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Topics tagged with 'Forestry'

More in: Forestry
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Fisheries TAG in the wings as others wind down

7 Nov 2008

A fisheries ETS technical advisory group is due to be set up next year, but most other advisory groups are winding up.

Moses Maladina ... coconut has proved its worth.

Add coconut to biofuel mix, says PNG politician

7 Nov 2008

A Papua New Guinea MP and former deputy prime minister is promoting coconut - either virgin or as copra - as a potential fuel feedstock.

Concrete makers fear dose of the 'coal syndrome'

7 Nov 2008

The Cement and Concrete Association is sustaining its charm offensive for fear of catching the "coal syndrome" - in which a product becomes so politically negative that it's shipped out of the country to be used elsewhere.

David Rhodes ... lobbying in Rome.

EXCLUSIVE: Forest owners make Kyoto advance

4 Nov 2008

The Forest Owners' Association has made a major international advance in its push to get forest-offsetting and other issues included in Kyoto Protocol regulations.

Martijn Wilder ... Australia could be carbon finance hub.

No cap and no fixed price on carbon, investors say

4 Nov 2008

An international gathering of finance and carbon market experts has called on the Australian Government to avoid a price cap or fixed price for emissions permits.

Government's stand against illegal logging backed by forest owners

4 Nov 2008

A Government plan to require all lumber and wood products made from kwila to carry labels verifying that they come from legally-logged forests is strongly supported by the NZ Forest Owners Association.

Nervous foresters: We don't want policy flip-flops

31 Oct 2008

Foresters awaiting regulations due to released at the end of the year in order to make firm calculations of their carbon credits and liabilities fear that a new government might turn the existing policy on its head.

Wayne Swan ... sustained growth, more jobs.

Households up for $1 a day under ETS, says Australian Treasury

31 Oct 2008

Emissions trading will cost Australian households a dollar a day when it starts in 2010, according to economic modeling released yesterday by the federal Treasury.

Brits reluctant investors in climate change, says report

31 Oct 2008

British investors are still failing to grasp the significant opportunity offered by climate change, according to a report from wealth management specialist Holden & Partners.

Andrew Fenton ... fears switch to imported produce.

ETS will put us out of business, says horticulture chief

28 Oct 2008

The horticulture sector’s official body says that the ETS legislation was enacted in dangerous haste and will put many of its members out of business.

Pete Hodgson ... project might need government money.

EXCLUSIVE: Government might back first bioethanol plant

24 Oct 2008

The Government is involved in talks which could see a 10-million-litre biorefinery, converting plant material to enthanol, built in New Zealand within three years.

Stavros Dimas ... developed countries must pay.

EC eyes market solution to deforestation

24 Oct 2008

The European Commission has called for a target to halt global deforestation by 2030, to be delivered partially through a Global Forest Carbon Mechanism (GFCM), under a post-2012 climate agreement.

Tsakounis Global to investigate JI coal methane projects in Australia.

22 Oct 2008

Following the recent passing of the New Zealand Emissions Trading legislation, Environmental Intermediaries & Trading Group Limited has appointed Tsakounis Global to investigate Joint Implementation Projects for Coal Mine Methane in Australia.

Biodeisel demand fuels price of wood waste

21 Oct 2008

Solid Energy’s demand for high-grade biomass materials is forcing up prices for sawmill shavings and other prime process residue.

Forests back in fashion as weapon to combat climate change

17 Oct 2008

Perhaps one of the greatest natural defences against climate change, the Earth's forests, got a boost this week with British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and a host of environmental lawyers throwing their support behind plans to protect them and eventually include the forestry sector in carbon markets.

We're wasting our wood resource, says biofuel innovator

14 Oct 2008

A world-leading New Zealand innovator says he despairs over the country's inertia when it comes to using its abundant wood waste resource.

Jim Anderton ... the government must be sensible and pragmatic.

