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Topics tagged with 'United Nations'

More in: United Nations
Previous 1 ... 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 ... 42 37 of 42 Next

Escape to New Zealand, Americans told

17 Mar 2009

The Washington Post has cited New Zealand as the destination of choice for those seeking to escape what it describes as the “fear of looming environmental disaster.”

Lord Stern ... inaction is inexcusable.

Scientists slam ‘weak, ineffective’ governments

17 Mar 2009

The world’s top scientists have urged “weak and ineffective” governments to stand up to big business and “vested interests” in order to address the alarming climate impact.

Al Gore ... writing on the wall.

Gore optimistic for climate deal in December

17 Mar 2009

Former US vice-president Al Gore is optimistic that a global deal to combat climate change would be agreed at a summit in December.

Nick Smith ... getting rid of 'expensive slogans.'

Govt setting bad example, says UN award winner

13 Mar 2009

The scaling back of government green initiatives is setting a bad example for the private sector, says a Wellington environmental consultancy that has just been recognised by the United Nations.

Lamar Alexander ... now's not the time.

US senators attack Obama’s cap-and-trade proposal

13 Mar 2009

The United States should not impose a cap-and-trade system to battle climate change this year because it amounts to a painful tax during a deep recession, senators argued this week.

Sea level could rise twice as fast, warn scientists

13 Mar 2009

By the end of the century, sea levels might rise twice as much as was predicted two years ago in the fourth assessment report by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Angry EU farmers oppose livestock-gas tax

13 Mar 2009

Proposals to tax the flatulence of cows and other livestock have been denounced by farming groups in the Irish Republic and Denmark.

Rajendra Pachauri ... IPCC chairman.

Bad news on way as scientists give climate update

10 Mar 2009

Climate scientists are preparing for bad news as they review the latest data on global warming at a conference beginning today in Copenhagen.

Gordon Brown ... US leadership critical.

British PM urges US to lead on climate change

6 Mar 2009

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has urged the United States to harness historic global goodwill to pull the world out of its economic slump and lead the charge against climate change.

UN drives roadmap for halving car emissions

6 Mar 2009

With the world's car fleet expected to triple by 2050, a roadmap to halve greenhouse gas emissions from automobiles by that date was laid out by United Nations at the Geneva Motor Show.

New report slams state of world’s fisheries

6 Mar 2009

The fishing industry must do more to confront the effects of climate change as well as get a grip on the perennial problem of overfishing, says a new UN report.

Superfund continues to invest in nuclear weapons, say Greens

6 Mar 2009

Four months after a commitment to divest the New Zealand Superfund from companies involved in manufacturing nuclear weapons and cluster bombs, the Green Party called on the Government to set a deadline to sell its remaining $25 million investment.

Barack Obama ... the global equation has shifted.

Obama raises hopes for Copenhagen climate pact

3 Mar 2009

Until recently, the idea that the world’s most powerful nations might come together to tackle global warming seemed an environmentalist’s pipedream.

'Alive and well' AAUs surviving money crisis

3 Mar 2009

The market for government-level emissions rights under the Kyoto Protocol is alive and well, mostly unfazed by the global economic downturn, according to Reuters.

Planted forests critical to wood supplies, says UN

3 Mar 2009

Planted forests which provided wood that is renewable, energy efficient and environmentally friendly have become increasingly critical to future supplies, according to a new study by the United Nations.

Lord Stern ... mass migrations will set off mass conflict.

Stern warns of ‘extended world war' over climate

24 Feb 2009

If countries don't deal with climate change decisively, "we're talking about extended world war," eminent British economist Lord Nicholas Stern has warned.

UN: Heat waves and extreme drought will increase with climate change

24 Feb 2009

The severe drought and searing heat that recently allowed wildfires to char much of Australia will oppress wide swathes of the earth with increasing frequency this century, according to a forecast by scientists who met last week in Beijing, China.

