HKUST Launches 35th Anniversary Celebrations Showcasing a Legacy of Miracles and a Vision for the Future

Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 16 March 2026 – The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) today officially launched its 35th Anniversary celebrations with a vibrant ceremony, bringing together distinguished government officials, industry leaders, and members of the university community to reflect on an extraordinary journey of excellence.

The Chief Secretary for Administration of the HKSAR Government Mr. CHAN Kwok-ki (middle), Deputy Director of LOCPG Mr. LUO Yonggang (third right), Secretary for Education of the HKSAR Government Dr. Christine CHOI Yuk-lin (third left) and members of the HKUST leadership team, including Pro-Chancellor Dr. John CHAN Cho-Chak (first right), Council Chairman Prof. Harry SHUM (second right), Court Chairman Dr. the Honorable Andrew LIAO Cheung-Sing (first left), and President Prof. Nancy IP (second left) inaugurate a series of commemorative initiatives for the HKUST 35th anniversary.

Themed “Where Miracles Happen,” the milestone event honors the pioneering spirit that has propelled generations of HKUST members to achieve remarkable feats. Officiating at the ceremony were Mr. CHAN Kwok-Ki, Chief Secretary for Administration of the HKSAR Government; Mr. LUO Yonggang, Deputy Director of the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the HKSAR (LOCPG); and Dr. CHOI Yuk-Lin, Secretary for Education of the HKSAR Government. They were joined by HKUST Pro-Chancellor Dr. John CHAN Cho-Chak, Council Chairman Prof. Harry SHUM, Court Chairman Dr. the Honorable Andrew LIAO Cheung-Sing, and President Prof. Nancy IP to inaugurate a year of commemorative activities.

A Journey Forged with Vision and Purpose

In her welcome address, President Ip, who joined HKUST in 1993, offered a personal reflection on the University’s remarkable ascent. She witnessed its evolution into a world-class institution; a success built on academic excellence and a vibrant innovation ecosystem created from the ground up. She credited this profound transformation to the extraordinary foresight of the University’s Founding President, Prof. Chia-Wei Woo.

“From its very inception, HKUST was built on a bold and unprecedented vision: to become Hong Kong’s first research-intensive university,” President Ip shared. “Long before the Greater Bay Area concept existed, our founders, led by Prof. Woo, understood that Hong Kong’s future was inextricably linked with the region. This visionary courage saw them forge vital connections with the Chinese Mainland, laying the groundwork for what would become HKUST (Guangzhou) in 2022. Their courage, dedication, and tenacity built the unshakeable foundation on which we stand today.”

President Ip emphasized that the University’s success is measured not by rankings alone, but by its tangible impact on society. This founding DNA—to anticipate and meet societal needs with excellence—is now driving HKUST’s most ambitious chapter yet: the establishment of a new School of Medicine. “This is a transformative milestone, fulfilling a dream pursued for over three decades,” she stated. “We are deeply grateful to the HKSAR Government for its trust and partnership. Together, we will build a technologically advanced, humanistic medical school that ushers in a new era for healthcare in Hong Kong. Let us honor those who walked before us by carrying their courageous legacy into a new era of excellence.”

A Cornerstone of Hong Kong’s Global Leadership

Mr. Chan Kwok-Ki commended HKUST’s profound impact on Hong Kong’s development. “Over the past 35 years, HKUST has evolved from a bold new institution into a globally respected university, driven by visionary leadership, dedicated faculty, a continuing flow of talented students, and an enduring spirit of innovation. Its strong international rankings, vibrant start-up ecosystem, and diverse global student body demonstrate how research and education can deliver tangible societal impact,” he stated. “As Hong Kong advances its role as an international education hub, HKUST stands as a shining example of how universities can nurture global talent while supporting national development priorities. With strengths spanning artificial intelligence, science, and its planned School of Medicine, HKUST is exceptionally well-positioned to shape the future of innovation and talent development.”

Carrying a Pioneering Spirit into the Next Chapter

Prof. Harry Shum reflected on the University’s unique position. “Thirty-five years is a fascinating milestone. In human terms, it is the age of maturity, the point where youthful energy meets seasoned wisdom. And I see the same spirit alive in this institution. We still possess the curiosity and drive of our early years. But now we have the strength, the reputation, and the alumni network that only decades can build. The world is changing faster than ever before. If we are to serve the next generation as well as we have served the past, we must lead, we must innovate, and we must redefine what education can be. In this regard, HKUST is ready to open a new chapter.

“The HKSAR Government has appointed HKUST with the trust to build the third medical school in Hong Kong. We envision the University’s medical school that will bridge traditional medical curriculum with the latest technology and AI breakthroughs, will gradually revolutionize the entire medical spectrum—from diagnosis to treatment to recovery, prevention and personalized medicine. I am confident that this future-oriented medical school, which will admit its first cohort in 2028, will play an important role in educating and training a new generation of scientists and clinicians in the next 35 years and beyond.”

A Celebration of Innovation and Heritage

Reflecting the theme “Where Miracles Happen,” the ceremony showcased HKUST’s leadership in technology in a truly spectacular fashion. In a breathtaking fusion of tradition and innovation, the university’s Guangzhou campus team presented a robotic lion dance. This remarkable creation brought the classic folk art to life through advanced robotics, embodying the spirit of cultural heritage reimagined through cutting-edge engineering.

For the grand officiating ceremony, HKUST turned into an unexpected source of inspiration: humanity’s best friends. But there were no ordinary dogs. A team of robotic dogs—developed by Direct Drive Technology (an HKUST-nurtured startup), the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and the Cheng Kar-Shun Robotics Institute—took center stage. Engineered to navigate complex, uneven terrain and perform dangerous industrial inspections, these four-legged helpers were given a far more meaningful mission for the day: carrying the ceremonial “Miracle Balls” to the officiating guests. As robotic dogs trotted majestically onto stage bearing their precious cargo, they symbolized the University’s commitment to channeling cutting-edge research into real-world applications—and its penchant for making miracles happen.

The ceremony reached its pinnacle with a dramatic display of innovation. In a symbolic gesture of bridging past and future, a drone—generously donated by distinguished alumnus Mr. WANG Tao, Founder of DJI—soared into the venue carrying the commemorative “35th Symbol Key.” As the drone gracefully descended to deliver the key to the officiating party on stage, it signaled the formal inauguration of the anniversary celebrations.

HKUST expressed its deep gratitude to Mr. Wang for his generous donation of two of the latest drone solutions to the university. These state-of-the-art drones will serve as an inspiration for faculty and students to explore and address new challenges in the rapidly evolving low-altitude economy.

The campus itself has been transformed with a “Circle of Time” visual theme, inspired by the iconic Sundial sculpture—a symbol of the University’s enduring legacy and its continuous measurement of progress in education, research, and knowledge transfer.

A Legacy of Excellence and National Trust

Since its founding in 1991, HKUST has risen to rank among the world’s top 50 universities. This commitment to excellence is underscored by the deep trust the nation has placed in the University. Following the reorganization of two existing State Key Laboratories, HKUST has secured approval from the Ministry of Science and Technology to establish a new one, further strengthening its role in advancing cutting-edge research critical to national development.

In a major national space endeavor, HKUST is developing a multi-functional robot for the historic Chang’E-8 lunar mission, designed to operate on the lunar surface and contribute to China’s advancing space exploration capabilities. The University is also leading the development of a high-precision, point-source greenhouse gas detection instrument. This groundbreaking project is set to make history as it will become HKSAR’s first payload to China’s Tiangong Space Station aboard the Tianzhou cargo spacecraft for research and application.

Celebratory Events

A full year of celebratory activities is planned, including co-hosting Asia Universities Summit with Times Higher Education, an AI Film Festival, and joint celebrations with HKUST (Guangzhou).

Global Thought Leadership

Following the symposium held earlier this year, where multiple Nobel laureates and world-leading scholars were invited to engage with HKUST faculty, students and alumni, the University will co-host the THE Asia Universities Summit 2026 with Times Higher Education (THE) this April. The event will draw university presidents and industry leaders from around the world to Hong Kong to explore Asia’s leadership role in driving global change. HKUST will also host the China Association of Higher Education’s flagship “World University Presidents Forum” for the first time in Hong Kong.

AI and Innovation Thematic Events

HKUST will organize a series of events focused on AI, technology governance and creative culture—including an AI Film Festival—to highlight the University’s leadership and societal impact in AI.

Building the HKUST Community

The University will host joint celebrations across its Clear Water Bay and Guangzhou campuses, including a year-long blood donation drive, a marathon, a “Mixed Reality x AI” art exhibition, and more, to foster closer interaction between faculty and students from the two campuses. HKUST will also organize a grand anniversary gala dinner to celebrate with faculty, students, alumni and community leaders, alongside a digital commemorative booklet that recounts the University’s 35 years of outstanding achievements with society.

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– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/17/hkust-launches-35th-anniversary-celebrations-showcasing-a-legacy-of-miracles-and-a-vision-for-the-future/

Outdoor Activities – Map reveals hundreds of DOC public access easements

Source: Herenga ā Nuku – the Outdoor Access Commission

Hundreds of public access easements held in the Department of Conservation’s (DOC) internal property records are now visible to the public for the first time, marking a significant step forward for public access transparency.
The milestone follows an ongoing collaboration, working together to translate historic legal records into mapped digital data that can be viewed by the public.
The Outdoor Access Commission has published 858 land parcels -representing 175 confirmed DOC public access easements – on its mapping system (WAMS). Until now, these easements have been recorded in DOC’s National Property and Land Information System (NaPALIS). Many existed in legal documentation rather than mapped spatial layers, meaning they had not previously appeared on any public-facing map.
Outdoor Access Commission geospatial manager Matt Grose says DOC converting the information into accurate mapping data gives a free, accessible and public way to view the data.
“Many of these easements were contained in legal instruments rather than digital map files,” Matt says. “We have turned that historic property information into accurate spatial data that can be confidently shared with the public.”
Many of the newly displayed easements show legal public access links between the ends of formed roads and public conservation land. In many cases, access has existed in law for years, but people have not been able to easily see those routes when planning trips.
DOC’s spokesperson, Manu King, Geospatial Services Manager, says the release reflects both teamwork between agencies and the increasing value of public data.
It demonstrates what can be achieved when technical teams work together with a common purpose. By combining property expertise, GIS capability and the commission’s mapping platforms, we’ve been able to unlock information that benefits all New Zealanders.”
The commission is displaying the easements on WAMS and its Pocket Maps app, making the information readily accessible to people naturing; walkers, hunters, trampers and others who recreate on public conservation land.
“Map users will now be able to see how public access actually reaches DOC land,” Matt says. “Instead of an isolated block of conservation land, people can see the legal access that connects them to it.”
The initial release will soon be followed by a second tranche of around 300 additional easements currently undergoing verification. Many of these are older records that require manual review and confirmation before they can be confidently mapped and published.
Outdoor Access Commission chief executive Dan Wildy says the publication of public access easements is another step to deliver transparent and accessible information related to public access.
“Through our GIS team, helped by our partners at DOC, we are delivering greater public access information than at any other time in our country’s history.”
Together, this mahi reflects a shared commitment to making public access clearer, more visible and easier to understand – now and into the future.
Three examples of these easements

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/16/outdoor-activities-map-reveals-hundreds-of-doc-public-access-easements/

Government’s climate change plans go to the High Court

Source: Radio New Zealand

Climate Action and the Environmental Law Initiative are asking the High Court to declare Climate Change Minister Simon Watts’ decisions unlawful. RNZ / Mark Papalii

A landmark legal case that argues the government’s plan to tackle climate change is unlawful and risky will go ahead today.