Anderton vows to shelter farmers troubled by ETS

14 Oct 2008

Agriculture Minister Jim Anderton has vowed to do all he can to shelter farmers from any adverse effects of the emissions trading scheme.

Clyde Dam .. wrong side of the alps?

Hydro schemes on wrong side of the island, says report

14 Oct 2008

A long-range rainfall forecast has ignited a controversy that the bulk of the South Island hydro capacity was built on the wrong side of the Southern Alps.

FORUM: Institute of Forestry reply

10 Oct 2008

It is time for politicians and farm leaders to stop using knowledge of cobalt deficiency and incomplete economic analysis as excuses for deforestation, says NZ Institute of Forestry president Andrew McEwen.

Reducing greenhouse gases one fridge at a time.

10 Oct 2008

Natural refrigeration specialist company Arneg New Zealand is to tell this year’s New Zealand Cold Storage Association conference that the industry needs to do more to reduce the effect of refrigeration systems on the environment.

David Parker ... Government has provided safety valve.

Major players say no to carbon price-cap proposal

7 Oct 2008

A call for a price-cap on carbon in New Zealand is supported by neither the Government nor significant industry players spoken to by Carbon News.

Nick Smith ... businesses must make their own risk assessment.

No need for panic-buying, Smith tells businesses

7 Oct 2008

The National Party is not pushing the panic-button over the issue of businesses buying carbon credits - despite companies being urged to consider buying sooner rather than later.

Port of Westport ... bar not the problem, say Coasters.

Our shipping treated badly, say West Coast businesses

7 Oct 2008

West Coast business interests say that the carbon emissions trading regime is being deliberately slanted to favour rail over coastal shipping, effectively by-passing Westport and Greymouth as coal exporting ports.

Stockton mine ... going for deeper coal.

Asian coal demand gives longer life to Stockton mine

3 Oct 2008

Solid Energy’s Stockton coal mine will operate for at least another 20 years.

Old Tianjin is starting a new life as a carbon exchange city.

Lawyers smile as carbon trading warms up in Tianjin

3 Oct 2008

Many CDM projects and carbon transactions have taken place in China since 2005, but some recent developments in the legal framework and the market place may turn a new page in China’s participation to mitigate climate change.

Kiwi company claims world first for charcoal

30 Sep 2008

A world-first invention has been unveiled in Blenheim today with multi-billion dollar earning potential and the ability to impact on carbon capture on a global scale.

NZ directors are running on empty with carbon risk knowlewdge.

Bosses know little of carbon risk, survey shows

30 Sep 2008

Most of the people running New Zealand companies have no idea of their enterprises’ carbon risk.

Shane Ahern ... prepared to go into bat for forest industry.

Nats vow to sweep new broom through forest industry

26 Sep 2008

National hopes to sweep a new broom through the forestry sector, promising changes to the Resource Management Act, pushing for offsetting to be included in the Kyoto Protocol, and creating open, regular dialogue between the government and industry.

ANALYSIS: Our future under K2 bleak without forestry

26 Sep 2008

The release of the National Party’s forestry policy has received a warm reception from the sector, with the New Zealand Forest Owner’s Association applauding the party for listening to the industry.

Plastic pallets ... lighter, safer, more durable.

Pallet-maker puts the heat on plastic bags

26 Sep 2008

A Christchurch company has developed a heat process that converts consumer plastics into industrial freight pallets.

Rwanda aims for 30 per cent forest cover by 2030.

Canadians will pay Rwandans to plant trees

23 Sep 2008

A Canadian carbon offset development company plans to invest $US17m on reforestation projects in Rwanda over the next 20 years.

Steve Wilton ... expects forest costs to be high.

Promises, promises ... but what are the costs, asks forester

19 Sep 2008

The “Cassandra of carbon trading” says that the ETS-era is characterised with promises of rewards, yet riddled with unknown costs to achieve them.

Mark Franklin ... talking to large companies.

