O-Week in Dunedin: Police and university to monitor ‘feral’ student behaviour

Source: Radio New Zealand

Castle Street in Dunedin on a Sunday morning during O-Week. RNZ / Tess Brunton

Police and the University of Otago will be monitoring student behaviour, with concerns about another year of out-of-control and dangerous behaviour during Orientation Week (O-Week).

It has prompted the university to start meeting with some of the larger, named flats to discuss expectations for the year and how to party safely.

By Sunday afternoon, Castle Street was quiet, but the signs of Saturday’s pre-O-Week ‘Flo-Week’ blow-out remained with shattered glass, bottles, boxes and rubbish lining the road.

Some Castle Street flats had cardboard on their lower windows in what appears to be an attempt to protect them from damage RNZ / Tess Brunton

Second year students Charlie, Hunter and Hugo hosted Saturday night’s Castle Street bash, saying hundreds of people attended.

Hunter said there was a bit of pressure to host, so the six flatmates pooled their money and paid a company for the gear and set up.

Charlie said they also had security and wristbands to control who could go inside.

Hugo said out-of-towners could be okay, but not when they got too rowdy.

Someone had smashed a bottle into a window because they thought they could, he said.

Hunter said people did not seem to understand that people lived in these flats.

They acknowledged the street was in a sad state, with Charlie saying the red rubbish bin was full in a day between the six flatmates and the glass bin might only last 30 minutes on a night out.

Charlie said the flat had met with university staff as part of the new initiative.

“It was actually real good, and they kind of just were like ‘we know what you’re here to do’. They’ve got it run pretty well.

“They know it’s not the tidiest place to live. No one’s living in the best conditions but we’re all choosing to be here and they told us they can give us more rubbish bins, talked about obviously getting on roofs with what happened last year, and couch fires and stuff.”

Castle Street in Dunedin on a Sunday morning during O-Week. RNZ / Tess Brunton

Second years Kyra and Pippi were excited for O-Week.

Police have called some of the behaviour “feral”, which Pippi reckoned was fair.

“I think it’s definitely feral. But I think that’s just how everyone wants it to be. People know that Flo-Week you kind of just like go all out for a couple of weeks. But then tame it out throughout the rest of the year,” Pippi said.

Since September, two young men have been critically injured from falls – including from the roof of a Castle Street flat.

Pippi said people liked the thrill of climbing on roofs.

“It definitely is dangerous and bad… but it is very common. You just see people on roofs at almost every house but I think people get a bit of a shock once they hear the bad stories about it. Like, we heard a pretty tragic story and so it’s honestly scared us all.”

Kyra was glad the university shared information about staying safe.

“It’s also really good that there’s like police around, controlling everyone… when it gets really rowdy and stuff, so it like makes people feel more safe.”

They both had friends down for Flo-Week, and said it was good to have visitors and others to meet as long as they did not trash the flats.

First years Amy and Ruby just moved into a uni hall, saying there has already been meetings about safety.

Amy was glad the university was proactive about it, saying it meant they felt more comfortable asking for help.

“I think it’s real cos they know exactly what we’re doing and I mean they help us do it safely rather than turn their heads the other way and pretend it’s not happening,”

Ruby was not surprised about the state of Castle Street, describing it as disgusting and filthy.

“I guess that’s just what Castle Street’s all about.”

Castle Street in Dunedin on a Sunday morning during O-Week. RNZ / Tess Brunton

University vice-chancellor Grant Robertson said they proactively told students about safe partying and how they were expected to behave. That included staying off roofs.

“We’re really clear that students need to stay off roofs. The tragic consequences of that are clear for everybody. We make that clear in all of our communications with students.”

He was pleased that flatmates from about 40 of the larger, named flats had met with the proctor as part of the new initiative, which he said made sure they were all on the same page.

The university did not support out-of-towners joining the frivolities as they could be difficult to manage, Robertson said.

“Many times they behave quite differently than students who know that Dunedin is their home.”

Flats were made aware this could be an issue and there was support for them if there were any issues, he said.

“Police have obviously got a role to play there because ultimately what is facilitated and allowed comes down to what the police are prepared to put up with given that these are private residences where these parties are being held.”

A major step forward would be to take out the glass, and the university had submitted to the local Alcohol Plan for that to happen, he said.

Castle Street in Dunedin on a Sunday morning during O-Week. RNZ / Tess Brunton

More than 4000 first-year students were welcomed over the weekend.

The Otago University Students’ Association is hosting a range of events for O-Week, which kicked off on Monday. Association president Daniel Leamy said they would be safe, inclusive environments for all students.

“Student Support is also always open to assist students as needed, and will have the Are You OK teams on the ground at events,” he said.

“We must also be cognisant of a select few creating a bigger story for the masses. Most students have a great week.”

The association actively encouraged students to choose cans over glass and recycle responsibly, promoted registering parties in advance in partnership with Good One and actively participated in clean-up days as a signatory to the Sophia Charter, he said.

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Hamilton residents face shake-up in how they pay for water

Source: Radio New Zealand

Carla Johnstone, a Hamilton resident whose household is taking part in a water meter trial. RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

Hamilton residents are facing a shake-up in how they pay for water.

National water reforms meant the city had to move away from the way residents had always paid for water – through their rates based on capital value – to either a set charge or a user pays model.

The new local water authority, Iawai, hoped a water meter trial, due to start in part of the city, would help find a way forward.

Carla Johnstone’s busy Hamilton household tried to think about their water use.

“I grew up really trying to conserve water in Australia,” she said.

They took simple steps such as turning the tap off when brushing their teeth, while balancing it with enjoying life.

“It’s quite nice to have come here and not have had to worry about it so much, and having two young children who like to play outside with the hose, it’s nice to not have to be so conscious of it,” she said.

Andrew Parsons from the water authority, Iawai. Supplied

As the city did not have water metering, she really didn’t know what her household used – but she soon would.

Her family was one of hundreds taking part in a water metering trial in Hamilton East.

Johnstone was generally supportive of the idea that the city might introduce metering.

“It could be beneficial to people and the city,” she said, citing the role metering played in helping identify leaking pipes.