Climate advocates will argue that the government broke the law when it dismantled dozens of climate policies soon after the 2023 election, before it had consulted the public.

They also say the current plan relies too heavily on planting trees to offset greenhouse gas emissions, instead of reducing the amount of emissions the country produces in the first place.

Lawyers for Climate Action and the Environmental Law Initiative (ELI) are jointly taking the case against Climate Change Minister Simon Watts.

The organisations are asking the High Court to declare the minister’s decisions unlawful and to throw out the current emissions plan so a new, more ambitious one can be prepared.

An environmental law expert says the case is “hugely significant” and has similarities to challenges in the UK, which resulted in changes to that government’s climate plans.

Under New Zealand’s climate laws, the government must produce five-yearly emissions reductions plans, which set out how the country will meet its domestic climate targets.

At the moment, those targets are to reduce carbon dioxide and other long-lived gas emissions to net zero by 2050, and to reduce methane emissions to 14 to 24 percent below 2017 levels by the same deadline.

The methane target was originally a 24 to 47 percent reduction by 2050, but the government changed this last year in response to lobbying from the agricultural sector, which produces half of New Zealand’s methane emissions.

There are also interim targets for 2030: to halve long-lived gases from their 2005 levels, and a 10 percent reduction of methane emissions from 2017 levels.

Subsidies for electric vehicles, and a fund to help businesses electrify their coal- and gas-fired industrial processes, were among policies that the government chose to scrap in late 2023.

ELI senior legal researcher Eliza Prestidge-Oldfield said climate laws allowed the government to make changes to an emissions reduction plan, but they must consult on any changes that are more than minor or technical.

Instead, the government scrapped large parts of the plan before formally amending it.

“By the time the plan was actually amended, there were over 30 initiatives that were being consulted on where the decisions had already been made,” she said.

“What the government should have done is consulted on any amendments before it locked in those changes.”

‘Phenomenal’ reliance on pine planting

The latest emissions reduction plan, which kicked in at the start of this year, was not really an emissions reduction plan at all, Prestidge-Oldfield said.

“Instead of having arranged policies that might substantively reduce our reliance on fossil fuels, or replace sectors of the economy that currently are reliant on out that equipment with new equipment, they’ve just relied on baseline modeling and trees offsetting carbon emissions.”

The reliance on forestry planting in the plan was “quite phenomenal”.

“The reliance on forestry means that people aren’t going to be doing the other things that they can do, that are technically feasible now and may even have a good payoff, unless they’re cheaper than a forestry credit,” she said.

Relying on mostly pine plantations was “inherently risky”, she said.

“As the climate heats, the risk of them burning down is pretty significant. We’ve already seen issues with extreme weather events, windfall, forestry slash – so these are not a robust solution in and of themselves.”

Lawyers for Climate Action executive director Jessica Palairet said using trees and other types of carbon sequestration was an important part of the climate response, because it would help to remove carbon dioxide already warming the planet.

It could not simply replace reducing emissions at their source, though.

“The government shouldn’t treat reductions and removals as equivalent,” Palairet said.

“They’re different, they needed to be treated differently under the law, and we don’t think the minister even turned his mind to whether this plan of planting our way out of the climate crisis complied with international law.”

The global Paris Agreement did not explicitly state that governments must prioritise reducing emissions over removing them from the atmosphere, Palairet said.

“But there’s numerous parts … that do suggest a preferencing of reductions over forestry removals.”

States were also expected to take a precautionary approach to reducing their emissions, she said.

“So reduce emissions now, rather than keep them at high levels and leave them for future generations to deal with.”

Case is significant – environmental law expert

The hearing in Wellington will add to a growing body of climate law cases being levelled at governments around the world.

An advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice last year found that developed countries like New Zealand were expected to lead the way in making emissions reductions, and that the way was open for countries to sue each other for failing to take action.

Auckland University associate professor Vernon Rive said the latest case was “hugely significant”.

“It concerns some quite fundamental planks of the government’s policy and approach on climate mitigation,” he said.

“It tests whether from a legal perspective the policy reliance on the [emissions trading scheme] – almost to the exclusion of everything else – is a legitimate approach.”

The outcome could set a precedent for how emissions reduction plans were set, especially about the level of certainty the government needed to have that a plan could meet an emissions budget.

“I don’t think anyone expects there to be 100 percent certainty, because this involves modelling and predictions of what will happen in the future,” Rive said, “But there is an expectation of a level of certainty and robustness and credibility.”

That included what wiggle-room there was if some policies did not succeed, or something else unexpected happened.

“The government’s plan – by its own recognition – is cutting it very, very fine,” he said. “There’s a very small buffer for achieving it or not achieving it.”

New Zealand’s system of setting greenhouse gas budgets and emissions reduction plans was similar to Ireland and the UK, where governments had also faced legal challenges.

“[There have been] two significant cases in the UK where environmental interests have successfully challenged the UK government’s emissions reduction plans, or their equivalent,” Rive said.

“The court has said look, there are just too many uncertainties here involved in your plan – you need to go back and do it again, and do it properly this time.”

New Zealand’s legal system was similar to the UK’s, so he expected the courts here to take a similar approach to the law.

“Each of these cases will turn on their own facts … but this is a very credible claim.”

The hearing is expected to last three days, with a reserved decision later this year.

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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/2026/03/16/governments-climate-change-plans-go-to-the-high-court/

Fast-track Decision Looms on Destructive Waitaha Hydo Scheme

Source: Green Party

The Green Party says the Fast Track expert panel should turn down the previously declined ‘Waitaha Hydro’ project, which if approved will destroy an internationally significant South Island river.

An application to dam the river as part of the ‘Waitaha Hydro project’ was declined in 2019 by the Minister for the Environment David Parker. It was shown then to offer little benefit to New Zealand, while causing significant impacts on the natural character of the wild Waitaha River and Morgan Gorge, the intrinsic value of the area, and people’s enjoyment of it.

Green Party Environment spokesperson MP Lan Pham says they are expecting a release on the Waitaha Fast-track hydro application today, based on comments from the panel chair during a recent hearing.

“The only people to benefit from this zombie project being resurrected from the dead are to its investors. It is a cynical manipulation of democracy to try and get a different result through the Fast Track process after it was already declined through an earlier, more robust process.”

“This project wouldn’t even be ‘fast’ to get going – the project backers want 15 years to build the thing. Using the Fast Track process is a transparent misuse of the legislation and a big middle finger to Aotearoa NZ.”

“The Waitaha river flows through conservation land. The area is home to over 25 native bird species, including kea, kākā and kārearea, whio, and long-tailed bats, and forest and green geckos.”

“The Department of Conservation themselves have said “the Waitaha Valley has ecological, landscape and recreational values of local, regional, national and international significance.”

“It is DOC’s view that the proposal will result in the fundamental loss of natural character, solitude and remoteness that underpin the Waitaha Valley characteristics of a back country-remote zone.”

Pham says along with irreversibly destroying the wild character of area, the project fails to meet any sensible economic threshold.

“There are already consented, unbuilt hydro schemes on the West Coast, that wouldn’t do the damage that this project would. The proposed cost has doubled to $200 million, while only providing power for 12,000 homes. That’s about $20,000 per household – money which could be used to expand nearby solar projects, or other modern technology solutions which don’t rely on destroying our remaining wild places.” 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/13/fast-track-decision-looms-on-destructive-waitaha-hydo-scheme/

Launching predator-free pilot in the Chatham Islands

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

On the Chatham Islands, 800 kilometres east of mainland Aotearoa, New Zealand, a group of locals are mobilising to protect hundreds of endangered species, including eight types of albatross.  

Chatham Islands albatross/toroa/popo. Photo by Dave Boyle.

Taking action for all living beings

The Chatham Islands Landscape Restoration Trust has launched the first phase of its Predator Free Chathams project. This includes targeting introduced predators across an initial 7500-hectare area in the northeast of Rēkohu/Wharekauri/main Chatham.

“Predator Free Chathams is a big step in something larger, for all our communities – human, plant, animal, everything that’s part of our ecosystems,” says Hamish Chisholm, the Trust’s Project Lead and a sixth-generation islander.

Success in this area will show what’s possible for the biggest island in the archipelago, Rēkohu/Wharekauri, and further activate the local movement, he says.

“We’re currently building a network of AT220 automated traps targeting possums and rats in the operational area, and we are working with the Hokotehi Moriori Trust to remove feral cats.

“We’re treating this phase like a pilot – what we learn here will help inform how we approach the rest of the island. We want to build greater opportunities for community involvement and support as we are quite a small organisation with two staff, our trustees, and some dedicated volunteers we couldn’t do without.”

Project lead, Hamish Chisholm, amongst the bracken at Te Whanga Lagoon.

Stories of native species revival

The Chatham Islands community has a proud history of bringing species back from the brink of extinction.

This includes the parea, a wood pigeon much like kererū on mainland Aotearoa, whose population has risen from about 40 birds to around 600.

