Meningococcal disease case confirmed at Otago University

Source: Radio New Zealand

Otago University was working with public health to contain the infection. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Otago University has confirmed a case of meningococcal disease within the student community.

In an email to students, vice-chancellor Grant Robertson said the university was working with public health to contain the infection.

He said close contacts had been notified and offered antibiotic and vaccination protection.

Grant Robertson said the risk was low for the wider student community as the meningococcal disease infection was passed on only though close or prolonged contact with an infected person.

Meningococcal bacteria live in people’s noses and throats and are spread by coughing, sneezing, or contact with nose and throat secretions.

“Although the bacteria can be passed from person to person, it is relatively uncommon for even family contacts to become ill,” Robertson said.

He said it was important to know the symptoms and seek medical help quickly if students felt unwell. Symptoms could appear suddenly and may include:

  • Fever
  • Severe headache
  • Neck stiffness
  • Sensitivity to light
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Cold hands and feet or limb pain
  • Drowsiness or difficulty waking
  • Confusion
  • A rash that does not fade when pressed.

“If you experience fever together with headache, neck stiffness, or feel suddenly very unwell, please seek medical help immediately.”

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/meningococcal-disease-case-confirmed-at-otago-university/

Greenpeace calls for government to drastically cut legal limit of nitrates in drinking water

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s current legal limit for nitrates in drinking water is 11.3 mg/L. HENDRIK SCHMIDT

Greenpeace is calling on the government to drastically cut the legal limit of nitrates in drinking water as the Danish government moves to drop its legal limit by almost 90 percent.

The Danish government plans to lower its limit to just over one milligram of nitrate-nitrogen per litre (mg/L) of drinking water, a steep drop from its current limit of 11.3mg/L.

New Zealand’s current legal limit for nitrates in drinking water is 11.3 mg/L, but there was growing evidence of health impacts at levels as low as 1mg/L.

An expert group commissioned by the Danish government in 2024 to examine nitrate levels reported back late last year and recommended reducing the nitrate contamination limit to 1.3 mg/L nitrate-nitrogen.

Danish state broadcaster DR reported Environment Minister Magnus Heunicke had received the group’s recommendations and has committed to adopting them.

“It is an urgent matter. When there is such a clear conclusion from our independent experts, of course we have to react to it. There is no other choice,” DR reported the minister as saying.

Greenpeace spokesperson Will Appelbe said the organisation had sent an open letter to Local Government Minister Simon Watts and Health Minister Simeon Brown, urging them to follow the Danish government’s lead.

RNZ approached Watts and Brown for comment.

“The Danish government aren’t operating off a secret playbook or anything, they don’t know anything we don’t know. They’re just following the scientific evidence and choosing to prioritise people’s health. Meanwhile, our government is burying its head in the sand,” Appelbe said.

The panel’s report quoted 2023 University of Copenhagen research, which found lowering nitrate contamination would save 2.2 billion Kroner ($580m NZD) by preventing approximately 127 cases of bowel cancer per year linked to the current nitrate levels.

Fertiliser use was the primary source of nitrate contamination, the report said.

Appelbe said there was overwhelming evidence that the same was true in New Zealand.

“Anyone suggesting otherwise isn’t being particularly honest about what the science is telling us,” he said.

“We need to urgently take measures to reduce that risk. That means reducing cow numbers and reducing synthetic nitrogen fertiliser.”

Appelbe said the government was more concerned with protecting dairy industry profits than human health and he called for reductions in the size of the dairy herd, an end to ongoing dairy expansions and limits to the use of nitrate fertiliser.

“The evidence is clear nitrate contamination is a risk to human health – there’s a growing body of evidence that says so – and the government needs to take action to lower the nitrate limit so people can rely on the drinking water they need.”

Greenpeace spokesperson Will Appelbe said nitrate contamination was a risk to human health. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Rural communities were disproportionately affected and faced considerable costs installing filters to make their water drinkable, he said.

“We need, as a country, to have a grown-up conversation about nitrate contamination in drinking water – the evidence is pretty overwhelming on what’s causing it and there’s a growing body of evidence that links risks to human health.”

Appelbe said the current limit of 11.3mg/L is based on World Health Organisation guidance from the 1960s to avoid Blue Baby Syndrome, an acute illness that could affect babies.