Andrew Parsons from Iawai, the new water authority set up by Hamilton City and Waikato District, said metering water in the area of Hamilton where the Johnstones lived would come with many challenges – which wasn’t a bad thing.

“The good part for me about Hamilton East is that it’s an older area, there’s established trees in the berm, there’s a mix of pipes under the ground,” he said.

That more challenging infrastructure environment would hopefully mean the trial collected lots of helpful data.

A water metering trial is underway in Hamilton East. 123rf

Parsons said doing a trial did not mean a decision to move to water metering had been made.

“This is not a decision to roll out meters across the whole city, it is more an information gathering phase so we can understand the costs, what works from a customer perspective and what might work from a business perspective.”

The alternative to user paid water metering, however, was a fixed price model, which Parsons said could come with some poor financial consequences.

Under that model every household would pay the same amount for water, whether they were a single person in an apartment or a family of six with a pool and spa.

Wintec principal civil engineering academic staff member (water) Maryam Moridnejad said metering was fairer than both the current way of paying and a set price.

“You’re paying for water anyway at the moment, you are paying through your property rate. If the meters go ahead you are going to pay based on your actual usage,” she said.

It would also be expected to lead to water conservation – making the water Hamilton had go further.

“People will be surprised with how much water they use per person,” she said.

Moridnejad said data showed people in Hamilton used 1.5 times more water per person than residents of Tauranga – where water had been metered for several decades.

Maryam Moridnejad believes metering is a fair way of paying for water. RNZ / Libby Kirkby-McLeod

She said the country needed to face up to its water challenges and treat water as a precious resource.

“In New Zealand we are going towards water scarcity in future; we have been ignoring our water resources and the infrastructure of water for so long and they are now at a very critical point.”

Andrew Parsons from Iawai said they were looking forward to the results of the water meter trial and would soon consult with the public on a 10-year water services strategy.

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Why Auckland’s bug problem is getting worse

Source: Radio New Zealand

A sign warning of yellow-legged hornets on the North Shore in Auckland. RNZ / Isra’a Emhail

From ants inside clothing packages from Australia to potentially deadly European hornets, Auckland has recently become a hotspot for unwanted insects from overseas.

Aucklander Jayd Graham, 21, was disgusted to find ants inside the sealed packaging of one of two dresses she ordered from Australia.

“I opened the package in my room. The first dress was completely fine. But then I opened the second dress and started seeing ants all over my bed. In the package with the second dress, there were eggs and ants crawling everywhere. I literally ran outside and chucked it on the ground.

“I was like, that’s disgusting, and my mates said I should make a video on TikTok.”

Biosecurity officers confirmed the ants were an Australian species already present in New Zealand.

In response to RNZ’s questions about whether the package had ants in it upon arriving in New Zealand, Biosecurity acknowledged that some unwanted pests can slip through the border security system.

Graham said the clothing brand she ordered from, which did not respond to RNZ’s request for comment, ultimately replaced her order and gave her a voucher.

Meanwhile, also in Auckland, Biosecurity staff are searching for yellow-legged hornets and their nests after the invasive pest, which wreaks havoc on overseas agriculture, was spotted in the country for the first time in 2025.

To date, 51 queen yellow-legged hornets and 61 nests have been found on Auckland’s North Shore.

Retired Hawke’s Bay beekeeper, Peter Berry. Supplied

A retired Hawke’s Bay beekeeper, Peter Berry, who worked in the industry for about 50 years, said the possibility of a wider outbreak was still worrying.

“If these things get away, the problem will be huge. And it won’t just be for the environment or for beekeepers, because they make life really unpleasant for anybody who bumps into them. People will die, and people will be severely injured by these things, and certainly lots and lots of people will be terrified.

“We really need to keep an eye out throughout the whole country because they are so easily spread.

“As I understand it, they’re fairly like the wasps we’re used to seeing that hibernate in lumps of firewood over the winter. If a queen wasp has got into one of those lumps of firewood, in the bumper of somebody’s car, or under a tarpaulin somewhere, then it could be anywhere in the country.”

He said the economic cost of a nationwide outbreak would be worse than anything he dealt with during his career.

“For the whole country, you’re probably talking billions of dollars lost.

“Wasps are bad enough. The German and the common wasp used to cost us when we were a business something like $100,000 a year.

“And when the number of those gets up in a rural environment, they just eat everything. And there’s nothing left for the birds to eat. So something a lot worse than them, that would be an absolute bloody disaster.”

He said harmful species entering the country was not ideal, but almost inevitable.

“We have gaps in our biosecurity the size of containers. A queen yellow-legged hornet is half the size of your little finger. And it’s very, very difficult to find something like that. Obviously better and cheaper to stop them in the first place, but without curtailing trade, it’s virtually impossible.”

“I’d love to have better biosecurity, but the main thing is if it gets here, that they do something about it.”

A yellow-legged hornet trap. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

The government had committed $12m to cover the cost of the hornet response until the end of June 2026.

Berry said that the investment was absolutely worth it.

“If you can catch it when it’s small and jump on it and spend millions of dollars to kill it while you’ve only got a couple of hundred of them, it’s an awful lot cheaper than ever trying to wipe out tens of thousands.

“I think they could possibly spend some more time trying to just check around over the whole of the country to make sure that there isn’t something popping up. But I think you’ll find that pretty well every beekeeper in the country will be looking.”

Fruit fly battle ongoing

In the central Auckland suburb of Mount Roskill, biosecurity staff were also trying to eradicate an obnoxious fruit fly from Australia.

Restrictions on the movement of fruit and vegetables are in place in the area after a single male Queensland fruit fly was found in a surveillance trap in January.

Kris Robb, the manager at Clyde Orchards, was hopeful that the fruit fly would not get to them in the South Island.

Clyde Orchards Manager, Kris Robb. Supplied

“It’s obviously concerning to the industry, but personally, I think we’ve got full faith in the processes in place to be able to contain it.

Our biosecurity measures are as strong as any country in the world. They do the best job they can to stop these incursions. It’s just unfortunate that the odd bug gets through. That’s a risk of a global economy.”

There have been 15 previous incursions of different fruit fly species in Auckland and Northland since 1996, and all have been successfully eradicated.