Another example is the Chatham Island tāiko which was once one of the world’s rarest seabirds before sustained predator control and species recovery work started.

“Tāiko are being carefully monitored and protected in the south of main Chatham by another local conservation group, the Chatham Island Taiko Trust, with 52 known breeding pairs returning to their burrows in the 2024/25 season,” Hamish says.

The parea/Chatham Island pigeon is closely related to the slightly smaller kererū on mainland Aotearoa, New Zealand. Photo by Jess MacKenzie

The project has many stories to draw upon, including the rescue of the kakaruia/karure/black robin which helped put Aotearoa on the international conservation stage in the 1980s.

“Dropping to just five individual birds, DOC teamed up with locals to help bring this species back from the brink, and it now exists on the two nature reserve islands, Mangere/Maung’Re and Rangatiara/Hokorereoro,” Hamish says.

“These islands are now reaching their population capacity, highlighting the real need for safer habitat to be created in other areas of the archipelago.”

“One of the highlights from last year was translocating some hakoakoa/tītī to revive an old seabird site in the area, as part of a project led by the Hokotehi Moriori Trust,” Hamish says.

“These chicks all fledged successfully, and the second translocation of chicks is due to happen at the end of March.”

Image: Hakoakoa/tītī translocation into the northeast project area led by the Hokotehi Moriori Trust.

Creating a sustainable future for the Chatham Island community

The livelihood of the local community is also the heart of the vision for Predator Free Chathams, Hamish says.

“Our mahi isn’t just about endangered species, although we do have 326 of those living across the archipelago. By rewilding and restoring whole ecosystems in the archipelago, we can mitigate against climate change and help create a sustainable future for the 700 or so people who live on these remote islands.”

This includes creating environmental career pathways for young people on the island so they can stay if they choose and help restore their home while building valuable skills.

“Our gardens and agriculture will also benefit a lot, with opportunities for alternative land use or new approaches to farming. With the incredible number of seabirds, and unique species out here, there are also great possibilities for well-managed ecotourism.”

Chatham Island albatross with chick on nest

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Chatham Island albatross with chick on nest

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Chatham Islands albatross/toroa/popo on its nest with a chick. Photo by Dave Boyle.

Hamish says there are important opportunities to learn in the Chathams that could benefit the wider predator-free movement and conservation efforts across the country, particularly if a project to remove feral cats from Pitt Island can find funding to go ahead.

“From approaches to targeting feral cats to insight on eradicating predators on inhabited islands, we’re keen to be part of that big picture, working towards a Predator Free Aotearoa where nature, including the people who live in it, is thriving.”

[embedded content]

The Chatham Islands Landscape Restoration Trust and Predator Free Chathams has been supported by a range of organisations along the way, including WWF, Wellington Zoo, Predator Free NZ Ltd, Pacific Development Fund, private donors, Chatham Islands Council, and more recently through two operational grants from the Department of Conservation.

You can find more information about the project and the species they are trying to protect by watching the video above or visiting the Chatham Islands Landscape Restoration Trust website.

Follow the team’s progress on Facebook and Instagram, or sign up to their quarterly newsletter.

Hebe bakeri at Nikau Bush, Chatham Island. Photo by Jess MacKenzie

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/13/launching-predator-free-pilot-in-the-chatham-islands/

Human remains identified, Coppermine Island

Source: New Zealand Police

Human remains located on Coppermine Island (Mauipane), east of Whangārei have been identified as belonging to a person who went missing in May 2024.

On 20 December 2025, a member of the Department of Conservation contacted Police after finding the remains on the island.

The remains have since been examined by a pathologist, anthropologist, and ESR scientists as we worked to identify who the person was.

Following the examination, the human remains have now been confirmed as those of missing person Ferzil Babu, who went missing while on a fishing trip at The Gap, Taiharuru on 1 May 2024.

Police have since spoken with Ferzil’s family to inform them of the finding.

Police extend their sympathies to his loved ones at this difficult time.

ENDS.

Holly McKay/NZ Police

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/13/human-remains-identified-coppermine-island/

Tech tool used to target pest plants at precious wetland

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Date:  12 March 2026

Whangamarino is 7000 ha wetland an hour north of Hamilton, comprising open water, swamp, fen and peat bogs. It is listed as significant under the international Ramsar Convention on Wetlands and is home to numerous threatened plant and insect species.

A recent report on the wetland to the Convention identifies a concerning decline in water quality, indigenous wetland habitat, the wetland’s Australasian bittern/matuku population, and cultural values recognised by mana whenua.

One of the biggest threats to Whangamarino is invasive weeds, which outcompete native plants and alter the waterways and food sources essential to taonga species.

Royal fern is among those. It’s an introduced, tough and adaptable deciduous plant, which grows rapidly and can take over wetlands by crowding out slower-growing, rare native species found in Whangamarino.

Department of Conservation Biodiversity Ranger Lizzie Sharp says two drones, operated by specialist pilots, were used to map the royal fern and implement targeted herbicide control during fine weather periods in late February.

“Slogging through the peat bog to carry out ground control would be very hard going for our teams and could also risk damaging the surface of the bog,” Lizzie says.

“The drones took to the air and used a targeted jet of herbicide on the royal fern in the centre of the bog, before moving out toward the edge of the bog in an effort to push the invasion back.”

It’s the first time royal fern has been controlled using an aerial device, and the success and efficiency of the method may lead to it being used to control other weeds in future. The contractors carried out half a day of mapping their work area before three days of control using the drone.

Lizzie says with weather increasingly unpredictable due to climate change, numerous approaches to pest plant control will be needed – and drones will be valuable for protecting important habitats like Whangamarino.

Left uncontrolled, royal fern will appear in most habitats, especially bare damp ground. It produces thousands of spores distributed by the wind and unintentional human carriers and forms dense forests shading out all other species. At Whangamarino, this includes native peat bog vegetation which has adapted to exposed sunlight. After the fire of October 2024, royal fern has used the disturbed ground to grow into dense canopies at a faster pace than native plant species.

Lizzie says contractors used a helicopter to control willow species across the wetland during summer. Willow is another introduced pest plant which can cover the breeding and feeding habitat for matuku-hurepo/Australasian bittern. The helicopter method was similar to the use of the drone, with half a boom used to apply herbicide to the willows. Precision spot-spraying on individual trees complements aerial control and means surrounding vegetation is not impacted.

Willows also absorb water from the surrounding area. Their root systems create mounds of earth where water should be running, altering fish populations. Whangamarino locations where willows were controlled a few years ago have native plants returning to support insects, fish and birds in the area.

The aerial application of herbicides is strictly controlled through DOC’s operating procedures and a set of rules and regulations that DOC and its contractors must follow.

Whangamarino is precious and fragile eco-system, and as it recovers from the fire of 2024, people are asked not to go naturing in the wetland to protect the fragile peat bog.

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/tech-tool-used-to-target-pest-plants-at-precious-wetland/

DoC’s Kākāpo livstream attracts international attention

Source: Radio New Zealand

Rakiura a female kākāpō is being livestreamed from her nest. SCREENSHOT

A Department of Conservation (DoC) livestream of a nesting Kākāpo on a remote island off the coast of the South Island, has attracted international attention.

Through a hidden camera, viewers can watch Rakiura as she raises her chick, who looks more like a sentient ball of fluff than a bird, at this stage.

In the comments of the YouTube livestream, watchers announce they’re tuning in from places including Argentina, The United States and The Netherlands.

“She’s a star,” one commenter said, “I love to come here and watch Rakiura and her chick for a while every day it is so special,” another wrote.

More than 100 people are tuning in to the livestream at any given time.

The livestream is beamed across the world from a arge cavity beneath a rātā tree on Whenua Hou/Codfish Island.

Twenty-four-year-old Rakiura even laid an egg on the livestream back in January and was now raising her chick for the world to see.

According to DoC, there were only 236 Kākāpo left in the world, and as they were only in Aotearoa, many people would never see one in real life.

A Kākāpo with her chick. (File photo) JAKE OSBORNE

This was the first breeding season for Kākāpo since 2022, it said.

Kākāpō only breed every two to four years and this year’s season could the best yet following a bumper mast, or mass fruiting of rimu berries.

During this breeding season, Rakiura had laid three eggs – but only two of these went on to hatch. One of the chicks was transferred to a foster mum while the second, Nora-A2 2026, is still in the nest with her mum.

DoC said Rakiura had nine living descendants across six breeding seasons and also had many “grandchicks”.

The Kākāpo cam helped scientists learn about nesting behaviour along with letting people around the world watch without disturbing the birds, it said, and helped build support for protecting the species.

On its website, DoC urged people to share the video with friends and family because “the more people who care, the better the future for kākāpō”.

This year’s live stream set up involved four solar panels, 26kg of batteries, 300m of cable, satellite internet, routers, voltage converters and more.

The Kākāpo livestream could be viewed here.

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/docs-kakapo-livstream-attracts-international-attention/

Greenpeace – Luxon’s climate policies leave Kiwis hurting as petrol hits $3 a litre

Source: Greenpeace

As petrol prices climb to around $3 a litre, Greenpeace is pointing to a series of Government decisions that have left Kiwis hit harder by the oil price spike.
“The Luxon Government has spent the last two years dismantling policies that were helping wean New Zealanders off expensive imported oil,” says Gen Toop, Senior Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa.
“Instead of helping households escape volatile and expensive petrol prices, they have crashed the EV market, slashed public transport funding and are spending billions on new roads.
“These decisions are making the climate crisis, and the cost of living crisis worse.”
Greenpeace points to a number of decisions that it says have increased New Zealand’s dependence on imported fossil fuels including:
“This Government is effectively turning New Zealand into a dumping ground for the world’s dirtiest, most oil-hungry cars while other countries rapidly switch to EVs,” Toop says.
“At the same time they are slashing public and active transport options which forces more people into cars leaving them facing more pain at the pump when petrol prices spike.
“This latest plan to build a multi-billion dollar LNG import terminal is ludicrous. Importing and burning another volatile fossil fuel is the last thing our climate, and power bills need. Especially when we have all the wind, sun and renewable energy potential we need right here at home.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/greenpeace-luxons-climate-policies-leave-kiwis-hurting-as-petrol-hits-3-a-litre/

The New Zealand Threat Classification Series hits 50

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

A milestone worth celebrating for Aotearoa New Zealand’s biodiversity

The New Zealand Threat Classification Series has officially reached its 50th issue! That’s 50 deep dives into the state of our unique species, 50 scientifically robust contributions to conservation knowledge, and 50 reasons to feel proud of the mahi behind this nationally important series.