UN urges green revolution to rescue the world’s hungry

20 Feb 2009

Unless major changes are made - including the way food is produced, handled and disposed of around the world - last year’s food crisis which plunged millions back into hunger may foreshadow an even bigger crisis in the years to come, the UN has warned.

Beijing Olympics raises bar on green sporting events

20 Feb 2009

Last year's Beijing Olympics set new records for eco-friendly mass spectator sporting events by raising the bar on many of the high environmental standards it set itself, according to a new UN report.

Global warming worse than we thought, say scientists

17 Feb 2009

The pace of global warming is likely to be much faster than recent predictions, because industrial greenhouse gas emissions have increased more quickly than expected, according to scientists.

Hillary Clinton ... message for China.

Clinton tries to build climate change pact with China

17 Feb 2009

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hopes to recruit China as a partner in American efforts to reduce global warming on her first official tour through Asia this week.

Barack Obama ... UN appearance would send strong signal.

UN chief lines up Obama for debut appearance

13 Feb 2009

US President Barack Obama is expected to make his first appearance at the United Nations next month.

Explorer Graphics works help MFE map soil carbon

13 Feb 2009

Porirua-based Geographic Information Systems company Explorer Graphics Limited says it has signed a major contract with the Ministry for the Environment to help it meet New Zealand's requirements under the Kyoto Protocol.

Millions in Asia face growing water stress, UN warns

10 Feb 2009

Hundreds of millions of South Asians face growing water stress due to over exploitation, climate change and inadequate cooperation among countries, which are threatening river basins that sustain about half of the region’s 1.5 billion people, the United Nations warns in a new report.

Carbon trading may be new sub-prime, says energy boss

3 Feb 2009

The row over the working of the European Union’s emissions trading scheme has intensified with EDF Energy warning that speculators risked turning carbon into a new category of sub-prime investment.

Big UK polluters abusing EU carbon trading scheme

30 Jan 2009

Britain’s biggest polluting companies are abusing a European emissions trading scheme designed to tackle global warming by cashing in their carbon credits in order to bolster ailing balance sheets.

Asian cities team up to prepare for climate change

30 Jan 2009

Asian cities will form a network to prevent disasters and prepare for the impacts of climate change with initial backing of around $50 million from the US-based Rockefeller Foundation.

Todd Stern ... will lead US Kyoto negotiations.

Clinton names key US climate change envoy

27 Jan 2009

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton today appointed a special envoy for climate change, vowing that the Obama administration would restore America's credentials and leadership in shaping environmental policy.

Japan satellite to measure carbon gases from space

27 Jan 2009

Japan has launched the first satellite to monitor greenhouse gases worldwide, a tool to help scientists better judge where global warming emissions are coming from, and how much is being absorbed by the oceans and forests.

New Zealand should join the new International Renewable Energy Agency

27 Jan 2009

About 100 states will be meeting in Bonn this week to establish an International Renewable Energy Agency (http://www.irena.org/), but New Zealand has not yet committed to being there.

President Obama ... US will harness the sun and the wind.

Obama vows to pioneer renewable energy revolution

23 Jan 2009

President Barack Obama has promised the American people the country will pioneer a green revolution in renewable energy.

Ban Ki-Moon ... Un shares goals with Obama.

‘Optimistic’ UN chief greets new US president

23 Jan 2009

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has, “with great optimism,” congratulated Barack Obama on his inauguration as President of the United States, stressing that America and the UN share a number of common goals.

Achim Steiner ... Green New Deal an idea whose time has come.

UN hails green stimulus plans by Japan and Korea

23 Jan 2009

The decisions of Japan and the Republic of Korea to invest billions of dollars in environmentally smart projects to create jobs and spur economic growth has been applauded by the United Nations.

Scientists find out how fish poo fights climate change

23 Jan 2009

Scientists have discovered that fish play a major role in the marine carbon cycle, making them unexpected allies against climate change.

World carbon market could be worth $150 billion this year

16 Jan 2009

Despite the slumping economy, the value of the worldwide carbon market soared 84 per cent in 2008 to reach $118 billion, and could reach $150 billion this year.