Queensland fruit fly. Supplied / Biosecurity New Zealand

In a statement to RNZ, Biosecurity said only a small number of pests made it through the border, and that this was the first time the yellow-legged hornet had been detected here.

“It is impossible to eliminate the risk of live organisms getting past the border without stopping all trade and travel – something that would be unacceptable to most New Zealanders.

“Even with fully closed borders, some pests and diseases would still reach New Zealand through natural means such as wind, ocean currents or migratory species. Because some risk will always exist, Biosecurity New Zealand’s approach is to reduce this to an acceptable level.”

It said there were multiple safeguards in place to stop harmful pests from getting into the country.

“Biosecurity New Zealand operates a multilayered defence system that works offshore, at the border, and within New Zealand to stop harmful pests from entering the country. The system includes strict import rules for potential risk goods (eg. produce), screening of cargo, passengers, mail and vessels, detector dog teams, and surveillance programmes, including more than 36,400 insect traps nationwide.

“High-risk sites such as ports and approved facilities that receive international cargo are routinely inspected. Any insects detected that could pose a biosecurity risk are tested and dealt with immediately.”

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Onehunga shooting: Police seize shotgun during search

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police seize shotgun during search of Māngere property. Supplied/Police

A shotgun has been seized during a search of a Māngere property, as part of the ongoing investigation into a shooting in Onehunga last month.

Police were called to a house on Arthur Street on 16 January following reports several people had arrived at a house and fired shots toward the front of the home.

A man inside the home was shot and critically injured.

Police are yet to confirm whether they believed the gun, found during the search of a Māngere property on Friday, was used in the shooting.

Detective Senior Sergeant Matt Bunce said they recovered a shotgun and ammunition.

“The public will appreciate we can’t share the details of the work ongoing, however we have a dedicated investigative team that is working to hold those involved to account for what happened that day.”

A 43-year-old man appeared in Auckland District Court at the weekend, charged with unlawful possession of a firearm as well as unlawful possession of ammunition.

Bunce called for any information that could help the ongoing investigation.

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Minister to attend AI Impact Summit in India

Source: New Zealand Government

Science, Innovation and Technology and Universities Minister Dr Shane Reti will visit India this week to attend the flagship artificial intelligence (AI) Impact Summit, strengthening international AI partnerships and unlocking opportunities for New Zealand. The theme for the summit is ‘AI for People, Planet and Progress’.

“Attendance at this summit ensures New Zealand has a seat at the table, along with senior international Ministers and officials, to help shape global AI standards, while providing opportunities to strengthen international partnerships and drive economic growth,” Dr Reti says.

“As highlighted in the New Zealand AI Strategy, AI has enormous potential to lift productivity and grow our economy, with some estimates predicting that generative AI alone could add $76 billion, around 15 per cent of GDP, by 2038.

“Our government is focused on unlocking economic opportunity through AI adoption, while ensuring appropriate guardrails. That’s why we are investing up to $70 million over seven years to support innovative AI research and applications, develop world-class expertise, and sharpen New Zealand’s competitive edge.

“This visit is also a chance to strengthen our science, innovation and technology relationships and promote New Zealand as an outstanding destination for international education.

“India is a growing powerhouse in science and technology. While New Zealand already has strong links between universities and research organisations, there is significant potential for greater research collaboration between our two countries. 

“International education partnerships bring students and export earnings into New Zealand, while AI adoption will lift productivity, support higher incomes, and help drive economic growth.”

While in India, Dr Reti will attend the AI Impact summit, meet with science and education counterparts, engage with leading technology firms and undertake a range of education focused engagements. Dr Reti departs New Zealand on 14 February and returns on 21 February.

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/16/minister-to-attend-ai-impact-summit-in-india/

Name release: Waiohiki fatal crash

Source: New Zealand Police

Police can release the name of the man who sadly died following a crash on Korokipo Road, Fernhill, on Friday 9 January.

He was Patutai Patterson Kire, 60, from Flaxmere.

Police extend condolences to Patutai’s loved ones.

Enquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/name-release-waiohiki-fatal-crash/

Wellington Water chair’s resignation ‘right thing to do’ – Mayor Andrew Little

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington mayor Andrew Little. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Wellington’s mayor says he has confidence in Wellington Water’s current leadership, after its chair resigned in the wake of the Moa Point crisis.

Nick Leggett stepped down on Sunday, saying the failure at the Moa Point treatment plant was deeply serious and had affected the environment, public health and the community.

Last week the plant failed – sending millions of litres of raw sewage into Cook Strait per day.

Mayor Andrew Little said Leggett’s resignation was the right thing to do, and he believed the remaining directors could lead work on restoring the plant.

“Particularly the deputy chair person who is going to be stepping up – Bill Bayfield – I have confidence they [the directors] will continue to lead the organisation to respond effectively, they have to do that in conjunction with Wellington City Council.”

Little said Leggett made the decision to resign, and that it was “the right thing to do”.

“Wellington Water has I think been struggling with some public confidence issues for some time, this further incident doesn’t help. And it’s not a question of blame, it’s about indicating the organisation accepts the seriousness of it.”

File photo. Nick Leggett. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Little said he spoke with Leggett last week, who raised with him that he was considering resigning.

He said the priority now was for the organisation to set about fixing the plant.

“The focus now though has to be on Wellington Water being supported to get the recovery done, and an assessment of the damage and a plan for reinstating it, and that’s got to be top priority and that’s my expectation as what they’ll be focusing on.”

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Six-monthly company reporting season hoped to start to reflect turnaround in economy

Source: Radio New Zealand

Investment firm Forsyth Barr said 2025 looked to have ended on a strong note and it would be looking for revenue and profit margin growth. RNZ

The six-monthly company reporting season is about to start, with high hopes that earnings will start to reflect the turnaround in the economy.

Investment firm Forsyth Barr said 2025 looked to have ended on a strong note and it would be looking for revenue and profit margin growth.

“Many NZ corporates have had three-plus years to right size their businesses, therefore how they speak to operational improvements, cost control, and operating leverage will be key,” Forsyth Barr analysts said.

“This season will be the first litmus test.”

Sharesies head of data and analytics Jordan Cunningham said its customer base would be looking closely at the dividend payout of the big four power companies – Meridian, Contact, Mercury and Genesis.