What is the Threat Classification Series?

Since 2013, the New Zealand Threat Classification Series (NZTCS) has served as a cornerstone of conservation science in Aotearoa. It’s a scientific series, but not the gathering dust on a shelf kind. These publications are all open access, living online on DOC’s Science Publications webpages, and widely used by researchers, conservationists, NGOs, and agencies here and overseas.

Each issue shares the most up-to-date conservation status of New Zealand’s wild species, from algae and spiders to birds, fungi, and everything in between. On average, three publications roll out every year, covering 23 different species groups. More than 16,000 species have been assessed to date.  

Flashback to issue #1

The very first issue, published in June 2013, was a whopper, compiling results from 21 peer-reviewed studies covering 12,223 species. It marked a major shift, moving NZTCS data from membership only journals to an open, freely available platform. 

The second issue, also released June 2013, helped shape the series’ now-recognisable structure, though the look has evolved over the years (including the addition of the official NZTCS colour scheme in 2021). 

We’ve actually come full circle – the series launched with a reptile assessment in 2013 and now issue #50 celebrates reptiles again. 

Enjoy the photos in this blog. They’ve all featured on the cover of a report.  

It started with spreadsheets

In the early days, each issue came with an accompanying Excel spreadsheet packed with data. In 2018, this transformed with the creation of the NZTCS database, and supportive data is now accessed directly through digital links inside each publication.  

A global audience

The NZTCS isn’t just for New Zealand audiences. In 2025, it had more than 2,500 reads, including readers in 68 countries. Outside Aotearoa, the biggest readership comes from the United States, Australia and China. 

The most popular publication so far?

Issue 36 – Conservation Status of Birds in Aotearoa New Zealand, 2021. The issue was a real milestone, announcing that North Island Brown Kiwi, while remaining conservation dependent, was no longer threatened or at risk of becoming threatened thanks to 30 years of community conservation. 

A massive collaborative effort

Behind each issue lies a considerable cross-sector effort. More than 200 authors – from DOC, Crown Research Institutes, universities, museums, and consultancies – have contributed their expertise. 

Why the NZTCS matters

The NZTCS provides evidence-based assessments of extinction risk for species across Aotearoa, including marine species. It complements the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, but tailors its criteria to New Zealand’s unique natural environment such as island ecosystems, naturally small populations, and species with restricted ranges found nowhere else in the world. 

Panels of experts reassess each species group roughly every five years, weighing abundance, distribution, and population trends. The result is a clear, nationally relevant picture of how our species are doing and where conservation energy is most needed. 

Here’s to 50 issues, and many more to come

The NZTCS is more than a set of publications. It’s a living record of the state of Aotearoa’s biodiversity. It informs policy, recovery planning, advocacy, science and even national reporting. 

Reaching 50 issues is a huge achievement. And as long as our taonga species need champions, the series will keep growing, evolving, and supporting the mahi to protect our natural heritage. 

Ngā mihi nui to everyone who has contributed, supported, read, shared, or relied on this work. Here’s to the next 50! 

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/12/the-new-zealand-threat-classification-series-hits-50/

Greenpeace – Renewed calls for Govt to lower nitrate contamination limits, following Danish precedent

Source: Greenpeace

In  an open letter launched this morning, Greenpeace is calling on the New Zealand Government to put public health above industry profits by lowering the legal limit for nitrate in drinking water. (ref. https://www.greenpeace.org/aotearoa/publication/open-letter-nitrate-limits/ )
This follows the Danish Government’s move to lower the legal limit for nitrate in drinking water, after an expert panel recommended it should reduce from 11.3mg/L – which is also New Zealand’s current standard – to 1mg/L. The panel’s recommendation was to take a precautionary approach to protect against the risk of bowel cancer.
Greenpeace Aotearoa freshwater campaigner Will Appelbe says, “Rural families’ drinking water is being poisoned by the intensive dairy industry, yet the New Zealand Government is burying its head in the sand and pretending there’s no problem.”
“A growing body of international evidence has linked elevated levels of nitrate in drinking water with several human health risks, including bowel cancer, preterm birth, and Blue Baby syndrome.”
“But while Denmark moves to protect people from these health risks, the Luxon Government is protecting dairy industry profits.”
Appelbe says that the Danish situation is a ‘good news story’ – one that New Zealand needs to replicate.
“The Danish Government has recognised a threat to human health, and taken action to stop the problem from getting worse.
“Nitrate contamination has been linked to an increased risk of bowel cancer, preterm birth, and at high levels, Blue Baby syndrome. Another recent international study suggests a correlation between high nitrate in drinking water and increased dementia risk. The weight of the available evidence supports taking a precautionary approach and reducing exposure to nitrate contamination.”
“The evidence is clear. Nitrate contamination puts people’s health at risk. That’s why we’re calling on the Luxon Government to lower the Maximum Allowable Value – the legal limit – for nitrate in drinking water now.”

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/11/greenpeace-renewed-calls-for-govt-to-lower-nitrate-contamination-limits-following-danish-precedent/

Consumer NZ – No u-turn to petrol for New Zealand EV owners

Source: Consumer NZ

New research from Consumer NZ shows an overwhelming 96% of electric vehicle (EV) owners would buy another EV, confirming strong satisfaction among current owners.

Consumer has released findings from its latest car reliability and satisfaction survey, representing responses from 5,791 members and supporters collected in November and December 2025.

“This survey canvassed car owner experiences, providing insights into preferred engines, brand performance, reliability and overall owner satisfaction,” says Consumer NZ chief executive Jon Duffy.

While petrol vehicles continue to dominate the nation’s roads, making up 59% of cars New Zealanders own, the landscape is shifting. The share of EVs and plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) has grown from 12% in 2023 to 17% in 2025. Hybrid ownership has also risen significantly, increasing from 10% to 15% over the same period.

“This indicates a gradual but growing shift towards going electric on our roads,” says Duffy.  

Over half of EV owners made the switch with the anticipation of lower running costs, and 81% of current owners say their operating costs are much cheaper. Environmental considerations were also a key factor.

“Our research found that one of the more affordable electric vehicle brands ranked highly when it came to price and reliability, outstripping performance on some better-known petrol brands,” says Duffy.

However, despite 56% of EV owners wanting lower running costs, 29% kept the same power plan after buying an EV, even though they would now be using more energy.

“This highlights the importance of heading to Powerswitch to the find the best deal for your energy needs. There are significant savings to be made on power by shopping around,” says Duffy.

The survey also explored how drivers feel about vehicle safety technology. Reversing cameras and sensors topped the list as respondents’ most valued safety features, while lane-keeping assist was ranked the most annoying.

For more insights into New Zealand’s best and worst cars, including reliable motoring, owner satisfaction, maintenance and repair costs, and the recipients of Consumer NZ’s annual People’s Choice awards, see the full survey results at consumer.org.nz/products/ car-reliability  

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/11/consumer-nz-no-u-turn-to-petrol-for-new-zealand-ev-owners/

Large kea flock ‘micro-chipped’ to track travels

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Date:  11 March 2026

Department of Conservation science staff and rangers recently caught 31 kea from a record flock of about 36 birds, attaching leg bands with tiny microchips. The bands are scanned by solar-powered readers attached to hut roofs and other sites that kea like to visit, allowing their travels to be recorded.

DOC Senior Science Advisor Kerry Weston says the kea caught at Red Tarns above Aoraki Mount Cook Village were part of the largest flock seen at Aoraki since kea surveying began in 2019.

“They were mostly young kea, many just fledged from their nests, including one bird that had travelled 40 km from Whymper Hut on the West Coast across the main divide.

“This is the largest flock of kea I’ve seen at Aoraki or anywhere. Combined with increased sightings of kea around the park, it’s a positive sign that the local kea population is increasing.

“Young kea often band together in wandering flocks in late summer and autumn, but we don’t know where they’re coming from. We’re hoping this research will help answer that question.”

So far, 420 kea have been banded with the RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tags over the past two summers as part of the trial. There are 13 readers installed at huts and other sites within the adjacent Westland Tai Poutini and Aoraki Mount Cook national parks, and other nearby conservation areas. More readers will be added including to New Zealand Alpine Club huts.

Use of the RFID tags is a cost-effective way of monitoring kea. The leg bands cost less than $1 each and the data is passively gathered as kea land on the readers.

The trial, which is supported by the World Parrot Trust, addresses one of the priorities of a new joint recovery strategy by DOC, Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu and the Kea Conservation Trust to develop new tools and approaches to monitor kea populations and their movements across the landscape.

While it’s known kea fly large distances, improved understanding of kea movement patterns will help inform the design of effective predator control and other management measures.

Early trial results confirm young kea are travelling from lowland forests on the West Coast to alpine areas and across the Southern Alps/Kā Tiritiri o Te Moana. For example, one young bird was tracked flying over 30 km from its nest in lowland forest at Ōkārito to Chancellor Hut, perched above Fox Glacier/Te Moeka o Tuawe.

“The Predator Free South Westland and Te Manahuna Aoraki Project predator eradication work underway in this area is benefiting kea and will give this flock of young birds a good chance of survival,” says Kerry.

Predators such as stoats and feral cats are a big threat to kea, which nest and forage on the ground.

“As we see kea numbers increase in places like Aoraki, we ask people to help keep kea wild and safe.

“When you are out naturing, you can help by giving kea space, not feeding them and keeping your belongings secured so they don’t attract curious kea,” says Kerry.

Young kea, typically aged 1-4 years, form ‘teenage gangs’ to socialise, play and learn to forage and navigate their environment. There’s safety in numbers with flocking also reducing the risk of predation. When birds reach sexual maturity at 3-4 years old, they settle down to find a mate and establish territory.

Predator Free South Westland

Te Manahuna Aoraki Project

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/11/large-kea-flock-micro-chipped-to-track-travels/

The world is eating our lunch: How our apples, seafood and avocados make millions

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ

Five years after Who’s Eating NZ, this series revisits where our food goes – but this time through the lens of Kiwi breakfast, lunch and dinner staples. We track how much of what we produce is eaten here, and who has a seat at our global table during meal times. Today, it’s lunch time.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon memorably advised parents unhappy with supplied school lunches to “make a Marmite sandwich and put an apple in a bag”.