UN carbon trading scheme suspends reluctant Russia

16 Jan 2009

The immaturity of one of the United Nation’s flagship carbon trading schemes has been underlined after Russia was suspended from registering carbon credits on the international transaction log (ITL) as a result of unpaid fees.

EU slashes emission caps on utilities, factories

19 Dec 2008

The European Union approved tighter emission caps on energy and manufacturing companies as of 2013, bolstering the world’s biggest greenhouse-gas market in a bid to spur the US and China to help to fight climate change.

2008 among 10 warmest years on record, UN experts say

19 Dec 2008

The year 2008 is likely to rank as the 10th warmest year on record since the beginning of the instrumental climate records in 1850, although the global average temperature was slightly lower than previous years of the 21st century, according to United Nations weather experts.

Waitakere joins international climate change network

19 Dec 2008

Waitakere has become the first New Zealand city to join an international initiative aimed at combating the environmental effects of climate change.

Poznan positives: At least some progress is being made

16 Dec 2008

If one message has emerged from the long and often tortuous hours of climate negotiations in recent years, it is this: In the end, progress is being made.

Al Gore ... 'I say it can be done.'

Focus on climate, not O.J. or Paris Hilton, urges Gore

16 Dec 2008

Climate change campaigner Al Gore urged the world to fight on against global warming at the conclusion of UN climate talks at Poznan instead of focusing on celebrity news like the legal woes of O.J. Simpson and Paris Hilton’s latest shopping escapade.

George W.Bush ... welling of disdain.

Poznan delegates (happily) say bye-bye to Bush

16 Dec 2008

US President George W. Bush's last hurrah in the global climate arena has met with a welling of disdain contrasting with the outsized expectations for his successor Barack Obama.

We're losing coral reefs at an alarming rate, says report

16 Dec 2008

The world has already lost nearly one-fifth of its coral reefs and many of the remaining reefs could be denuded of life over the next 20 to 40 years as a result of climate change and other threats, the Global Reef Monitoring Network says.

Tim Groser ... we will participate constructively.

Critics slam NZ attitude at Poznan climate talks

12 Dec 2008

New Zealand is making a name for itself at the UN climate change summit in Poznan – for all the wrong reasons.

Ban Ki-moon ... the world is watching us.

UN chief calls for ‘Green New Deal’ at climate talks

12 Dec 2008

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today called for renewed global solidarity to tackle the twin challenges of climate change and the financial crisis, telling ministers gathered at the Poznan conference that the world cannot afford to let economic woes hinder progress on “the defining challenge of our era.”

Poznan pressure groups blast Australia

12 Dec 2008

Environmental groups have blasted Australia as the single biggest disappointment at climate change talks in Poland, saying it was "Groundhog Day" with the Rudd Government acting like the Howard government.

No country doing the job, say climate change watchdogs

12 Dec 2008

The climate watchdogs who rated New Zealand as one of the worst at dealing with greenhouse gas emissions believe no country is worth praising for its efforts in fighting climate change.

Climate experts begin to doubt renewables, says survey

12 Dec 2008

Support for renewable energy technology to fight global warming is weakening in the face of worldwide economic problems and the true scale of the carbon reductions required, a new survey has suggested.

Like the weather, Poznan climate talks go cool

9 Dec 2008

At the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change conference in Bali last year, the sweltering weather was a convenient motif both for global warming and the heat of arguments as negotiators scrambled to produce the Bali roadmap.

Yvo de Boer ... the system is sound.

UN defends American attack on carbon trading scheme

9 Dec 2008

The UN’s top climate official has defended a global trading scheme to reduce greenhouse gas emissions after the US government released a report questioning its efficacy.