Carbon platform eyes start early next year

16 Sep 2008

New Zealand’s carbon platform, TZ1, should be trading by the first quarter of next year.

ETS picture becoming clearer for forest owners

16 Sep 2008

The forestry sector will know precisely how to participate in the emissions trading scheme when the forestry stakeholder reference group meets with MAF at the end of the month.

Forest owners: Problems have not gone away

12 Sep 2008

The treatment of pre-1990 forests under the emissions trading scheme will emerge again as a major issue, warns the New Zealand Forest Owners’ Association.

REACTION: Greens: ETS a first step, time for some big strides now

12 Sep 2008

The passing of the Emissions Trading Scheme is the first small step towards getting New Zealand’s carbon emissions under control – there is still much work to be done, the Green Party says.

LETTER: Bad news for Ngai Tahu

12 Sep 2008

In Carbon News (5 Sept 2008) Willie Te Aho was quoted as saying that the deforestation liability for Ngai Tahu would be around $15,000 per hectare for changing the use of its 80,000 hectare pre-1990 forest estate.

Forest owners first to feel effects of ETS

11 Sep 2008

Forest owners will be the first New Zealanders into the emissions trading scheme - with the first entering within 10 weeks.

New world of emissions - what happens and when

11 Sep 2008

The mandatory reporting period for pre-1990 forests starts this year, with ETS obligations and entitlements accruing all year, and a surrender date of December 31 next year.

Bunny McDiarmid ... time to stop squabbling.

REACTION: Thank god that's over, now back to the climate, says Greenpeace

11 Sep 2008

Greenpeace is calling on political parties to outline their future plans for tackling climate change, now the emissions trading scheme has been passed into law.

Dr Peter Read

FORUM: Biochar holds many of the answers for climate change

11 Sep 2008

Biochar technology is an environmental triple-whammy, so why is it under attack? By Dr Peter Read.

Govt all talk and no action, says vehicle emissions group

9 Sep 2008

The Government needs to put its money where its mouth is when it comes to lowering vehicle emissions, says a high-powered lobby group.

ValueAdd model promotes 'carbon farming'

9 Sep 2008

The ValueAdd Company has just completed an Emission Trading Scheme analytical model relating to so-called “carbon farming”, one of the “business opportunities” promoted extensively by the supporters of the bill, the company says in a statement.

David Parker ... sympathy for landowners.

Parker: Not the time to move on offset planting

5 Sep 2008

Allowing land-owners to transfer forestry blocks to marginal land now would shoot New Zealand’s long-term international interests in the foot, says Climate Change Minister David Parker

Te Ururoa Flavell ... millions at stake.

Govt: ETS forestry compo benefits large number of iwi

5 Sep 2008

The Government claims a large number of iwi believe the compensation package under the emissions trading scheme gives them a net benefit rather than a net cost.

Tribal group challenges Parker's ETS support claim

5 Sep 2008

A major iwi is challenging Climate Change Minister David Parker’s claim that most tribes support the emissions trading bill.

National’s ETS changes: devilish cost in the detail

5 Sep 2008

ANALYSIS - The further glimpses of National Party emissions trading policy “detail” in the past few days show it might take some risks with the taxpayers’ purse.

Nick Smith .. preparing to allow more emissions through intensity-based measurement for trade-exposed businesses?

Rare glimpse of National's post-election ETS policy detail

5 Sep 2008

National may have pointed to its possible course on emissions trading law if it forms the government after this year’s election.

First publicly-displayed credits on TZ1 registry

2 Sep 2008

TZ1 and GreenAir Ltd have announced the first carbon credits to be publicly listed on TZ1's Registry.

Gold Coast Convention & Exhibition Centre 30-31 October 2008

2 Sep 2008

The Australian Federal Minister for Climate Change and Water, Senator the Hon Penny Wong will address the inaugural Carbon Market Expo Australasia on the Gold Coast 29th-31st October.