“Expectations going into this earning seasons are quite subdued, but we think that our investors will be looking to New Zealand stocks in particular for dividends, if they’re looking for that growth potential for New Zealand.”

Power companies were also regarded as defensive stocks, often able to avoid or withstand market volatility.

Cunningham said only about 15 percent of the funds invested on the platform were in NZX-listed companies, with strong support from Air New Zealand, Auckland Airport and Spark.

“Despite that strong US focus, there really is still growing trading in New Zealand, and a really strong buy-to-sell ratio… In recent months for every dollar sold $1.50 was bought.”

The good, the bad, the ordinary

Forsyth Barr expected about 40 percent of reporting companies to have a positive outlook, including speciality milk company A2 Milk, healthcare and pet food firm EBOS, Port of Tauranga and casino operator SkyCity, despite its torrid time in recent years.

A similar proportion was likely to have a neutral outlook, with a handful of companies with potential to disappoint the market.

Among them was the national carrier Air New Zealand, which was expected to deliver a first-half loss, but with hopes of a more positive second-half outlook.

Forsyth Barr senior analyst Matt Montgomerie said companies most exposed to the economic cycle and which were hard hit by the recession such as building product firms, retailers, and service businesses might surprise on the upside.

He said many of the firms had aggressively cut costs, but might not be in a hurry to start spending again.

“This reluctance to re-expand costs creates strong operating leverage … As a result, net earnings growth during upswings can surprise to the upside, often materially outpacing consensus expectations.”

Window on recovery

Amova Asset Management head of equities Michael Sherrock said company reports should provide a steer on the economic turn around, with companies such as transport firm Freightways something of a bellwether.

“For the likes of Freightways, what is customer volume growth looking like? Six months ago, they started to see some pickup in that customer volume growth. How that’s tracking since they last updated the market.”

“The likes of SkyCity as well, somewhat cyclically exposed, but also some regulatory type of issues as well.”

Sherrock, the casino and hotel operator, has been required to implement carded play on pokie machines, and has just taken over the International Convention Centre, which would be pointers for the company’s future earnings.

Others to watch included Fletcher Building, pharmaceutical supplier and pet retailing chain EBOS and Sky Television.

“The market will be very, very focused on (EBOS) given that stock (price) has fallen … on the back of a disappointing result last year. They’ve got a new CEO. What are they telling the market ? And hopefully it’s a positive story, and there’s no disappointments.”

He said Sky TV would be watched to see if it delivered on plans to pay a dividend this year.

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Onehunga shooting: Police seize firearm in ongoing investigation

Source: New Zealand Police

Police are continuing to make progress in investigating a shooting in Onehunga last month.

The Auckland City Organised Crime Unit has been investigating the incident on Arthur Street on 16 January 2026.

Detective Senior Sergeant Matt Bunce says the investigation team executed a search warrant at a Māngere property on Friday.

“Our detectives were supported by the Armed Offenders Squad, in which we have recovered a shotgun and ammunition,” he says.

“At this stage we are unable to confirm this firearm was involved in the original offending.”

Police have charged a 43-year-old man with unlawful possession of a firearm as well as unlawful possession of ammunition.

He appeared in the Auckland District Court over the weekend.

“We have no tolerance for blatant violence involving firearms in our community,” Detective Senior Sergeant Bunce says.

“The public will appreciate we can’t share the details of the work ongoing, however we have a dedicated investigative team that is working to hold those involved to account for what happened that day.”

Detective Senior Sergeant Bunce continues to call for any information to assist the ongoing investigation.

If you can assist, update Police online now or call 105 using the reference number 260116/9278.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS. 

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/16/onehunga-shooting-police-seize-firearm-in-ongoing-investigation/

Wellington Water chair’s resignation ‘right thing to do’ – Mayor Anderw Little

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wellington mayor Andrew Little. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Wellington’s mayor says he has confidence in Wellington Water’s current leadership, after its chair resigned in the wake of the Moa Point crisis.

Nick Leggett [ttps://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/586892/wellington-water-chair-nick-leggett-resigns-over-moa-point-sewage-disaster stepped down] on Sunday, saying the failure at the Moa Point treatment plant was deeply serious and had affected the environment, public health and the community.

Last week the plant failed – sending millions of litres of raw sewage into Cook Strait per day.

Mayor Andrew Little said Leggett’s resignation was the right thing to do, and he believed the remaining directors could lead work on restoring the plant.

“Particularly the deputy chair person who is going to be stepping up – Bill Bayfield – I have confidence they [the directors] will continue to lead the organisation to respond effectively, they have to do that in conjunction with Wellington City Council.”

Little said Leggett made the decision to resign, and that it was “the right thing to do”.

“Wellington Water has I think been struggling with some public confidence issues for some time, this further incident doesn’t help. And it’s not a question of blame, it’s about indicating the organisation accepts the seriousness of it.”

File photo. Nick Leggett. RNZ / Angus Dreaver

Little said he spoke with Leggett last week, who raised with him that he was considering resigning.

He said the priority now was for the organisation to set about fixing the plant.

“The focus now though has to be on Wellington Water being supported to get the recovery done, and an assessment of the damage and a plan for reinstating it, and that’s got to be top priority and that’s my expectation as what they’ll be focusing on.”

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Households and the Reserve Bank’s official cash rate decision

Source: Radio New Zealand

How soon is the official cash rate (OCR) likely to start to increase? And will any hint of it send what banks charge higher?

For many homeowners and households, that will be the main thing on their minds when the Reserve Bank issues its next update this week.

It cut the OCR to 2.25 percent in November, but what captured the most attention was the indication that it did not necessarily think it would cut rates much further.

Market attention turned to when the rate might start to lift, and wholesale rates increased, taking banks’ home loan rates with them.

  • Reserve Bank governor sends message markets gone too far
  • Reserve Bank Governor Anna Breman took the unusual step of warning that it might have been an overreaction.

    In recent days though, all the main banks have again shifted their longer-term rates higher, as inflation worries continue to simmer.

    ANZ senior economist Miles Workman said any insight the bank gave into the future path of interest rates would be key for most households.