Adaptation
More >
Flooding in Motueka, July 2021

New research on climate adaptation as severe weather hits

Today 12:00pm

As extreme weather batters the country yet again, researchers have published the first ever empirical study of climate adaptation justice in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Agriculture
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Outdated land-use system unfit for modern environmental regulation, commissioner warns

Today 12:00pm

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New Zealand’s long-standing Land Use Capability (LUC) system is no longer fit for regulatory decision-making, according to a new review from the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment.

Airlines
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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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Why Trump might be onboard with a UN carbon-offset programme for airlines

Thu 12 Feb 2026

The president’s team has backed the rollout of an initiative that calls for the use of sustainable aviation fuel and carbon credits, even as Trump has pulled back from other international emissions-reduction efforts.

Biodiversity
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World fight against invasive species comes to Auckland

Tue 10 Feb 2026

Media release: University of Auckland | From countering invasive pink salmon in Norway to controlling feral cats in the Cayman Islands, knowledge on eradicating invasive species will be shared by international experts in New Zealand.

Biofuels
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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
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Carbon market rallies but auction floor still out of reach

Fri 13 Feb 2026

By Liz Kivi | The carbon market has rallied, with secondary market prices up more than 25% in the past two weeks, although current prices in the mid-$40s are still far below this year’s $71 auction floor, with the first auction of 2026 less than three weeks away.

Carbon News world
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US pressures Vanuatu at UN over ICJ’s landmark climate change ruling

Today 12:00pm

The United States is urging governments to pressure Vanuatu to withdraw a United Nations draft resolution supporting a landmark International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling that countries have a legal obligation to act on climate change.

Carbon prices
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Climate Change Commission chair Dame Patsy Reddy with Climate Change Minister Simon Watts

Minister’s letters: Mildly positive or just virtue signalling?

5 Feb 2026

By Liz Kivi | The carbon market was buoyed slightly yesterday, after letters between the Government and the Climate Change Commission were proactively released.

Coal
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Flawed decision-making around taxing electricity to fund LNG import terminal

Today 12:00pm

By Simon Orme | COMMENT: The Government's decision to back an LNG import terminal exemplifies an egregious failure in public policy and energy sector governance.

Comment
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LNG: a rational choice compared to unpalatable alternatives

Tue 10 Feb 2026

By Pattrick Smellie | COMMENT: By deciding to underwrite the private construction of a liquefied natural gas import facility in Taranaki, the Government has made a rational choice in favour of energy security and affordability.

Construction
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RMA’s successors hinge on two untested bets

17 Dec 2025

Two ideas sit at the heart of the Government’s replacement for the Resource Management Act: regulatory relief and spatial planning.

COP
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Resources Minister Shane Jones and New Zealand First deputy leader Shane Jones

Opposition attacks Govt over fossil fuel phaseout backdown

2 Feb 2026

By Liz Kivi | Revelations that Resources Minister Shane Jones ruled out New Zealand signing up to a 'road map' away from fossil fuels at last year’s global climate summit show the National Party’s minor coalition partners’ undue influence over the Government, according to Labour leader Chris Hipkins.

Emissions trading
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EU weighing options to support industry in carbon market overhaul

9 Feb 2026

The European Commission is looking at various ways to support industries in an upcoming overhaul of the EU carbon market to prevent them moving to areas with lower pollution standards, the head of the Commission’s climate department said late on Wednesday.

Energy
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France bets on nuclear in new plan to cut fossil fuel imports

Today 12:00pm

The French government unveiled a 10-year energy strategy that leans heavily on nuclear power and offshore wind farms to curb fossil fuel dependence. Environmental groups criticised a 'stubborn insistence on believing in the nuclear myth'.

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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Media round-up

Fri 13 Feb 2026

In our round-up of climate coverage in local media: Senior UK ministers have asked their New Zealand counterparts to explain new climate policies, National’s LNG blunders are a warning ahead of election campaign, and what are the lessons New Zealand should take from another summer of weather disasters?

Fishing
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Transport dominates NZ’s rising consumer emissions

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
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'Damning' report challenges forestry’s role in Tairāwhiti as sector rejects conclusions

4 Feb 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New independent analysis commissioned by Mana Taiao Tairāwhiti challenges long-standing claims that industrial forestry underpins the Tairāwhiti economy.