Adaptation
More >

Conservation bill risks climate goals, lawyers say

Wed 1 Jul 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Lawyers for Climate Action NZ says the Government's plan to change the law to encourage economic development on conservation land could undermine New Zealand's climate goals by weakening the land's ability to store carbon, as well as allowing new sources of emissions such as mining.

Agriculture
More >

Strong El Niño raises drought and wildfire concerns

Thu 2 Jul 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | A newly declared El Niño is expected to bring drier conditions to parts of New Zealand over the coming months, increasing the risk of drought, water shortages and wildfires, while experts warn communities should prepare for potentially significant impacts.

Airlines
More >

$30m airline fund risks ‘burning public money’ without lasting benefit – expert

20 Mar 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | A $30 million government package to support regional air routes risks delivering poor value for money while increasing emissions, according to transport strategist Tim Adriaansen.

Aviation
More >

‘They want to destroy Corsia’: Brussels takes aim again at airline emissions

Thu 2 Jul 2026

The European Commission is planning to shoot down the International Civil Aviation Organisation’s (ICAO) largely voluntary decarbonisation scheme, CORSIA, when it presents plans to overhaul the EU’s carbon pricing system, sources suggest.

Biodiversity
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Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment Simon Upton

Upton warns of 'expensive mess' if catchments carved up

Wed 1 Jul 2026

The Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment has warned the Government risks creating an "expensive mess" if it abolishes regional councils without first deciding which environmental functions must still be managed at catchment or regional scale.

Biofuels
More >

Inaction on shipping decarbonisation could cost NZ up to $94b by 2050, report says

Tue 30 Jun 2026

By Oli Lewis | Failing to support and enable the decarbonisation of the shipping industry could result in losses of $17.5 billion to $94.4b to the New Zealand economy by 2050, according to a report from the Aotearoa Circle.

Carbon Credits
More >

Tens of millions swelter as heatwave blasts US

Thu 2 Jul 2026

Tens of millions of Americans sweltered under furnace-like temperatures Tuesday as central and eastern cities hunkered down for a heat wave set to last through the July 4 holiday weekend.

Carbon News world
More >

Ocean surface temperatures hit record high as world enters ‘uncharted territory,’ scientists warn

Today 12:15pm

“The planet is warming because we’re emitting vast quantities of greenhouse gases, primarily from fossil fuel burning,” one expert said.

Carbon prices
More >
Biochar

Carbon markets and biochar: a golden opportunity for NZ?

Wed 1 Jul 2026

By John O’Brien | COMMENT: New Zealand’s abundant and increasing forestry waste could become a multi-billion dollar opportunity for biochar carbon sequestration – as long as the right policies, programmes, and incentives are in place.

Coal
More >

China's coal power on the rise again in 2026, reversing first-in-a-decade decline

25 Jun 2026

China's coal-fired power generation is set to rebound this year from its first fall in a decade, analysts said, due to the impact of El Nino and ‌the Iran war and as renewable sources of energy have failed to keep pace with demand.

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

Politicians need to lead on climate: Carr

Tue 30 Jun 2026

As the election campaign heats up, former Climate Change Commission chair Rod Carr has a list of actions he's hoping to see from our aspiring leaders, which includes confronting climate denial as well as refusing funds or policy advice from vested interests.

Construction
More >
Andrew Eagles, NZGBC chief executive (centre) launched the manifesto last week

Green building council calls for clean energy policies

18 May 2026

The New Zealand Green Building Council has released its 2026 election manifesto calling for policies to reduce energy waste in buildings, lower household and business energy costs, and improve New Zealand’s energy security.

COP
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Parliament Buildings, Budapest

What Magyar’s defeat of Orbán in Hungary means for climate and energy

21 Apr 2026

Hungary has played a disproportionate role in EU climate and energy policy in recent years, by repeatedly vetoing climate action and by delaying the phaseout of Russian fossil-fuel imports.