New Zealand certainly does enjoy an abundance of apples.

We grow so many that almost nine out of 10 are sold overseas, fresh and processed.

The bumper crop is no accident. There has been a concerted push to grow the apple export industry with the development and marketing of new varieties. Royal gala and Braeburn apples have been joined by Jazz, Envy and Rockit.

Back in 2012, the industry set a goal of reaching $1 billion in exports by 2022. At that time, exports were sitting at $340 million. The target was missed in 2022, but exceeded in 2025 when exports of $1.26b were achieved.

New challenges come with that success though. Horticulture company T&G won a court order in China, forcing orchards in China to rip out illegally grown knock-offs of its Envy variety.

China clearly has developed a taste for our apples – it was our biggest apple buyer in 2025, followed by Taiwan, Vietnam and India.

For local apple buyers, prices fluctuate through the year, with the highest prices occurring in January. In 2007, 1kg of apples cost $3.89. In January 2025 a kilogram of apples cost $6.15.

The humble avocado might be one of the most controversial foods around. Along with being blamed for creating a generation of renters, its notoriously slippery stone has meant millions in ACC payouts for ‘avocado hand’ injuries, and telling someone they “have the avocados” can spark a language debate.

As well as being keen consumers, New Zealand makes a solid contribution to the global supply of avocados. More than 4700 hectares of the country is planted in avocados, with most concentrated in the Far North and Bay of Plenty.

About 50 percent of what was grown locally last year remained in the country, the rest heading offshore.

Australia is the biggest buyer, purchasing about a third of our exports in 2025, down from a peak of 90 percent in 2020. Far smaller quantities are bought by South Korea, Thailand, Taiwan and Hong Kong.

Export earnings have fallen from a 2020 high of $177m to $102m, as New Zealand competes with other global growers, such as Peru, which had a bumper crop in 2025.

New Zealand Avocado chief executive Brad Siebert said countries such as Mexico, Peru, Columbia and South Africa are producing more avocados, which leads to volatile prices. Demand globally is increasing, but at a slow, sometimes uneven pace.

Domestic prices rise and fall annually, often peaking in May. The highest price per kg of $28.67 was in May 2019.

Seafood might be hard to miss in an office lunchroom, but in the data it disappears. It is incredibly hard to put a figure on how much commercially caught seafood ends up in our lunchboxes compared to what’s exported.

The industry body Seafood NZ said there’s been no need to collect domestic information and this position hasn’t changed since RNZ examined seafood exports in 2020.

It is possible to take some stabs at the number. Previously published figures include 90 percent, 77 percent, and numbers previously on Seafood New Zealand’s website say approximately 450,000 tonnes of seafood is caught each year, with 276,901 tonnes exported.

This comes out at about 63 percent – but working on caught weight versus exported weight is not accurate. Fish is gutted and often filleted before export, so it is impossible to match the caught weight up with export data. Sanford’s 2025 annual report says about 82 percent of its sale value is from exports.

Where our seafood goes has shifted over time. In the 1990s, Japan, Australia and the United States were the biggest buyers of our seafood, but by 2011 China emerged as the top buyer. Its spending peaked in 2022 at $709m but by 2025 dropped to $594m.

Seafood exports earned $2b in 2024 and 2025. The biggest single export earner was live rock lobster – China bought $290m worth of them.

Crayfish might not be on everyone’s lunch menu, but rock lobster has been New Zealand seafood’s biggest export earner since 2017 with around 2500 tonnes exported each year, earning between $266m and $392m. Export volumes hit a record 2700 tonnes in 2025.

The demand has put pressure on crayfish populations. In December it was announced that commercial and recreational fishing for rock lobster will be banned from April 2026 off Northland’s east coast in an effort to halt the species rapid decline in the area.

Despite high-profile controversy about global beverage giants bottling our water, exported New Zealand water actually represents a small proportion compared to what’s sold locally.

An exact figure for local sales is hard to come by, but 2018 information published on the Ministry for the Environment’s website suggests only 17 percent is exported.

Bottling companies pay resource consent fees, but do not pay for the water itself. This can mean they pay less for water than residential rate payers.

In 2020 China was the biggest buyer, but since 2022 the US has taken top position.

Despite abundant water here, Kiwis still pay for water from other countries. In 2025 more than 3 million litres was imported, including 1m litres from Italy and nearly 300,000 litres from Fiji.

Stay tuned for Friday’s story, where we take a look at who we’re sharing our dinner with and dive into beef, sheep, onion and wine exports.

Where the data came from

Apples: New Zealand Apple and Pears and StatsNZ trade data items with a harmonised system description containing “Fruit, edible; apples”.

Avocados: New Zealand Avocado and StatsNZ trade data items with a harmonised system description containing “Fruit, edible; avocados, fresh”.

Seafood: Various sources and StatsNZ trade data for items with a harmonised system code between 301910000 to 308909000.

Water: Ministry for the Environment and StatsNZ trade data items with the following harmonised system descriptions: “Waters; mineral and aerated, including natural or artificial, (not containing added sugar or other sweetening matter nor flavoured), other than in metal containers”, Waters; other than mineral and aerated, (not containing added sugar or other sweetening matter nor flavoured), ice and snow, other than in metal containers” , “Waters; mineral and aerated, including natural or artificial, (not containing added sugar or other sweetening matter nor flavoured), in metal containers”, “Waters; other than mineral and aerated, (not containing added sugar or other sweetening matter nor flavoured), ice and snow, in metal aerosol containers, not containing chlorofluorocarbons” , “Waters; other than mineral and aerated, (not containing added sugar or other sweetening matter nor flavoured), ice and snow, in metal containers, not aerosol”

Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/11/the-world-is-eating-our-lunch-how-our-apples-seafood-and-avocados-make-millions/

AECOM supports CEDD and AFCD of HKSAR Government in launching Hong Kong’s first comprehensive nature-based solutions guidelines to advance sustainable urban development

Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 10 March 2026 – AECOM, the trusted global infrastructure leader, supported the release of the Hong Kong Nature-based Solutions Design Guidelines (HKNbSDG), a first-of-its-kind guidelines developed for the Civil Engineering Development Department (CEDD) and the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) of the HKSAR Government. The HKNbSDG helps government agencies, designers, planners and built environment professionals in integrating nature-based solutions (NbS) into urban development projects across Hong Kong.

Developed through multidisciplinary expertise in ecology, landscape architecture, engineering, climate resilience and urban planning, the HKNbSDG provides a practical blueprint for designing, implementing, sustainably managing, and evaluating NbS across diverse environmental contexts — from rivers and wetlands to coastlines and high-density urban districts.

Factoring in the characteristics of Hong Kong’s natural ecology and urban development, the HKNbSDG is built on three core principles that outline a holistic approach to promoting ecosystem diversity at multiple scales, embracing human-nature coexistence for mutual benefits, and improving resilience through NbS. It also includes a performance evaluation framework to support evidence-based decision-making and features local case studies, including Long Valley Nature Park and Tung Chung East Eco-shoreline.

“The HKNbSDG reflects our commitment to advancing nature‑positive design and supporting Hong Kong’s journey toward climate resilience and sustainable growth,” said Dr. Johnny Cheuk, senior vice president and Hong Kong executive leader at AECOM. “By integrating ecological science into design practice, we aim to empower practitioners to harness nature’s potential in building climate-resilient infrastructure.”

The HKNbSDG was officially launched at the Promulgation Ceremony held on March 3, 2026, at Long Valley Nature Park. The event was officiated by Miss. Diane Wong Shuk-han, JP, Under Secretary for Environment and Ecology; Mr. David Lam Chi-man, JP, Under Secretary for Development; Mr. Charles Karangwa, Global Head of Nature-based Solutions Centre of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN); Ir Michael Fong Hok-shing, JP, Director of Civil Engineering and Development; and Mr. Mickey Lai Kin-ming, JP, Director of Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation.

The ceremony featured an introduction to the HKNbSDG by Stephen Suen, director of landscape architecture at AECOM, followed by a panel discussion on building cross-sector partnerships to reverse nature and biodiversity loss through NbS.

Panelists included:

  • Mr. Charles Karangwa, Global Head, Nature-based Solutions Centre, IUCN
  • Ir. Michael Fong Hok‑shing, JP, Director of Civil Engineering and Development
  • Mr. Mickey Lai Kin Ming, JP, Director of Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation
  • Ms. Frances Chen, Director, Sustainability & Climate Change, North Asia, HSBC
  • Mr. Benny Au, Senior Manager, Sustainable Development, Swire Properties Limited

The release of the HKNbSDG supports Hong Kong’s key policy commitments, including the Climate Action Plan 2050 and its biodiversity conservation targets, by providing a practical roadmap for enhancing urban resilience and expanding green infrastructure. This publication equips practitioners with essential tools — from integrating ecology into early planning to designing for multifunctional benefits — grounded in Hong Kong-specific experience. It also serves as a central resource for advancing the Northern Metropolis development strategy, where NbS is helping to drive urban-rural integration and foster the co-existence of urban development and ecological conservation.

The HKNbSDG forms part of AECOM’s broader mission to help cities adapt to climate risks while enhancing quality of life. By bringing together global best practices and local ecological insights, AECOM aims to strengthen industry-wide capability in implementing NbS at scale.

Learn more about the Hong Kong Nature-based Solutions Design Guidelines here.

Download high-resolution images here.

Hashtag: #AECOM #NatureBasedSolutions #NaturePositive #ClimateResilience #Biodiversity

The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.

– Published and distributed with permission of Media-Outreach.com.

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/aecom-supports-cedd-and-afcd-of-hksar-government-in-launching-hong-kongs-first-comprehensive-nature-based-solutions-guidelines-to-advance-sustainable-urban-development/

Tracks reopen as Pirongia storm damage clean-up continues

Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Date:  10 March 2026

Pirongia was hit by severe weather on 13 and 14 February and the network of tracks across the maunga were significantly damaged – including slips, downed trees and floodwaters destroying some bridges and steps.

DOC Waikato Operations Manager Niwha Jones says staff have completed initial assessments on all tracks across the maunga, and several tracks are now able to be reopened.