Gas
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The port's industrial area has long focused on petrochemicals, with the tank farm and the former Dow agrichemical plant features of the neighbourhood.

Explosive risk brings caution call on LNG

Today 12:00pm

By Craig Ashworth, Local Democracy Reporter | Community energy lobbyists say a Liquified Natural Gas terminal in Taranaki must be built far from homes to protect locals from the risk of catastrophic explosions.

Geothermal
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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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European Central Bank's green supervision grows teeth, but will banks avoid being bitten?

Fri 13 Feb 2026

After several years of issuing guidance and repeatedly calling on banks to take climate and environmental risk management seriously, the European Central Bank is moving from guidance and expectations to enforcement.

Greenhouse Effect
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Green Member’s Bill aims to give whales legal ‘personhood’

9 Feb 2026

The Green Party wants to give whales legal rights, including the right to sue.

Greenwashing
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No such thing as 'clean gas': if advertisers can act, why can’t politicians?

Today 12:00pm

COMMENT: In the rankings of least trusted professionals, advertising executives usually sit at the bottom along with politicians and real estate agents. But there’s one area where the advertising industry can now justifiably hold itself above politicians – stopping greenwashing by the gas industry.

Hydro power
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Climate Change and Energy Minister Simon Watts

Govt missing opportunity to slash electricity prices, says expert

Wed 11 Feb 2026

By Liz Kivi | The Government’s fixation on eliminating the "dry-year risk margin" as a lever to reduce costs misses a much bigger opportunity to lower electricity prices, according to Christina Hood, head of Compass Climate.

Hydrogen
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Hydrogen emissions are ‘supercharging’ the warming impact of methane

19 Dec 2025

The warming impact of hydrogen has been “overlooked” in projections of climate change, according to authors of the latest “global hydrogen budget”.

Insurance
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Wales council to buy and demolish homes prone to flooding

4 Feb 2026

A row of homes in a village in south Wales is to be bought by a local authority and demolished as they can no longer be protected from flooding caused by the climate crisis.

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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Lawyers for Climate Action executive director Jessica Palairet

Lawyers seek answers on climate impacts of LNG import facility

Fri 13 Feb 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | Lawyers for Climate Action has written to Climate Change and Energy Minister Simon Watts warning that the Government's plan for an LNG import terminal could be in conflict with New Zealand’s climate obligations and emissions reduction targets.

Low carbon
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Govt unveils plans for carbon storage regulations – and ETS rewards

18 Dec 2025

By Liz Kivi | The Government has released plans to regulate carbon capture and storage in natural geological formations, which include Emissions Trading Scheme incentives, with the aim of introducing related legislation in 2026.

Mining
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Ministers celebrate fast-track milestone amid criticism

Tue 10 Feb 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The government is marking the first anniversary of its fast-track approvals regime, saying it is helping “build New Zealand’s future”, despite continued criticism from environmental groups, opposition parties, and industry voices following several controversial project decisions.

NZ ETS
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Climate Change Minister Simon Watts

Govt looks to Commission for ways to shore up carbon price

4 Feb 2026

By Liz Kivi | The Government has asked the Climate Change Commission to look at lower auction volumes and an increase in the auction floor price as options to revive the Emissions Trading Scheme, as carbon prices remain weak.

NZ Market Report
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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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Climate change linked to decline in southern right whale

Thu 12 Feb 2026

Scientists in Australia are warning southern right whales are showing signs of climate-related stress, just days after a Green Party Member’s Bill was introduced in New Zealand proposing legal personhood for whales.

Paris Agreement
More >
Waikiki beach, Honolulu

Climate ambassador moves on

Fri 13 Feb 2026

By Liz Kivi | The Government is on the hunt for a new top climate diplomat, with previous climate ambassador Stu Horne moving on to a posting in Honolulu as New Zealand’s Consul General to Hawai’i.