    “Swap rates have lifted meaningfully since the November MPS (monetary policy statement) as markets have reassessed the outlook for monetary policy following the inflationary vibe across recent data releases.

    “And that’s put upward pressure on fixed mortgage rates. The February MPS is an opportunity for the Reserve Bank to signal whether it thinks that move is justified by recent data and its updated economic outlook. Households may also be listening closely to what the bank says about the inflation and labour market outlooks, given cost of living pressures remain and the labour market is still soft.”

    Mike Jones, chief economist at BNZ, said the Reserve Bank would need to walk a fine line between signalling the OCR would not stay as low for as long as previously thought, and not sending financial markets higher on the expectation of future increases.

    “There will probably be a hat tip from the bank to the fact the economic recovery is growing in momentum, but equally confirmation that a period of low interest rates is still part of the plan to ensure it gets going proper and current spare capacity is soaked up.

    “There does appear to be some concern out there about whether recent lifts in wholesale and retail interest rates might lean against the fledgling economic recovery. The bank will also be wary of this, but it’s also important to note most mortgage borrowers soon to experience a mortgage rate reset will be rolling on to a rate more favourable than previously. So, there’s still some of the lagged impacts of previous rate cuts to come through.”

    He said households would probably also want to see confirmation that the bank still thinks inflation will return to about 2 percent later this year.

    Westpac chief economist Kelly Eckhold said it would also be interesting to watch Breman‘s first press conference.

    “It will be the first opportunity we get to understand what sort of things she thinks are important, how she chooses to express the trade-offs that she inevitably has to deal with when deciding what to do with policy. Ultimately, is she dovish? Is she hawkish? What sort of factors and variables is she going to make more prominent when explaining to people what she’s doing?”

  • New Reserve Bank Governor Anna Breman talks to Corin Dann
  • He said the market had already priced in a lot of cash rate rises this year.

    “It’s not to say that it’s impossible that they could price in more, but it feels like the hurdle, the bar is set quite high to really have those rates have to go up much further.

    “Perhaps, if she was to say that a September rate hike might be something that’s a realistic possibility, that could be the sort of thing that would leave the market to obviously fully price that in, and maybe even start speculating about an earlier move than that. But it strikes me as relatively unlikely, and that instead she might talk about the possibility of a rate rise at the end of the year. And, you know, possibility could have a capital P or a small p, depending on the nature of the discussion that’s around it.”

    He said households might also be interested in what the Reserve Bank expects of house prices.

    “We’re not really forecasting a house-price led recovery. We’ve got 4 percent [increase in house prices] this year, which is close to where the Reserve Bank was forecasting them at the end of last year.

    “What does she think about that? Does she think that the fortunes of the housing market are tightly tied to the fortunes of the broader economy, or not?”

    Westpac last week changed its forecast. It still expects a first increase in November, but then increases at each meeting between February and September 2027.

    “We’ve basically upgraded the growth forecasts, so that means excess capacity will get used up a bit more quickly based on our revised view,” Eckhold said.

    “We think once they get going they’ll move a bit more quickly, because by the end of the year, if the growth outlook that we are depicting has panned out then it won’t really be appropriate to have interest rates in the 2 percents.”

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/households-and-the-reserve-banks-official-cash-rate-decision/

    Ōtorohanga flooding: The silver lining amongst devastation, damage and disarray

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    An Ōtorohanga man in his 80s is devastated by the damage and disarray at his flooded home after the weekend weather event – save the silver lining of a saved pet goat and an heirloom teddy bear that survived the waters.

    Kio Kio Station Road resident Colin Payne had to be rescued by a boat, after floodwaters came through his property in the early hours of Saturday, when the region received between 150 to 300 millimetres of rain.

    He said he had a feeling on Friday night that things could get bad when the water came up to his gate, which prompted him to move his campervan to a friend’s house in the town centre before returning home.

    Payne slept at about 9.30pm, not expecting that floodwaters would gush through his property, and also not knowing about the state of emergency declared in Ōtorohanga around 1am.

    He woke up about 4.30am to find his bed surrounded by water.

    A family heirloom teddy bear from Colin Payne’s great great grandfather. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

    The only thing Payne managed to pull out of the water before his rescue boat came – besides his medication and clothes – was an heirloom teddy bear and its chair, which was inherited from his great-great-grandparents.

    Returning to check on his house for the first time on Sunday, Payne struggled to come to terms with the rooms with knocked over fridges, a fallen TV, and sentimental items strewn over the muddy floors, in rooms where they would have floated for hours.

    “Coming in and seeing the mess here is a bit devastating, 85 years of collections … personal stuff and family stuff and heirlooms,” said Payne.

    “How do you describe it… I mean daunting, devastated, everything, just suddenly your life’s expired in a sort of roundabout way, if you understand what I mean, from an asset … the biggest trick is you gotta be very careful walking around in the silt because it’s very slippery.”

    Colin Payne said he’s devastated to see 85 years worth of collections and family heirlooms drenched by floodwaters. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

    A silver lining amidst the chaos of his flood-damaged home and having to write off his drowned vehicle – Payne was relieved to find out that his pet goat Sophie survived, thanks to the help of neighbours.

    “At least my good friend Sophie’s been rescued, that’s my favourite friend, my goat.”

    Colin Payne and his partner Frances Rawlings. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

    Payne’s partner, Frances Rawling – who was not at the house that night – said it was hard to know where to begin when faced with the mammoth task of cleaning up.

    “Once the mould sets in… it’s hard to imagine being here again,” she said.

    The couple said they have a house in Te Kuiti where they can stay in the meantime.

    RNZ / Marika Khabazi

    On Sunday morning the rain resumed, and a community member with a quadbike came to help take Payne’s two steers to a safer place.

    Craig Janett, who had been helping out, said he felt for the Kio Kio Station Road residents.

    “A lot have been lost, one bloke down here lost all his lifestyle block… lost all their stock, washed away, just devastation, the river, the rubbish in the river, the drums, just everything rubbish.”

    Payne was moved by the kindness of the community.

    A washed over bridge off Kio Kio Station Road. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

    “Kio Kio Station Road, K-K-S-R stands for kind, caring, supportive residents, and believe me, that applies to everyone in this street.