“The popular Nikau Walk and Loop has reopened – however, visitors should be aware there are contractors working on repairs and there may be pedestrian management in place to ensure visitor safety while machinery is used,” Niwha says.

The Pāhautea Hut and campsite have reopened for booking – but visitor access is now from Waite Rd and only via Ruapane and Tirohanga tracks.

Visitors should return via the Tirohanga and Ruapane tracks to Waite Rd.

No other tracks to the hut are currently open, but over coming weeks DOC will plan for repairs to Tahuanui Track.

“The Mangakara Nature Walk will remain closed for some time, due to the destruction of two bridges. We will need to plan and budget for replacements,” Niwha says.

The Bell Track and Mahaukura Track were significantly damaged by slips and will require further assessment before any decisions are made.

The Hihikiwi Track remains unavailable due to the closures of surrounding public roads.

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

MIL OSI

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/10/tracks-reopen-as-pirongia-storm-damage-clean-up-continues/

Navy faces potential fine after Akaroa Harbour oil spill

Source: Radio New Zealand

Oil spill from HMNZS Te Kaha is contained on Akaroa Harbour. Facebook/Environment Canterbury

Canterbury Regional Council is yet to decide if there will be any penalties for the Royal New Zealand Navy after a ship spilled hundreds of litres of oil in Akaroa Harbour.

About 200 to 300 litres of lubricating oil leaked from HMNZS Te Kaha on Sunday morning because of an oil cooler defect on the ship’s starboard engine.

The Defence Force (NZDF) said the ship was in Akaroa for a training exercise.

The council’s coast and harbours manager Guy Harris said crews had cleaned up most of the oil using absorbent booms. It was not a large spill, but the oil was quite toxic and “thick” for wildlife, although that made it easier for teams to pick up, he said.

“We’ve been on the water since first light doing observations. We still haven’t seen any more black oil but we are still seeing odd sheen, which is very thin layers of oil, and we’re chasing those down.

“We’re also doing shoreline observations looking for oil on the beach, on the rocks.

“This type of oil could be quite significant if it wasn’t captured, if it was in a more remote place or the weather wasn’t so forgiving or we couldn’t get to it, it could be quite damaging. But in this instance we did everything right, and we had a few things on our side as well.”

Harris said any enforcement action against the Navy was yet to be determined by the regional council.

Polluting ships could result in prosecutions or fines of thousands of dollars under the Resource Management Act.

Harris said there had been no reports of any oiled or sick wildlife so far, but teams were continuing to search the area. The oil spill did not happen in Akaroa’s marine reserve.

“We’ve been looking out for seabirds such as shags or blue penguins, there’s a few other birds that come and go but they’re the main ones we’d be looking for, and maybe red-billed gulls,” he said.

The HMNZS Te Kaha (file photo). SUPPLIED / US NAVY

Otago University professor of zoology Liz Slooten said she had serious concerns for dolphins and seabirds in the harbour.

She said seabirds could have their feathers covered in oil, causing them to lose their insulation, sink, drown or be unable to catch fish. Risks for marine mammals included breathing in polluted fumes, getting oil in their eyes, or eating contaminated fish, she said.

“There’s a whole bunch of health effects that will follow on from these animals taking in oil, or diesel or other petrochemicals, so it’s a really serious problem.”

She said bottlenose dolphins had been seen to lose teeth after swimming in contaminated waters in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon disaster, when 4.9 million barrels of oil spilled into the sea.

Slooten said it was concerning the Navy leak was the second spill in the harbour in the past two months, with more than 2000 litres of marine diesel fuel spilling from the Black Cat Cruises boat on 31 January.

Banks Peninsula councillor Tyrone Fields said Akaroa had had a “horror run” and news of another spill was disheartening.

“The health of the harbour there is really on the precipice, and I’d hate to think we’d consider doing future damage to it by continuing to pump wastewater into it. At some point we just have to start doing the right thing when it comes to our waterways.”

NZDF said the ship’s company had been working with the harbourmaster to clean up the slick.

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LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/09/navy-faces-potential-fine-after-akaroa-harbour-oil-spill/

Zero Waste – No support for disestablishing the Ministry for the Environment

Source:  Zero Waste Aotearoa (ZWA)

Zero Waste Aotearoa (ZWA) does not support disestablishing the Ministry for the Environment and bundling its environmental protection functions into the proposed MCERT Mega Ministry.

“This takes us back to an old 1970’s approach by embedding a fundamental conflict of interest into the new mega-Ministry. Environmental protection will be viewed as an internal obstacle to be managed, rather than a statutory goal to be upheld,” says Sue Coutts of Zero Waste Aotearoa.

“Clean and green is part of our national identity.  It underpins our trade and tourism industries. If we don’t have a strong champion to protect our environment we are putting our health, our economy and our future at risk.”

“Almost all of our major environmental indicators show we’re in serious trouble. Our lands, air and water are polluted, biodiversity is under extreme strain and climate goals have been abandoned.”

“Solving New Zealand’s waste, recycling, plastic and chemical pollution problems is already low on the government’s priority list, dismantling the Ministry for the Environment will cross these critical issues off the to-do list altogether.”

“Dismantling the Ministry for the Environment (MfE) is nothing less than vandalism of the public interest by a government that has shown it cares very little for the ecological systems that sustain us.”

“Climate, nature, environmental quality and health impacts need a dedicated, independent statutory voice. This helps to ensure any trade offs being made between development and production  and environmental quality and protection are rigorously analysed.”

“Decision making will be less open and transparent, because the new mega-Ministry Chief Executive will carry the responsibility for making trade offs between environmental and development objectives. This will happen at the management level, rather than these being debated and agreed in the public and political realm. There will be fewer opportunities for scrutiny of decision making with a public interest lens or by watchdogs like the Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment.”

“MfE also plays an important role in managing the Crown’s relationship with iwi regarding natural resources. The current expertise and relationships could be buried or lost in the shift to the MCERT mega ministry.”

“As importantly, resource management law is undergoing a massive overhaul. There is a lot of work to be done setting up the national standards, environmental limits and policy direction that will shape decision making in the future.”

“It makes more sense to leave MfE as it is and properly resource it to do the background work outlined in the new Planning and Environment bills. Restructuring and merging MfE into MCERT will disrupt the team and waste time, energy and resources that could be put into this critical work.”

“As the submission period closes, ZWA encourages the public to understand the negative impacts on environmental protection this will have. ZWA recommends to the select committee that the Ministry for the Environment is not included in this amalgamation, and instead is empowered to actually do the work of caring for our environment.”

Notes

Submissions are open until 4:30 pm on March 11, 2026, for the Environment (Disestablishment of Ministry for the Environment) Amendment Bill.

The Government introduced legislation to establish a Ministry for Cities, Environment, Regions and Transport (MCERT)

MCERT would formally disestablish the Ministry for the Environment. The new ministry will be established on 1 April 2026 and become operational from 1 July 2026

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NZ Navy’s HNZS Te Kaha leaks hundreds of litres of oil into Akaroa Harbour

Source: Radio New Zealand

The oil spill is contained on Akaroa Harbour. Facebook/Environment Canterbury

A Royal New Zealand Navy vessel has spilled hundreds of litres of oil into Akaroa Harbour on Saturday morning.

About 200-300 litres of oil leaked from the HMNZS Te Kaha, due to a defect to an oil cooler on the ship’s starboard engine, a defence force spokesperson said.

Immediate steps were taken to clean up the oil.

Crew used absorbent pads to clean up surface oil and an inflatable boat to disperse the oil.

“The source of the leak has been isolated and no further oil is leaking,” she said.

The ship has been in Akaroa Harbour on a training exercise and remains anchored there on Sunday.

Environment Canterbury Regional on-scene commander Emma Parr said teams were helping clean-up efforts, focused on containing and recovering the oil from the water’s surface.

Parr said the method was working well.

“We’ll continue this approach as long as weather, daylight and sea conditions allow.”

Parr said anyone who saw or smelled oil should report that to Environment Canterbury’s Pollution Hotline, 0800 765 588.

“If you observe any affected wildlife, please do not touch it. Keep a safe distance and call us on the number above.”

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Women shaping the future of Aotearoa recognised in inaugural Women of Impact in Property list

Source: Property Council of New Zealand

Thirty wāhine whose leadership is shaping the future of New Zealand’s built environment have been recognised in the inaugural Women of Impact in Property list, unveiled by Property Council New Zealand this International Women’s Day.

Spanning developers, designers, engineers, strategists, policy leaders and project specialists, the list – selected from over 90 nominees – celebrates the breadth of talent driving progress across the property ecosystem.

Importantly, Women of Impact in Property is not a competition. Every honouree is recognised equally for the influence and impact they have delivered across the sector.

Property Council Chief Executive Leonie Freeman says the programme shines a light on the people whose leadership is helping shape stronger, more inclusive communities.

“Our cities are built by people, and behind every great place are women creating change: leading teams, mentoring others, challenging thinking and delivering outcomes that benefit us all.”

“Women of Impact is about visibility, recognition and inspiration. We want the sector – and the public – to see what leadership looks like in all its forms.”

The initiative reflects Property Council’s ongoing commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion and will become an annual International Women’s Day tradition.

Women of Impact in Property is proudly supported by MinterEllisonRuddWatts.

A sector-wide celebration

Honourees were selected from nominations received across Aotearoa and represent a diverse range of disciplines, regions and career stages.

From large-scale urban development to community-led initiatives, governance leadership to technical excellence, each woman has demonstrated meaningful influence within the industry over the past 12 months.

Why it matters

Property is one of New Zealand’s largest industries, shaping the places where people live, work, play and connect. Recognising the contribution of women across the sector is essential to building a more inclusive, innovative and future-focused industry.

What’s next

The honourees will be celebrated at a dedicated event hosted by programme partner MinterEllisonRuddWatts in May.

NOTES

  • Women of Impact in Property is run by Property Council New Zealand.
  • The programme recognises influence, leadership, inspiration and commitment to advancing positive outcomes in the built environment.
  • The list is non-ranked, celebrating impact rather than competition.