Planetary boundaries
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Commentators slam Govt inaction in aftermath of climate change-fuelled storms

30 Jan 2026

By Liz Kivi | Climate action - or inaction - is shaping up to be an election issue, with multiple commentators drawing a line between the Coalition Government’s backsliding on climate targets and the deadly extreme weather events of the past week.

Plastics
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Kiwi startup takes on global plastic pollution

Thu 12 Feb 2026

A New Zealand startup is launching what it says is the world’s first plastic-free effervescent drink tablet, with the ambitious aim of eliminating bottled beverages to reduce global plastic pollution.

Policy development
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Space growth plan sparks climate and ozone warnings

Today 12:00pm

By Shannon Morris-Williams | The Government’s decision to increase the number of New Zealand's permitted space launches tenfold – from 100 to 1000 – has prompted warnings from scientists about potential impacts on the ozone layer and Southern Hemisphere climate systems.

Politics
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Australia's Liberals elect net zero opponent as new leader

Today 12:00pm

Australia's opposition Liberal Party elected as leader on Friday a conservative who lobbied to drop its commitment to net zero emissions, as it seeks to counter an insurgent populist right and rebuild support after a disastrous election loss last year.

Protest
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Greenpeace set to take UK Government to court over deep-sea mining licences

5 Feb 2026

Environmental NGO Greenpeace has kick-started a legal challenge against the UK Government’s decision to approve the transfer of two seabed exploration licences to a newly-formed mining company with US links.

Rare earth minerals
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Critical minerals talks with US questioned in Waitangi Tribunal climate inquiry

9 Feb 2026

By Shannon Morris-Williams | New Zealand and the United States' negotiations over critical minerals have raised questions for the Waitangi Tribunal’s long-running inquiry into climate change.

Renewable energy
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Africa leads growth in solar energy as demand spreads beyond traditional markets, report says

Today 12:00pm

A report shows that Africa has emerged as the world's fastest-growing solar market even as global growth slowed last year, driven by a 60% surge in imports of solar panels from China.

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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Technology Minister Dr Shane Reti (centre)

NZ-UAE partnership boosts advanced tech

9 Feb 2026

Media release | A new Antarctic science partnership with a leading UAE university will grow New Zealand’s advanced engineering and modelling capability, supporting high-value jobs, encouraging economic growth, and enabling smarter climate risk management, Science, Innovation and Technology Minister Dr Shane Reti says.

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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China maximises battery recycling to shore up critical mineral supplies

Wed 11 Feb 2026

Beijing is bracing for a tsunami of spent EV batteries by taking steps to boost recycling – a strategy that could also cut its reliance on imports of clean energy minerals.

Waste
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EU to ban destruction of unsold clothes and shoes

Thu 12 Feb 2026

The European Commission has adopted new measures that will require medium and large companies to stop discarding unsold clothing and footwear, in the bloc’s latest move to target textile waste.

Water
More >

January floods driven by tropical systems and La Niña conditions

Thu 12 Feb 2026

Record-breaking rainfall across parts of Aotearoa in January was fuelled by tropical moisture and persistent low-pressure systems, with some regions recording more than five times their normal monthly rainfall, Earth Sciences New Zealand says.

Wildfires
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Argentina fires ravage pristine Patagonia forests, fueling criticism of Milei’s austerity

4 Feb 2026

The wildfires, among the worst to hit the drought-stricken Patagonia region in decades, have devastated more than 45,000 hectares (174 square miles) of Argentina’s forests in the last month and a half, forcing the evacuation of thousands of residents and tourists.

Wind energy
More >
Kapuni Project wind turbines in South Taranaki (visual simulation)

Hydrogen plant to start construction

Tue 10 Feb 2026

Construction is set to start this month on Hiringa Energy’s long delayed green hydrogen project in South Taranaki, after years of consenting fights that culminated in the Court of Appeal rejecting Greenpeace’s challenge in late 2023.

More in: United Nations
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