    “Here’s two people coming this morning and taking my stock away… I know damn well that they’ll be well looked after and they’d take them away and put them onto safer ground, and that’s the kind of community we have in K-K-S-R.”

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/otorohanga-flooding-the-silver-lining-amongst-devastation-damage-and-disarray/

    Auckland’s Eden Park to host State of Origin match in 2027

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Watch above: Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown and Tourism Minister Louise Upston announce the deal.

    A State of Origin match will be played in Eden Park in Auckland in 2027 following three years of high-level talks with the NRL and the Australian Rugby League Commission.

    It is expected that 50,000 fans will pack the stadium for the Queensland versus New South Wales match.

    Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown said securing State of Origin reflected the city’s strength as a major sporting centre.

    “From the outset, Auckland made it clear we wanted to bring State of Origin to our city, and we’ve worked hard to secure it,” he said in a statement.

    “We know how to host major events, and we know the value they bring. This match will mean full hotels, busy restaurants and bars, and thousands of visitors experiencing everything our region has to offer.”

    Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow of the Maroons celebrates after scoring a try during the State of Origin game two match between the Queensland Maroons and the NSW Blues. AAP / Photosport

    Hosting State of Origin is expected to attract more than 10,000 international visitors from Australia, generate nore than 50,000 international visitor nights, and inject an estimated $17.4 million into the Auckland economy.

    Australian Rugby League Commission chairman Peter V’landys AM said the historic clash would give New Zealanders the opportunity to experience the intensity of the game’s greatest rivalry.

    “Rugby league is the number one sport in Australia and the Pacific, and the growth we have seen in New Zealand over recent years has been nothing short of extraordinary,” V’landys said.

    Sir Graham Lowe, the only New Zealander to coach a State of Origin team as a former Queensland coach, said the occasion would be one to remember.

    “Kiwis are excited about State of Origin, but there are only a few of them that have had the opportunity to actually watch it live. This will be a fantastic occasion for Auckland,” he said in a statement.

    The 2027 fixture is being co-funded in partnership by Auckland Council Events and the New Zealand Government via the Major Events Fund.

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

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/16/aucklands-eden-park-to-host-state-of-origin-match-in-2027/

    State of Origin heads to New Zealand

    Source: New Zealand Government

    In an historic moment, New Zealand will host its first-ever State of Origin match next year at Eden Park, a major event expected to draw thousands of international visitors and deliver a significant economic boost for Auckland.

    The New Zealand Government and Auckland Council have worked in tandem, alongside the Australian Rugby League Commission, to bring the sporting spectacular to Auckland. 

    Tourism and Hospitality Minister Louise Upston says securing one of Australasia’s biggest sporting events represents a major win for fans, tourism and New Zealand sport.

    “I couldn’t be more excited to welcome the Blues and Maroons across the ditch for the very first time,” Louise Upston says.

    “This is a milestone moment for rugby league in New Zealand, but it is so much more than a game. 

    “Hosting State of Origin is expected to attract over 10,000 of our Aussie neighbours, generate more than 50,000 international visitor nights, and inject an estimated $17.4 million into the economy. 

    “With a significant Australian audience, our biggest tourism market, this match will showcase Auckland on an international stage, and put New Zealand on the map as a world-class destination for major events.”

    The State of Origin series is one of the fiercest rivalries in global sport, pitting Queensland and New South Wales against each other in a high‑intensity three‑match contest. Next year, for the first time ever, one of the series matches will be played on New Zealand soil.

    Hosting events has been made even easier because of changes to planning restrictions at Eden Park announced by the Government today, which will unlock the opportunity for more major events to be hosted at the stadium.

    The 2027 fixture is proudly supported by the Government’s Major Events Fund and Auckland Council Events.

    Dates and ticket details for the State of Origin fixture will be confirmed by the NRL later in the year.

    Attached:

    NRL State of Origin fact sheet

    MIL OSI

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/16/state-of-origin-heads-to-new-zealand/

    More gigs, more goals, more growth: Eden Park planning restrictions eased

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is building Eden Park’s future as a major events venue, making significant changes to local planning rules that have been holding Eden Park back from its full potential, RMA Reform Minister Chris Bishop says.

    “Late last year the Government launched an investigation into whether outdated planning rules were unnecessarily limiting Eden Park’s ability to host major events and deliver jobs and economic growth for Auckland and the rest of the country,” Mr Bishop says.

    “That investigation, which included public consultation in November, found the rules were overly restrictive, out of step with modern stadium use, and were directly constraining economic activity. We have now accepted all of the recommendations in full, with some technical amendments to reflect feedback from Auckland Council.

    “The changes will allow Eden Park, New Zealand’s largest stadium with a capacity of around 50,000, to host more major events that bring significant benefits to the local and national economy.

    “Under the new settings, Eden Park will be able to host up to 12 large concerts and 20 medium-sized concerts per year as permitted activities, without needing resource consent. That’s up from its current limit of 12 concerts, which were not permitted to be from more than six different artists or acts.

    “The changes also enable a wider range of events, including exhibitions, displays, markets, fairs, trade fairs, and cultural and community events.”

    Chris Bishop says the changes are expected to be in place in April 2026.

    “Concerts will be able to take place on any day, must finish by 11pm, and can run for up to eight hours. This is a significant increase on the current maximum of five hours on a weekday and six hours on a Saturday.

    “Night-time sports games will be permitted on any day, including Sundays, provided noise standards are met. Existing caps on the number of night games per year and per 35-day period, as well as the restriction on day-night cricket matches, will be removed.”

    Minister for Tourism and Hospitality Louise Upston says it’s a huge step forward for major events.

    “We know big events deliver. For example, over three years, 14 Auckland shows (including Coldplay and Pearl Jam) generated $33.7m for the local economy with 490,000 attendees,” Ms Upston says.

    “These changes sit alongside the Government’s $70 million events and tourism investment package announced in September, which is about helping New Zealand compete internationally, attract world-class events, and give both visitors and locals more reasons to get out and enjoy them.”

    Auckland Minister Simeon Brown says Eden Park is our national stadium and a critical piece of infrastructure for Auckland and New Zealand, and these changes secures its future as a premier events venue.