A 2025 GNS Science research paper estimated there could be more than 21,200 people drinking water above the legal limit of 11.3 mg/L and 101,000 people drinking water above half that (5.65mg/L) across rural New Zealand.

The authors found Waikato, Canterbury and Southland were disproportionately affected by elevated levels of nitrate

Public health specialists had long advocated to lower the nitrate limit, primarily based on international research linking low levels of nitrate (5mg/L) with pre-term birth and colorectal cancer (0.87mg/L).

New research from Australia’s Edith Cowan University and the Danish Cancer Research Institute found a link to early-onset dementia as low as 1.2mg/L with nitrates from processed meat and drinking water posing a higher risk, while nitrates from vegetables were associated with a lower risk.

The Canterbury Regional Council declared a nitrate emergency last year and there have been calls for Southland to do the same since the release of a regional council report mapping nitrate pollution across the region.

Canterbury’s dairy herd has increased by about 1000 percent since 1990 to well over a million cows.

Between 1990 and 2022, Southland’s dairy herd increased by 1668 percent from 38,000 to 668,000 cows.

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LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/greenpeace-calls-for-government-to-drastically-cut-legal-limit-of-nitrates-in-drinking-water/

Nelipak Announces Opening of Asia-Pacific Technical Development Center

Source: Media Outreach

New Singapore facility integrates flexible and rigid sterile barrier packaging systems development under one roof to simplify and accelerate package design and speed to market

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 11 March 2026 – Nelipak® Corporation (“Nelipak”), a leading global provider of healthcare packaging solutions, today announced the opening of its new Asia-Pacific Technical Development Center located in Singapore. This new facility establishes an integrated technical development capability in the Asia-Pacific region combining Nelipak’s flexible and rigid sterile barrier packaging design and innovation capabilities under one roof.

(L-R) Roger Prevot, Chairman, Nelipak, Aldin Velic, Vice President and General Manager, Asia-Pacific, Nelipak, Soo Haw Yun, Vice President, Global Enterprises, Singapore Economic Development Board, Pat Chambliss, Chief Executive Officer, Nelipak, Sean Patel, Vice President, Commercial Development, Nelipak

This investment marks a major milestone in Nelipak’s global growth strategy and establishes a permanent technical and innovation presence in one of the world’s fastest-growing medical device innovation and manufacturing hubs. Its strategic location in Singapore offers a launchpad to Asia-Pacific’s medtech and biomedical industries, owing to the country’s strong global connectivity and growing healthcare manufacturing and research capabilities.

The center will enable Nelipak to support customers across Southeast Asia, China, Japan, Korea, India, Australia, and New Zealand. It combines personalized real-time collaboration with Nelipak’s global manufacturing and innovation network to ensure that packaging solutions developed in Asia-Pacific are globally scalable and production-ready.

Designed to enhance how medical device and pharmaceutical companies develop and validate sterile packaging systems, the Asia-Pacific Technical Development Center enables customers to arrive with a medical device concept and leave with a validation ready packaging design and physical samples. For device manufacturers, the benefit is immediate and tangible. Customers can engage directly with Nelipak’s technical experts to co-develop and validate bespoke sterile barrier solutions, streamline iteration cycles and regulatory processes, and accelerate time to market.

The center supports the development of Nelipak’s comprehensive range of custom designed sterile-barrier packaging solutions which integrate both flexible and rigid formats. Its capabilities are also designed to support ISO 11607-compliant development, risk mitigation, and accelerated commercialization for Class I through Class III medical and pharmaceutical devices.

“Asia-Pacific is an important and growing region for global medical device innovation, manufacturing, and consumption,” said Pat Chambliss, Chief Executive Officer of Nelipak. “Our new Asia-Pacific Technical Development Center located in Singapore represents a foundational investment that supports our global customer base while anchoring Nelipak firmly in the Asia-Pacific region. It reflects our ongoing commitment to ensuring customer access to our broad range of flexible and rigid sterile barrier packaging solutions which are widely used globally and have been used extensively in the region for over 30 years.”

