s groundwater

28 Nov 2025

Media release | Earth Sciences New Zealand has developed a world-first National Groundwater Age Map and a powerful suite of tools to support the sustainable management of our hidden groundwater resources, from national through to local scales.

Wildfires
More >

Wildfires destroy 40 homes and kill a firefighter in Australia

Tue 9 Dec 2025

There were 52 wildfires burning across New South Wales on Monday and nine remained out of control. A total of 20 homes had destroyed over the weekend in that state.

Wind energy
More >

Australian market operator slashes wind farm predictions amid falling costs for solar and batteries

Today 12:15pm

The body that runs Australia's biggest power market has scaled back its plans for high-voltage power lines and wind farms to meet the country's green energy targets.

More in: Agriculture
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