    “This is a significant win for Auckland and for New Zealand. Strengthening Eden Park’s ability to host major events supports our broader work to grow the economy and ensure Auckland remains a world-class destination.

    “It means more jobs, more activity for local businesses, and more opportunities for people – whether they live here or are visiting – to enjoy more events at our largest stadium,” Mr Brown says.

    “These common-sense changes will enable Eden Park to operate like a modern, world-class stadium and deliver more jobs and economic benefits for Auckland and the rest of New Zealand,” Mr Bishop says. 

    Note to editors: 

    Please see attached fact sheet which compares the key changes to Eden Park’s existing restrictions with the status quo.

    Regulation-making power background:

    The investigation was conducted under the new regulation-making power in the Resource Management Act, recently passed into law through the Resource Management (Consenting and Other System Changes) Amendment Act 2025. 

    The regulation-making power enables the Minister Responsible for RMA Reform to remove or modify provisions in RMA plans where they negatively impact economic growth, development capacity or employment.

    The Minister must investigate the impacts of the provisions and whether specified statutory criteria are met and produce an investigation report which must be made publicly available.

    The Minister must then report to Cabinet with the findings, for a final decision on any changes to the RMA plan. 

    The changes will be delivered via regulations, which will require Auckland Council to amend its plan without using the regular plan-making process.

    MIL OSI

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/16/more-gigs-more-goals-more-growth-eden-park-planning-restrictions-eased/

    Amelia Kerr confirmed as White Ferns captain

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Wellington Blaze captain Amelia Kerr. Kerry Marshall / www.photosport.nz

    Amelia Kerr has officially been confirmed as White Ferns captain.

    Kerr takes over in all formats from fellow Wellingtonian Sophie Devine who stepped down as captain following the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup in October.

    The 25-year-old, who has represented the White Ferns in 172 internationals, will take on the permanent leadership mantle of both the ODI and T20I sides, having previously led the side in two ODIs and two T20Is.

    Her first official outing in the position will be in the T20 and ODI series against Zimbabwe later this month.

    “Growing up it was my childhood dream to represent New Zealand and to now have the opportunity to captain my country is a massive privilege,” Kerr said.

    “I am following an exceptional group of leaders who have captained the White Ferns before me, so I don’t take the responsibility lightly.

    “The captaincy doesn’t change who I am, I am still the same person and will give everything I can to lead this group and hopefully bring our country success.”

    Since making her international debut in 2016 at the age of just 16, Kerr has gone on to score 3757 runs and take 201 wickets across both formats and is already the White Ferns’ third all-time leading wicket-taker and fifth all-time leading run-scorer.

    Kerr said her leadership philosophy was centred around putting people first.

    “One of my favourite quotes is: ‘He aha te mea nui o te ao? He Tāngata, He Tāngata, He Tāngata.

    “We are people first. As a group we look out for each other, we celebrate each other’s success and we represent our people.

    “Encouraging others and building belief around us so we can all be the best we can be both as people and as cricketers.”

    Amelia Kerr at a glance

    WHITE FERN #188

    • Youngest player to ever debut for the White Ferns (16 years and 27 days)
    • Highest ever individual ODI score for the White Ferns (232* v Ireland 2018)
    • Only New Zealand player ever to win the ICC World Player of the Year (Rachael Heyhoe-Flint Trophy)
    • 2022 Commonwealth Games Bronze medal winner
    • 2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup winner
    • 2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup Player of the Tournament
    • 3x winner of the NZC Debbie Hockley Medal
    • White Ferns third all-time leading wicket-taker (201 wickets)
    • White Ferns fifth all-time leading run scorer (3757 runs)

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/amelia-kerr-confirmed-as-white-ferns-captain/

    ‘Every tonne matters’: The climate scientist who wants to give you hope

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    for Monday AM

    University of Bremen glacier scientist Ben Marzeion RNZ / Kate Newton

    The ice sheets are unstable, the glaciers are melting, sea levels are rising, and one of the world’s largest carbon polluters has just abandoned its global and domestic efforts to curb emissions.

    Every new climate change headline seems to bring another reason to be despondent about the existential challenge the world faces.

    “Sometimes I just want to bury my face in the remaining snow and ice,” British Antarctic Survey director of science Petra Heil told a Wellington audience last week.

    Enter Ben Marzeion.

    The University of Bremen glacier scientist, in New Zealand for the international Climate in the Cryosphere conference last week, has every reason to be gloomy.

    The warming that the world has already locked in – roughly 1.2° Celsius above the pre-industrial average and still rising – means the world is projected to lose 40 percent of all glacier ice over the coming centuries, half of that within the lifetimes of children born today.

    But Marzeion’s presentation at the conference was not about that.

    Instead, together with colleagues, he has been quantifying the impact that saving one tonne – or even one kilogram – of carbon emissions can have.

    “People often really feel powerless when they’re thinking about climate change,” he told RNZ.

    “They think, ok, if I change something, I do a little bit, it’s going to be meaningless if no one else is changing anything.”

    He and fellow researchers always believed that way of thinking was “really wrong” – so they set about finding the numbers to prove otherwise.

    “The main message is that small changes in emissions lead to changes in the climate system, in the Earth’s system, that are surprisingly big, actually.”

    The average person on the planet contributes between five and 10 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions each year, he says.

    Reducing that by even 10 percent makes a difference.

    “One tonne of CO2 reduction keeps, for example, nine tonnes of glacier ice in the mountains that would melt otherwise.”

    The same reduction prevents 12 cubic metres of sea level rise.

    It keeps 250 grams more fish in that sea, through averted increases in ocean temperatures.

    By similar mechanisms, it protects growing conditions enough to create six more kilograms of rice, or a kilogram of meat.

    “All those things, and many more, are happening at the same time – it’s not that you have to pick one,” Marzeion says.

    An artwork by Olafur Eliasson, The Glacier Melt, highlights glacier loss over 20 years. David St George

    The research looked at the effect of even tinier emissions decreases.

    “If I take my bike for around three kilometres instead of driving a car, I save one kilogram of glacier ice.”

    The numbers sound small, but they are real, and they compound, he says.

    “The idea behind this, really, is to show there is no lower limit to meaningful climate mitigation. Anything you can do is helpful, there is nothing that is too small to be relevant.”