About Women of Impact in Property

The Women of Impact in Property list celebrates the wāhine shaping the future of Aotearoa New Zealand’s built environment. Recognising leaders from across the property ecosystem – from architects and engineers to developers, investors and advisors – the initiative shines a light on the women creating meaningful impact in our industry and communities. The list is intentionally non-ranked, celebrating influence, leadership and contribution rather than competition, and highlighting the people helping build a more inclusive and dynamic property sector.

Honourees 2026

Note: This list is non-ranked and is ordered alphabetically.

Abi Richards

Project Manager, Antarctica New Zealand

Abi Richards leads complex, high-stakes infrastructure projects with calm authority, precision and deep care for the people involved. In the past year, she has progressed Antarctica New Zealand’s Wind Farm programme and Scott Base Redevelopment, providing on-ice leadership and cross-agency coordination to support globally significant climate and science research. Her briefings during the Governor-General’s official visit underscored the redevelopment’s strategic importance and international collaboration. Abi’s leadership is defined by empathy, inclusion and decisive action — whether aligning stakeholders, navigating remote logistics or mentoring peers. Operating at pace without compromising safety or integrity, she is shaping resilient infrastructure that enables communities, patients and scientists to thrive.

Alexandra Isherwood

Partner, Tavendale and Partners

Over the past year, Alexandra (Alex) Isherwood has played a pivotal role in advancing Nelson’s post-disaster recovery through strategic property development leadership. As legal advisor on four of the region’s five most significant developments – including The Meadows, Berryfields, Maitahi Village and a 320-lot residential project in Māpua – she has helped unlock critical housing supply and economic investment. Notably, she led the Fast-track Approvals process for two landmark projects, securing rare national approvals and enabling an estimated $450 million injection into the regional economy. Combining legal excellence with community stewardship, she is shaping resilient, future-focused neighbourhoods across Te Tauihu.

Ana Moriarty

Senior Investment Manager, Kiwi Property Group

Operating at the heart of Kiwi Property’s investment strategy, Ana Moriarty has played a critical role in delivering complex transactions that are strengthening investor partnerships and positioning the business for its next phase of growth. Over the past year, she led several strategically significant initiatives, including the equity investment in Mackersy, the sale of Plaza Shopping Centre, and the formation of the Mackersy Large Format Retail Fund. Her ability to navigate technical complexity, align diverse stakeholders and execute with clarity has delivered strong commercial outcomes. Through disciplined leadership and a collaborative approach, she is helping shape the future of New Zealand’s property sector.

Anna Kennedy

Director Valuation Services, FordBaker Valuation

Anna Kennedy is rapidly establishing herself as one of Ōtautahi Christchurch’s most trusted property valuation professionals. As Director of Valuation Services at FordBaker Valuation, she advises on major property portfolios, earning a reputation for technical excellence, sound judgement and professionalism well beyond her years. Alongside her professional work, Anna is strengthening the sector’s future through leadership and connection. In 2023 she co-founded the Wāhine in Property Collective, which in 2025 hosted ten sold-out events supporting women across the industry. Through both her professional expertise and community leadership, Anna is helping build a more connected and inclusive property sector.

Bernie Pitt

Quantity Surveyor, Hampton Jones Property Consultancy

Bernie Pitt has strengthened her influence in the property and construction sector through exceptional project delivery and committed industry leadership. Over the past year, she successfully led the TSB Bank flagship branch and office fit-out, navigating accelerated design, procurement pressures and tight deadlines to deliver on time and under budget – earning outstanding client feedback. As Chair of the NZIQS Wellington Committee, she delivered 28 industry events, advanced succession planning and expanded opportunities for emerging professionals. Balancing consultancy leadership, mentoring and further tertiary study focused on women’s representation in construction, Bernie is actively shaping a stronger, more inclusive future for the profession.

Chagalle Ellis

Partner, Real Estate, PwC

Chagalle Ellis is redefining what modern leadership in commercial property looks like — blending technical excellence with deeply human leadership. In 2025, she has continued to asset manage a significant $300m commercial portfolio for a charitable trust, shaping long-term strategy and driving sustained value creation. As a Partner in PwC’s Real Estate team, she delivers across advisory, structured transactions and valuation, translating complexity into clear, confident decisions. Just as importantly, she champions equity and inclusion, helping build a senior team where female leadership is the norm. Her influence strengthens portfolios, teams and the wider property sector alike.

Claire McLellan

Director, Quality and Risk Management, CBRE

Few professionals influence a sector as quietly and profoundly as Claire McLellan. In 2025, following her promotion to Director of Quality & Risk Management for CBRE’s VAS New Zealand, she has led a nationwide uplift in valuation standards, guiding more than 170 valuers through complex, high-risk decisions with clarity and integrity. She shapes national practice guidelines, champions ethical and AI-informed innovation, and strengthens capability across the business. Beyond CBRE, as NZIV President and Chairperson, she is steering the profession through structural change and raising its public profile. Through steady, principled leadership, Claire is elevating valuation practice across Aotearoa.

Davina Henderson

National Director – Strategic Business Development, Bayleys Real Estate

Davina Henderson has led one of the largest and most complex property programmes undertaken in Aotearoa in recent years. As a key architect of Bayleys’ appointment as master agent to Kāinga Ora, she helped secure and operationalise a nationwide divestment mandate covering at least 1,000 properties annually across multiple asset classes. Over the past year, she has overseen the creation of a bespoke, end-to-end delivery model ensuring governance rigour, transparency and consistent execution at scale. Alongside this national impact, Davina mentors emerging leaders and champions women in commercial real estate, strengthening capability across the sector.

Elisapeta Heta

Principal & Kaihautū Whaihanga – Māori Design Leader, Jasmax

Elisapeta Heta is reshaping architectural practice in Aotearoa and beyond by embedding Indigenous knowledge at the heart of design. As Principal and Kaihautū Whaihanga at Jasmax, she leads Waka Māia, advancing authentic co-design with Māori and Pasifika communities. Her influence spans landmark projects including the City Rail Link and Wellington’s Fale Malae, ensuring Mana Whenua narratives are integral to civic spaces. In 2025, her global impact expanded as inaugural Co-Director of the International Union of Architects’ Indigenous Peoples Work Programme — a historic first. Through cultural leadership, advocacy and mentorship, Elisapeta is redefining how architecture honours people, place and future generations.

Jane Holland

Partner, Bell Gully

Industry legend Jane Holland continues to shape New Zealand’s commercial property landscape through her leadership on complex, high-value developments. Over the past year, she has advised on a major telecommunications headquarters at Wynyard Quarter – a flagship 6-star Green Star project – and supported Vital Healthcare on significant hospital redevelopments nationwide. Beyond her legal practice, Jane chairs the Property Council’s Property Conference Committee, helping steer industry dialogue and sector capability. A trusted advisor to leading developers, owners and retailers, she also contributes as a thought leader, recently peer reviewing key industry lease documents and sharing insight across the profession.

Jane Kelly

Director / Architect, TEAM Architects

Jane Kelly’s leadership in 2025 reflects the power of architecture grounded in care, stewardship and collaboration. As Project Architect for the Metropolitan Cathedral of the Sacred Heart restoration, she guided a nationally significant heritage project to award-winning success, balancing cultural integrity with future relevance. Her aged care work, including Woburn Masonic Care, champions dignity and wellbeing through thoughtful design. Beyond projects, Jane strengthens the profession through governance leadership, mentoring and advancing diversity within TEAM Architects nationally. Generous with her expertise and steadfast in her advocacy, she is shaping enduring places, and a more inclusive future for architecture in Aotearoa.

Jenna Adamson

CEO / Director, Private Family Office / Southern Infrastructure

Jenna Adamson is advancing a new model of infrastructure and property leadership; one grounded in partnership, stewardship and long-term community value. As CEO of Rod Drury’s Family Office, she oversees property strategy and asset management across a diversified portfolio focused on strengthening enduring community assets. As Director of Southern Infrastructure, she is helping progress critical projects, including the Queenstown Cable Car and Southern Lakes Hospital, mobilising capital and expertise to de-risk delivery in fast-growing regions. Combining governance rigour with innovative thinking, Jenna is enabling infrastructure that expands access, resilience and opportunity for communities across Aotearoa.

Jennifer Andrews

Asset Manager – Retail Portfolio, Oyster Property 

Jennifer Andrews is strengthening the future of retail property through consistent investment in people and capability. Over the past year, she has contributed significantly to sector education as a presenter for the Property Council’s Retail Property Fundamentals programme, equipping emerging professionals with practical insight into investment, valuation and leasing. She mentors across multiple platforms, including the University of Auckland’s He Ira Wāhine programme, supporting women entering the industry. Alongside this, she leads a high-performing national team at Oyster Property, delivering strong financial outcomes while fostering inclusive leadership. Jennifer’s impact is defined by expertise shared generously and a clear commitment to building tomorrow’s talent.

Jenny Zhang

Shop Drawing Manager, Summerset Group 

Jenny Zhang is delivering precision and performance at the highest level of large-scale residential development. As Structural Coordinator and Shop Drawing Manager for Summerset’s $500M St Johns and Half Moon Bay projects, she has reviewed more than 3,000 shop drawings and managed over 800 RFIs — identifying buildability and coordination risks before they reach site. Her meticulous oversight of complex high-rise structures has reduced rework, improved contractor performance and safeguarded delivery timelines. Beyond project execution, Jenny mentors emerging professionals and leads diversity initiatives through NZCBIA, championing greater female participation across property and construction. Her impact is technical, cultural and enduring.

Jo Hatchman

Director – Quantity Surveyor, Hatch Consulting

Jo Hatchman is redefining the role of the quantity surveyor in Aotearoa New Zealand’s construction and property sectors. As founder of Hatch Consulting, she has grown a female-led, values-driven practice that brings contractor-side experience into strategic project advisory, helping clients make smarter delivery decisions. In 2025, her team expanded while continuing to deliver practical, commercially grounded guidance on complex developments. Jo is equally committed to strengthening the profession, delivering industry training and fostering emerging talent — reflected in multiple team award wins. Through entrepreneurial leadership and a people-first culture, she is elevating the influence and capability of quantity surveying nationwide.