Emissions trading
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BNZ and Pāmu team up on ‘carbon insetting’ with existing native forests

Tue 30 Jun 2026

By Liz Kivi | BNZ and state-owned enterprise Pāmu (Landcorp) have teamed up on what they say could be a model for landowners to earn revenue from existing native forests, while businesses pay for carbon removals. The organisations involved say this is “not offsetting,” with less stringent rules needed than for carbon credits.

Energy
More >

Taranaki offshore wind developer eyes mid-2030s commissioning after law change

Today 12:15pm

By Oli Lewis | The first offshore wind farm in New Zealand could be commissioned by the mid-2030s, with its developer saying a new permitting framework has bolstered investor confidence.

Extinction
More >
WWF-New Zealand chief executive Kayla Kingdon-Bebb

Environmental groups call for ETS reform

20 Feb 2026

Several environmental organisations are calling on political parties to make climate and biodiversity central to the 2026 election campaign, with reforming the Emissions Trading Scheme seen as a key priority.

Extreme weather
More >

Confidence in tackling climate risks remains low

Today 12:15pm

By Shannon Morris-Williams |New Zealanders have little faith in the country's ability to tackle climate risks, with a new poll finding fewer than one in three are confident the country can reduce the impacts of climate change, while many are calling for stronger Government leadership on climate hazards.

Fishing
More >

Tarakihi on verge of extinction: Stock collapse exposes major fisheries management failings

Today 12:15pm

Media release: Environmental Defence Society | Fisheries NZ is consulting on new sustainability measures for the country’s two tarakihi stocks.

Fossil fuels
More >

EECA seeks answers on NZ's future fuel mix

Today 12:15pm

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority is looking for specialists to assess the role future low-emissions fuels could play in New Zealand’s energy system.

Gas
More >
Rewiring Aotearoa chief executive Mike Casey

Savings gap doubles: all-electric households stand to save $3000 a year, report finds

Mon 29 Jun 2026

By Oli Lewis | The economic incentive for households to electrify has become more compelling, although overcoming upfront installation costs remains a barrier.

Geothermal
More >
Resources Minister Shane Jones at Marsden Point last week

Cabinet green-lights $55M super-critical geothermal drilling programme

9 Jun 2026

By Pattrick Smellie | Cabinet has agreed to release the $55 million unspent of the $60m secured by Resources Minister Shane Jones to drill up to 5 kilometres deep into super-critical geothermal heat under the Taupō volcanic zone.

Green finance
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World Bank to abandon goal to devote 45% of lending resources to climate change projects

Wed 1 Jul 2026

The World Bank Group said on Monday it will "retire" its previous goal ‌to devote 45% of its annual lending resources to projects with climate co-benefits, but extend its longstanding Climate Change Action Plan that was due to expire on Tuesday.

Greenhouse Effect
More >
Myles Allen (left) and Pattrick Smellie

Carbon capture and the need for ‘net zero oil’

16 Jun 2026

By Pattrick Smellie | The answer to making carbon capture and storage work is to make fossil fuel producers responsible for making it happen rather than consumers, says Oxford University climate change policy expert, Professor Myles Allen.

Greenwashing
More >

Govt climate claims don't match reality, lawyers say

17 Jun 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Lawyers for Climate Action has accused the Government of presenting an overly positive picture of New Zealand's climate progress at the United Nations climate summit in Bonn, arguing key claims on emissions reductions and support for the Paris Agreement's 1.5°C goal are not reflected in domestic policy.

Hydro power
More >
Lake Onslow

Lake Onslow pumped hydro consortium secures funding for consent push

26 Jun 2026

By Oli Lewis | The consortium behind Lake Onslow pumped hydro has secured funding to finalise its resource consent application, aiming to lodge it under the fast-track process before 2027.