    He does not want to see the numbers misused to place the burden of responsibility entirely on individuals, though, emphasising that global and national political action is still vital.

    “It’s often used as an excuse not just for individual people but for companies or countries not to do anything – saying we are a small country, if we lower our emissions but the US or China is not doing anything, it doesn’t make a difference.

    “And that’s simply wrong – it does make a big difference.”

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

    LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/02/16/every-tonne-matters-the-climate-scientist-who-wants-to-give-you-hope/

    Live weather: Evacuations, power cuts, roads closed as severe gales, rain batter lower North Island

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    Follow the latest in RNZ’s live blog above

    People have been evacuated in Manawatū and on the coast of the Tararua District due to rising river levels.

    The entire Manawatū-Whanganui region is in a state of emergency with heavy rain, flooding as severe weather lashes the lower North Island.

    Thousands of properties have had power cut off.

    Fire and Emergency have had 185 call outs across the lower North Island – with roofs lifting, power lines down, and trees and windows being blown in.

    Five districts – Manawatū, Rangitīkei, Tararua, Waipā and Ōtorohanga District – are in states of emergency.

    On Sunday afternoon, all remaining flights in and out of Wellington for the day were cancelled, as were Cook Strait ferry crossings.

    Follow RNZ’s live coverage above for the most up-to-date information.

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/live-weather-evacuations-power-cuts-roads-closed-as-severe-gales-rain-batter-lower-north-island/

    Do you need an admin party to get your life back in order?

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    “We’re always behind on something. We’re always juggling too many things. We’re always trying to deal with some company that we need to remember the password for their portal, or we need to dispute an insurance claim … or we need to wait on hold for a thousand hours for something and then get disconnected and start all over again.”

    American journalist Chris Colin had struck a nerve. So when he suggested gathering friends to party and do life admin, they found it funny but weren’t surprised. He has a reputation for quirky ideas.

    Seven years later, there’s now a waitlist and, after writing about it for The Atlantic and The Wall Street Journal last year, the concept has gone viral.

    Having a few minutes break in between for socialising is important too, Chris Coin says. It has to be fun.

    Supplied / Chris Colin

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/do-you-need-an-admin-party-to-get-your-life-back-in-order/

    New dietary guidelines from the US stir the pot

    Source: Radio New Zealand

    U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. unveils the department’s new dietary guidelines food chart during a policy announcement event. ANNA MONEYMAKER/ Getty Images via AFP

    New dietary guidelines from the US have upended the traditional food pyramid, moving protein into the spotlight – but some of the maths doesn’t add up

    When the new Dietary Guidelines for Americans were released in January, it was the graphic on the front – a food pyramid that’s been turned upside down – that grabbed attention.

    But the health sector has turned its focus to the finer details; not just what’s actually in the guidelines, but who’s behind it.

    “The process for the dietary guidelines in America is pretty rigourous and it actually takes years and years,” says long-time food and health journalist Niki Bezzant.

    She says the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee puts together a report with recommendations for the guidelines – this takes years.

    But this time, about half of those recommendations were rejected, and a new committee was formed to write new recommendations.

    “That was written by some hand-picked people who were all, as it turns out, aligned with beef, dairy, protein supplement industry interests, and it’s unclear exactly how they got to where they got to with the guidelines.

    “They claim to focus on gold-standard science, but actually their justifications are lacking, at least according to nutrition experts and certainly nutrition bodies around the world.”

    Bezzant points to articles from the Center for Science in the Public Interest, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.

    In today’s episode of The Detail, Bezzant and dietician Caryn Zinn look at what’s changed, and the process behind those changes, as well as how this trickles down to New Zealand, and whether we can trust science coming out of the White House.

    “That’s the biggest problem – people are going to look at these guidelines and go ‘oh gosh it’s part of that group which is all nutters so it’s meaningless,’ and that’s problematic,” says Zinn.

    These guidelines put protein, dairy, healthy fats, vegetables and fruits at the top of the pyramid – which is now the wide part of the triangle. Whole grains are at the bottom. Sugars have disappeared altogether. The visual itself takes a few minutes to unpick.

    “I don’t think they’ve done themself a service by flipping it … [my colleagues and my] philosophy was we need to flip the food pyramid in our philosophical thinking about what’s at the bottom and what’s at the top … they’ve actually visually flipped it which has added a little bit of the confusion.”

    But Zinn believes the changes themselves are largely positive.

    Among the positives for her: an emphasis on whole, real food over ultra-processed foods; a strong message that no amount of added sugar is considered nutritious; the prioritisation of protein, including a boost in the recommended daily intake and focus on animal proteins as opposed to plant-based; and a reduction in the recommended daily servings of grains.

    Fat is also in – the guide talks about butter, olive oil and beef tallow, and recommends full-fat dairy and animal proteins without removing fat.

    Zinn says this has brought controversy, because of the relationship between saturated fat and heart disease (which she says is a hotly debated topic).

    The guidelines suggest keeping saturated fats under 10 percent of total calories – but Zinn says it’s “highly unlikely” that someone could eat fatty meats, oils and butter as suggested and still keep their saturated fat intake at that level.

    But how much do these guidelines matter in America, let alone here?

    In the US, they’re used to guide policy and food programmes in places like schools and rest homes. But here, they may still trickle through to the way people think about food – for better or worse.

    “It might certainly affect people’s attitudes and eating behaviours, because we are all consuming the same content. This stuff is out there everywhere on social media,” says Bezzant.

    “The irony is that most people, and this probably is true around the world, don’t follow official guidelines anyway, and certainly in America they do not.

    “It’s true in New Zealand as well – we know that less than 10 percent of us eat the recommended servings of vegetables a day, five to six servings.”

    “I think the danger is probably that people take the simple messages away, right, and the simple message out of this American guideline is that image [of the inverted pyramid], and it’s just ‘hey eat more steak, and butter, woohoo’.

    “And if people go away and do that and they keep on eating their refined grains and their high fat diet and their high sugar and their high salt, no one’s getting healthier from that.”

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

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

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

    LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/02/16/new-dietary-guidelines-from-the-us-stir-the-pot/