Karin Speight

Sector Lead – Land Development, Principal Geotechnical Engineer, Tonkin + Taylor

Karin Speight is advancing smarter, more resilient land development across Aotearoa through engineering leadership and digital innovation. As Principal Geotechnical Engineer and Sector Lead for Land Development at Tonkin + Taylor, she guides complex projects across housing, health, education and infrastructure. Her leadership on the award-winning Whenuapai Senior Campus reflects her ability to balance technical precision with practical delivery. Beyond project work, Karin is driving innovation through digital tools that improve site selection, risk assessment and project planning, while contributing to national research on landslides and expansive soils. Through mentorship and forward-thinking engineering, she is helping shape safer and more sustainable communities.

Kerry O’Donnell

Partner, Property and Private Client, Anderson Lloyd

Kerry O’Donnell is helping guide Queenstown’s growth with foresight, integrity and deep community commitment. As a senior property lawyer at Anderson Lloyd, she has supported major residential developments in 2025, including the 750-section Kingston Village project, providing the legal framework for staged, sustainable expansion in a high-growth region. Her work across acquisitions, joint ventures and financing has strengthened development certainty while balancing environmental and community considerations. Beyond commercial practice, Kerry leads as Chair of the Queenstown Heritage Trust and serves as a trustee supporting local students, exemplifying leadership grounded in stewardship and long-term regional wellbeing.

Laura Johns

Director, RDT Pacific

Driving both project delivery and professional excellence, Laura Johns is making a significant contribution to New Zealand’s built environment. As Director and Auckland Lead at RDT Pacific, she has guided major programmes in 2025 including BNZ’s 80 Queen Street refurbishment and key public sector projects across justice, health and education. Her leadership has delivered strong outcomes for clients while supporting the continued growth of RDT Pacific’s Auckland practice. Beyond project work, Laura plays an active role in strengthening the profession through RICS chartership assessments and NZIQS interviews. Recognised as RICS New Zealand Woman of the Built Environment, she champions both industry capability and people-first leadership.

Lauren Joyce

Head of Auckland Office Portfolio, Precinct Properties

Lauren Joyce is helping shape the next generation of commercial property leadership in Aotearoa. Through her work at Precinct Properties, she contributes to complex mixed-use developments that prioritise design excellence, tenant experience and long-term community value. Known for her calm, collaborative approach, she brings investors, tenants and stakeholders together to deliver confident outcomes in high-pressure environments. Beyond project delivery, Lauren has been a driving force in advancing diversity and inclusion across the sector, chairing Property Council’s DEI Committee and helping establish the Inclusion Alliance. Blending commercial rigour with genuine care for people, she is strengthening both places and the profession.

Louise Martin

Head of Legal & Company Secretary, Auckland Airport

Louise Martin is shaping one of Aotearoa’s most significant infrastructure precincts with clarity, conviction and care. At Auckland Airport, she plays a central role in complex development, precinct planning and asset optimisation, balancing commercial performance with long-term community and cultural outcomes. Her ability to navigate competing priorities — from airlines and tenants to mana whenua and regulators — ensures projects are both visionary and deliverable. Known for her integrity and high standards, Louise champions inclusive design and authentic engagement while mentoring emerging leaders across the sector. Through strategic leadership grounded in humanity, she is influencing the future of New Zealand’s built environment.

Marilyn Storey

Head of Development, Argosy Property Limited

Marilyn Storey continues to set the benchmark for commercial property leadership in Aotearoa. As Head of Development at Argosy, she has led a pipeline of major industrial projects over the past year, targeting six Green Star Built-rated developments and embedding sustainability at scale. Operating in a complex market environment, she brings sharp commercial judgement, technical depth and decisive execution to every project, strengthening portfolio performance and long-term value. Widely recognised for her mentorship and high standards, Marilyn also shapes sector practice through her Urban Design Panel involvement. Her influence is evident in stronger assets, stronger teams and a more resilient built environment.

Mitika Chaturvedi

Sustainability Lead, Fosters Construction Group

Mitika Chaturvedi is driving measurable climate action across New Zealand’s construction sector. As Sustainability Lead at Fosters Construction Group, her leadership has contributed to a 38% absolute emissions reduction and a 90% drop in waste-to-landfill emissions since 2019–20. In 2025, she delivered a Green Star v1.1 Design Rating for the Air Liquide project within an accelerated programme, building new sustainability capability across consultants and contractors. Beyond project delivery, she champions industry-wide change — mentoring other firms on Toitū and Green Star pathways and leading New Zealand’s only construction sustainability work experience programme. Her influence is practical, scalable and transformative.

Nikki Mazur

Head of Property – New Zealand & Pacific, ANZ Bank New Zealand

Nikki Mazur is redefining how corporate property portfolios can reflect identity, culture and long-term responsibility. As lead of Tākiri Ā Nuku, ANZ’s New Zealand Property Strategy, she has embedded Te Ao Māori principles into spatial design, investment decisions and partnership models across one of the country’s largest portfolios. In the past year, she has advanced culturally grounded, accessible and future-focused property environments that prioritise people and place. Building on her previous leadership delivering inclusive national infrastructure at Waka Kotahi, Nikki brings cultural fluency and strategic foresight to every project — shaping workplaces that honour whenua and support intergenerational prosperity.

Rachel Morgan

Director, Barker & Associates

Rachel Morgan is shaping the planning frameworks that guide growth across Aotearoa. As a Director at Barker & Associates, she has led complex district plan reviews, structure plans and strategic planning projects that influence how communities accommodate development while building resilience for the future. In the past year, her leadership has helped align public policy and private sector delivery, creating clearer pathways for sustainable growth. Beyond project work, she advances wellbeing, cultural capability and technical excellence within her firm and the wider industry. Through principled leadership and sector advocacy, Rachel is strengthening both planning practice and property outcomes nationwide.

Rebecca Ryder

Partner | Landscape Architect, Boffa Miskell

Rebecca Ryder has spent more than two decades shaping property outcomes that balance growth with environmental and cultural integrity. As a Shareholder Director and Partner at Boffa Miskell, she provides landscape planning and visual assessment expertise on major developments across Waikato and the Bay of Plenty, guiding projects that integrate mana whenua values and long-term community benefit. In the past year, her leadership has continued to influence high-profile urban regeneration, industrial expansion and waterfront transformation initiatives. Through governance, mentorship and sector advocacy, Rebecca is embedding sustainability, cultural responsiveness and design excellence into New Zealand’s evolving property landscape.

Renée Young

Associate Director | New Zealand Mechanical Lead, Norman Disney & Young

Renée Young is shaping some of Aotearoa’s most high-profile developments while championing a more inclusive and culturally responsive industry. As Mechanical Lead at Norman Disney & Young, she has led building services delivery for landmark projects including New Zealand’s first IKEA store at Sylvia Park and multiple developments across the Britomart Precinct. Her leadership combines technical excellence with strong people development, guiding multidisciplinary teams through complex, high-performance projects. Beyond delivery, Renée actively mentors women in engineering, establishes supportive professional networks, and promotes cultural awareness across the sector. Through both project leadership and advocacy, she is helping redefine the future of engineering in the built environment.

Renee Smith-Apanui

Pou Tāhū | Managing Director, ŌRUA

Renee Smith-Apanui is driving structural change across Aotearoa New Zealand’s architecture and built environment sectors. As Co-founder and Pou Tāhū of ŌRUA, she champions kaupapa Māori leadership that uplifts whānau, hapū and iwi through design and governance. In 2025, she spearheaded the inaugural Puritia Te Aka Matua industry reports, establishing a new benchmark for accountability and improved outcomes for Māori architects and tauira. With an Accountability Framework set to follow, her work is shifting industry standards from aspiration to measurable change. Through governance roles, mentorship and advocacy, Renee is strengthening representation and embedding equity across the profession.

Sarah Toase

Chief Executive, Crane Association of New Zealand

Sarah Toase is strengthening the foundations of New Zealand’s construction and property sectors by tackling workforce and safety challenges head-on. In 2025, she led the establishment of a new industry-led Private Training Establishment for the crane and port sectors, securing TEC funding to address critical skills shortages impacting nationwide development. She also progressed a government-approved rewrite of the Approved Code of Practice for Cranes, modernising safety standards that underpin construction delivery. Beyond policy, Sarah champions equity initiatives and public engagement programmes that expand career pathways. Her leadership is practical, future-focused and vital to keeping Aotearoa building safely and sustainably.

Tamba Carleton

New Zealand Research Director, CBRE

Tamba Carleton is shaping how the property sector understands markets, risk and opportunity. As New Zealand Research Director at CBRE, her analysis informs major development decisions and national policy conversations. In 2025, she co-authored the nationwide Residential Valuer Insights Survey and produced influential research on effective housing demand, helping fill critical knowledge gaps in Auckland’s planning debate. Her insights regularly reach industry audiences through national media, conferences and CBRE’s annual Residential Symposium. Alongside her research leadership, Tamba mentors emerging professionals and contributes to wider community initiatives. Through rigorous analysis and sector engagement, she is elevating the quality of property market intelligence across Aotearoa.

Tessa Beetham

Wellington Buildings Structures Lead, Aurecon

In a city defined by seismic complexity, Tessa Beetham is helping redefine what resilient infrastructure looks like. As Wellington Buildings Structures Lead at Aurecon, she has guided technically demanding projects including the National Archives redevelopment and the Te Ngākau Civic Precinct upgrades, restoring vital public spaces with precision and long-term foresight. Her leadership extends beyond delivery — influencing seismic policy reform and advancing diversity as Vice President of SESOC. By bringing engineers, policymakers and communities together, Tessa is ensuring Wellington’s most important buildings are not only stronger, but smarter, more inclusive and built to endure.

About Property Council New Zealand

Property Council is the leading advocate for Aotearoa New Zealand’s largest industry – property.

Property Council New Zealand is the one organisation that collectively champions property. We bring together members from all corners of the property ecosystem to advocate for reduced red tape that enables development, encourages investment, and supports our communities to thrive.

Property is New Zealand’s largest industry, making up 15% of economic activity. As a sector, we employ 10% of New Zealand’s workforce and contribute over $50.2 billion to GDP.

A not-for-profit organisation, the Property Council connects over 10,000 property professionals, championing the interests of over 600 member companies.

Our membership is broad and includes some of the largest commercial and residential property owners and developers in New Zealand. The property industry comes together at our local, national and online events, which offer professional development, exceptional networking and access to industry-leading research. 

Our members shape the cities and spaces where New Zealanders live, work, play and shop.

www.propertynz.co.nz 

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