“Medical device customers are under enormous pressure to move faster without compromising safety, compliance, or performance,” said Aldin Velic, Vice President and General Manager, Asia-Pacific, Nelipak. “Our goal with this center is simple. Customers walk in with a device and a packaging challenge, and they leave with an engineered packaging solution, prototype samples in hand, and a clear path to development, validation and commercialization. We are replacing distance, delay, and fragmentation with expertise, speed, and collaboration.”

The Asia-Pacific Technical Development Center is equipped to support early-stage concept development, line extensions, material transitions, and risk mitigation projects, including changes driven by sterilization modality, regulatory requirements, or supply chain resilience. By unifying rigid and flexible packaging development in a single location, Nelipak enables holistic and optimized sterile barrier system design rather than isolated and fragmented component development.

“We congratulate Nelipak on the opening of its first Technical Development Center in Asia-Pacific. The new center will enable Nelipak to work closely with pharmaceutical and medical device companies in the region to accelerate product development and launches. The investment is a welcome addition to Singapore’s growing biomedical sciences ecosystem and strengthens our role as a regional hub for medtech innovation,” said Soo Haw Yun, Vice President, Global Enterprises, Singapore Economic Development Board.

This investment builds on Nelipak’s long-standing commitment to innovation, quality, and customer collaboration and reinforces the company’s broader expansion across Asia-Pacific. It also reflects growing demand from global medical device manufacturers for regionally based technical support that meets the same standards of rigor, speed, and expertise available in established Western markets.

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Hashtag: #Nelipak #Healthcare #HealthcarePackaging #MedicalDevices #Pharma

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/2026/03/11/nelipak-announces-opening-of-asia-pacific-technical-development-center/

James Dyson Award 2026: Calling the next generation of problem-solvers

Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 11 March 2026 – The James Dyson Award, a global design engineering competition that has supported more than 400 inventions, opens for submissions today for 2026. The Award invites current and recent design and engineering students across 28 countries and regions to present ideas that tackle real-world problems.

Shortlisted entries will be reviewed by national judging panels of design and engineering experts, including Dyson engineers. National winners will receive £5,000 and a chance to progress to the international stage. Sir James Dyson will select global winners to receive £30,000 and a platform to take their inventions to the next level.

The Award gives winners media exposure, international recognition, and the momentum for these young inventors to accelerate their ideas to commercialisation.

Sir James Dyson, Founder of Dyson, said: “I established the James Dyson Award to encourage young ‘doers’ in life who are focused on solving the problems they see in the world, not grandstanding about them. It has been inspiring to see so many brilliant ideas from young design engineers, many of whom have gone on to build businesses and take their problem-solving ideas to people and markets all over the world. I look forward to judging this year’s submissions.”

In 2025, the James Dyson Award marked its 20th year and received more than 2,100 inventions from young engineers worldwide. Projects provided solutions in areas such as health screening, household waste, and disaster relief.

The 2025 Hong Kong winner was awarded to Reef of Hope, an modular, 3D-printed artificial reef designed to restore oyster habitats. Invented by Dean Chan, a PhD candidate at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, the reef features an innovative topological design and uses a printing substrate infused with oyster shell calcium carbonate.

Since winning, Dean has advanced his project in Tolo Harbour, while delivering R&D services for marine conservation organisations, gaining support from the HKSAR Government and universities to deploy reefs, working with local fishermen in aquaculture areas, and forming a strategic partnership to expand reef deployment to Asia.

“Winning the James Dyson Award has significantly boosted media exposure for my marine conservation mission, providing a powerful platform to connect with much wider audiences and inspire real change.” Dean said.

Another notable past winner is the 2022 Hong Kong winner, O-Oley, which is rethinking eye care with smart-goggle technology designed to support eye health and wellness. Building on the industry exposure and recognition gained through the Award, the team officially launched its product in June 2025 and has since expanded its impact by delivering community screenings with NGO partners. They have also established a dedicated research centre in Tsuen Wan to support ongoing testing and development.

“Honestly, starting a company wasn’t even on our radar,” said Kin Nam Kwok, Minji Seo, Yuen Yin Leung and Kwun Chung Chan. “Winning the James Dyson Award gave us the confidence to take O-Oley from a project to a startup—strengthening our engineering mindset and giving us the credibility to be taken seriously from day one.”