Hydrogen
More >
Kapuni Project Wind Turbines in South Taranaki - Visual Simulation

Ballance secures gas for 2026 as it progresses energy transition plan

16 Jun 2026

By Oli Lewis | One of the largest industrial gas users in New Zealand is working on an energy transition plan to futureproof domestic fertiliser manufacturing, while continuing to secure ongoing gas supply contracts.

Insurance
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$75k up for grabs for climate resilience and inclusion projects

25 Jun 2026

Community organisations and charities working to strengthen climate resilience and social inclusion can apply for a share of $75,000 through the QBE Foundation's 2026 Local Grants.

Kyoto
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Waitangi Treaty Grounds

Climate law change spanner in the works for Waitangi Tribunal Inquiry

19 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | The Government’s controversial changes to New Zealand’s legal framework for climate policy have thrown a spanner in the works for a long-running Waitangi Tribunal Inquiry into climate change.

Litigation
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Labour climate spokesperson Deborah Russell

Labour promises to repeal bill to block climate lawsuits

Today 12:15pm

By Liz Kivi | The Government bill aiming to block climate lawsuits passed its first reading under urgency after a heated debate in Parliament last night, with the Labour Party promising it will repeal the bill if elected in November.

LNG
More >
Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment Simon Upton

Commissioner ‘unconvinced’ LNG is the best dry-year solution

26 Jun 2026

By Liz Kivi | The Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment has told the Energy Minister he is “unconvinced” the government’s proposed LNG import terminal is the best ‘dry year’ solution for the country, and criticised the Government’s “extremely limited” options analysis.

Low carbon
More >
Ed Harvey

Australia is at least ten years ahead of us on solar. It’s time we caught up.

Today 12:15pm

By Ed Harvey | OPINION: Starting this week, millions of households across New South Wales, South Australia and Southeast Queensland will have access to three hours of free electricity every single day.

Market advice
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Climate risks could reshape business finances, new guidance warns

15 Apr 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New guidance warns climate change is set to fundamentally reshape financial outcomes for businesses, including difficult-to-model climate “tipping points” – irreversible changes such as ice sheet collapse or ocean circulation shifts – which threaten severe and sudden financial impacts.

Methane
More >

UN chief says fossil fuel industry must cut methane for warming “relief”

25 Jun 2026

UN chief António Guterres called for stronger action to cut emissions of planet-heating methane, taking aim at the fossil fuel industry’s practices and profits, and pointing to coal, oil and gas as the root of today’s climate and energy crises.

Mining
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New report sounds alarm on risks of unregulated radioactivity from deep-sea mining

Today 12:15pm

Media release | A groundbreaking scientific report released today by the Deep Sea Mining Campaign exposes a critical, unaddressed threat to global ocean health: the mobilisation of naturally occurring radioactive materials by proposed deep sea mining operations.

NZ ETS
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Forestry at heart of ETS problems – commissioner

24 Jun 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Forestry is a central driver of growing problems within New Zealand's Emissions Trading Scheme, Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment Simon Upton told the Environment Select Committee during Parliamentary Scrutiny Week.

Oil
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Political debate at Electrify Queenstown

Hipkins pans LNG plan as ‘massive step backwards’

19 May 2026

By Liz Kivi | Labour leader Chris Hipkins has told a Queenstown audience that a Government he leads would not proceed with a planned LNG import terminal, if elected at November’s election.

Planetary boundaries
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A real ‘intergenerational equity’ budget would address Australia’s unceasing environmental decline

15 May 2026

Labor has unveiled a budget designed to tackle intergenerational equity in Australia through bold tax reform.

Plastics
More >

UN plastics pact talks restart amid fears production curbs will be left out

Thu 2 Jul 2026

Diplomats reconvene a year after negotiations collapsed, but campaigners fear the agenda risks burying tricky discussions on key elements.

Politics
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Media round-up

Today 12:15pm

In our round-up of climate coverage in local media: Getting the most impact from the Government's investment in school solar; NZ needs an objective assessment of LNG imports and renewable storage options; and while greener suburbs are healthier on all kinds of metrics, achieving them isn’t straightforward.