How to enter

Entries can now be submitted via the James Dyson Award website, with the deadline set for midnight on 15th July 2026. University students and recent graduates of design and engineering subjects are eligible to apply.

The best entries tackle a clear global problem, demonstrate a thoughtful design process, and showcase originality and technical feasibility.

Hashtag: #JamesDysonAward

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/2026/03/11/james-dyson-award-2026-calling-the-next-generation-of-problem-solvers/

Prudential Singapore launches protection plan to help families navigate their health gap years

Source: Media Outreach

SINGAPORE – Media OutReach Newswire – 11 March 2026 – Prudential Singapore (“Prudential”) announced the launch of PRUActive Life V, a comprehensive and customisable whole-of-life protection plan to support Singapore families in preparing for their health gap years – the period when an individual diagnosed with critical illness takes time away from work to focus on recovery. The plan offers multiplied coverage and lifelong protection with critical illness add-ons. It provides one of the widest ranges of coverage at 182 conditions including mental illness conditions.

As Singaporeans see higher incidences of critical illness (e.g. almost 58 per cent increase in stroke patients from 2011 to 2021[1]), many families will experience a serious health episode and the affected family member may be unable to work during their recovery. During this ‘health gap’ period, the resulting income loss creates a strain on household finances, along with additional costs to care for the patient at home.

Many Singaporean households remain unprepared to deal with such a scenario. According to the 2022 Protection Gap Study by the Life Insurance Association of Singapore, there is a 74 per cent protection gap[2] against critical illnesses such as cancer[3], stroke[1], and heart disease[4]. This gap is especially challenging for young families raising children and the sandwich generation caring for both children and ageing parents.

Insurance plans play different roles in supporting families during a serious health event. While hospitalisation insurance covers eligible hospital and treatment bills, critical illness plans pay a lump sum upon diagnosis and families have the flexibility to decide how they want to use the payout.

Ms Toni Fung, Chief Customer and Marketing Officer, Prudential Singapore, said: “Many families think that hospitalisation coverage is sufficient when a serious illness strikes and may overlook the wider financial impact on the household. For young families and the sandwich generation, a critical illness can disrupt income and add caregiving responsibilities that impact household finances. Critical illness coverage is therefore not just personal protection, but family protection, as it provides a lump-sum payout to take care of these additional costs.

“Families should consider critical illness protection early to ensure they have a safety net in place and the peace of mind to focus on recovery during their health gap years. With PRUActive Life V, families have access to a comprehensive protection plan that stands firmly behind them for life, even when the unexpected happens.”

Protection for families during their health gap years

PRUActive Life V, alongside its critical illness add-ons, provides whole life coverage for death, terminal illness, total and permanent disability and critical illnesses. It covers a wide range of 182 conditions ranging from cancer to accidental fracture of spinal column and includes additional payouts for 27 medical conditions e.g. mental illness and juvenile conditions[5].

Families may enhance their coverage up to five times (Multiplier Benefit[6]) up until age 80, to scale protection in tandem with their growing household income and caregiving commitments. There is also Kinship Booster[7], a 10 per cent boost in basic coverage for free when an immediate family member takes up PRUActive Life V.

Besides young families, critical illness protection is also important for singles with caregiving responsibilities for other family members such as elderly parents or siblings. A serious illness can disrupt their ability to work and continue supporting those who depend on them financially or for care.

Added Ms Fung: “Singles may face added pressure on their personal finances and family obligations during a prolonged period of rest as they do not have a spouse to share the burden. Critical illness coverage becomes an important safeguard to help them stay financially resilient while managing their caregiving responsibilities.”

Understanding the hidden costs of health gap years

Families can face significant financial strain when they take time off to recover from a critical illness. In Singapore, a family with young children has an average monthly household income and expenditure of $21,435 and $8,577 respectively.

Consider a 35-year-old father with two young children who contributes $15,000 to the monthly household income. When he suffers a stroke, the father pauses work and that results in a loss in income. Table A outlines additional ‘hidden’ costs[8] that he may face during his health break.

Ms Fung highlighted: “Many families underestimate the significant financial cost of recovery during their health gap years, which can be as much as 3.9 times[9] of one’s annual income based on the assumption of a five-year recovery period. Apart from the disruption to income, families may face ‘hidden’ costs such as caregiving arrangements, home modifications and therapies, as well as the longer-term reality that their insurance options may become limited after a serious illness. These hidden expenses will continue to accumulate and place added pressure to household finances.”