Protest
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Northern Thai residents march for action on polluted rivers. ‘This is an emergency’

9 Jun 2026

More than 600 residents of Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai provinces embarked May 31 on a roughly 68-kilometer, six-day ‘peace walk’ to demand the Thai government take action on the river pollution crisis that has seen Thai rivers polluted with heavy metals.

Rare earth minerals
More >

US defence spending on critical minerals surges in the last decade

22 Jun 2026

Members of communities affected by some of these projects said that U.S. state backing has meant projects are being fast-tracked without the necessary social and environmental checks or meaningful consultation.

Regulation
More >

A tale of two electricity systems as NZ and Australia roll out new cost-saving measures

Wed 1 Jul 2026

By Oli Lewis | New rules requiring electricity retailers to offer time-of-use pricing plans, where consumers can access lower-cost electricity at off-peak times, have come into effect.

Renewable energy
More >

Offshore renewable energy bill passes, opening path for developers

Thu 2 Jul 2026

By Oli Lewis | Feasibility permits for offshore wind developments could be issued within months after the Government passed a long-awaited law to establish a regulatory regime.

Resource management
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Labour won't scrap RMA replacement laws: Hipkins

26 Jun 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Labour Party leader Chris Hipkins says New Zealand needs to move beyond the "repeal and replace" approach to resource management, confirming the party would amend rather than scrap the Government's RMA reforms, if elected.

Science
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Climate scientist wins 'emerging scientist' prize

Wed 1 Jul 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | University of Waikato scientist Luke Harrington has been awarded the Prime Minister's MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize for developing new ways to measure how climate change is increasing the likelihood and intensity of extreme weather.

Tax
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Associate Professor Ru Hong

Carbon trading schemes cut more emissions than carbon taxes, according to global study

20 Mar 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Carbon trading schemes are more effective than carbon taxes at reducing emissions, cutting fossil fuel use, and accelerating the shift to renewable energy, a global study has found.

Technology
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Lack of finance stalling sustainable innovation – report

12 Jun 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | A lack of access to suitable finance is threatening growth in New Zealand's sustainable innovation sector, despite strong confidence and ambitious expansion plans among purpose-driven businesses, according to a new report.

The House
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Pacific climate response in question as NZ finance remains unclear

19 Dec 2025

By Shannon Morris-Williams | With New Zealand's $1.3 billion international climate finance commitment set to end with no clarity on what follows, the Auditor-General says oversight of that funding remains patchy and long-term outcomes are unclear.

Transport
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New Delhi offers residents $1,000 to scrap old cars for EVs to curb air pollution

Thu 2 Jul 2026

India's capital New Delhi will offer a cash incentive of over$1,000 to car owners willing to scrap their old vehicle for an EV, according to a new ‌policy finalised by the government on Monday in a move aimed at reducing high levels of air pollution.

United Nations
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‘Those blocking climate science are not our friends': Pacific leaders warn at Bonn talks

23 Jun 2026

Pacific nations and civil society groups have united at UN climate talks, pushing back against efforts to weaken agreed language on global temperature limits as negotiations continue behind closed doors.

Waste
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Next Govt must restart action on plastic pollution

Wed 1 Jul 2026

Media release - Zero Waste Aotearoa | Plastic Free July begins with an urgent call to put plastic pollution back on the political agenda. Plastic Free July is a worldwide campaign to reduce plastic waste and eliminate single use plastics.

Water
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Waikato river

Waikato Council advances water security action plan

23 Jun 2026

Waikato Regional Council has endorsed a new action plan to strengthen the region’s water security.

Wildfires
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Increase in wildfire-driven ozone linked to premature deaths across the U.S.

10 Jun 2026

Smog linked to wildfires is getting worse across much of the U.S., playing a role in more than 300 additional premature deaths every year since 2013, researchers say.

More in: Forestry
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