# Examples of ‘hidden’ costs[7] during health gap years
1. Caregiving support e.g. salary of a foreign domestic worker or day nurse, or enrolment in a day care centre
2. Caregiver impact e.g. caregivers/family having to take no-pay leave, paying for convenience services such as meal delivery or childcare help, and mental load
3. Home modifications to support changes in patient’s mobility and motor skills
4. Therapy e.g. physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, emotional counselling, Traditional Chinese Medicine etc.
5. Costly drugs and alternative treatments
6. Unforeseen expenses which might come up due to complications arising from the diagnosed critical illness

Table A: Hidden costs of health gap years

PRUActive Life V provides families with comprehensive protection against critical illness to manage financial uncertainties during their health gap years.

Other key features include:

For more information on PRUActive Life V, please refer to: https://www.prudential.com.sg/pal-v

[1] Source: https://www.nuh.com.sg/health-resources/newsletter/envisioninghealth—changing-lives-one-idea-at-a-time/delivering-world-class-stroke-care-and-outcomes

[2] Source: https://www.lia.org.sg/news-room/media-releases/2023/singapore-s-critical-illness-protection-gap-narrows-while-mortality-protection-gap-remains-relatively-unchanged-protection-gap-study-2022/

[3] Source: https://www.healthhub.sg/well-being-and-lifestyle/personal-care/cancer-facts-you-cannot-ignore

[4] Source: https://medicine.nus.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Press-release_Obesity-will-become-the-most-important-risk-factor-for-heart-attacks-within-3-decades_For-dissemination.pdf

[5] Includes Antley Bixler Syndrome, Sanfillipo Syndrome, Bile acid synthesis disorder, and Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Deficiency

[6] Multiplier Benefit is applicable only if you chose to have this benefit when you purchase the plan. You may choose from Multiplier Benefit factors of 2x, 3x, 4x or 5x and Multiplier Benefit ages of 65, 70, 75 or 80. The Multiplier Benefit factor and the Multiplier Benefit age will apply to PRUActive Life V and its attached Early Crisis Care and Crisis Care supplementary benefits.

[7] Only applies if the life assured is below age 55 when the immediate family bought the policy. It adds an extra 10% of the death and terminal illness sum assured of the life assured’s policy, up to S$100,000.

[8] References: https://www.snsa.org.sg/post/helpful-information-for-stroke-survivors-and-caregivers; https://edge.sitecorecloud.io/agencyforinb6cc-agencyforin73f5-production08ac-d178/media/agency-for-integrated-care/Files/Caregiving-Support/General-Caregiving-Resources/AIC_AB_Senior-MobilityAids_web.pdf

[9] Source: https://www.lia.org.sg/media/3974/lia-pgs-2022-report_final_8-sep-2023.pdf

[10] The income payout option allows you to receive yearly payouts from the surrender value of the policy over a period of 10 years. As such, this option is like partial surrender. Please note that once you begin receiving the yearly payouts, the sum assured and the long-term value of your policy will be reduced.

[11] Subject to a maximum of 1 claim per policy

[12] This benefit is only available when your policy has acquired a surrender value that is equal to at least two years’ of premiums paid. This interest-free loan amount needs to be paid back at the end of the premium deferment period. If the loan amount is not paid back at the end of the premium deferment period, interest will be charged. The Premium Defer Benefit can only be used once per policy.

[13] The bonuses are NOT guaranteed and will vary according to the future experience of the participating fund.

https://www.prudential.com.sg/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/prudential-assurance-company-singapore?originalSubdomain=sg
https://www.facebook.com/PrudentialSingapore/
https://www.instagram.com/prudentialsingapore/

Hashtag: #PrudentialSingapore #CriticalIllness #HealthGapYears

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/2026/03/11/prudential-singapore-launches-protection-plan-to-help-families-navigate-their-health-gap-years/

Kākāriki karaka eggs flown from Nelson sanctuary to Christchurch to boost species recovery

Source: Radio New Zealand

Sean McGrath / Department of Conservation

Eggs from the country’s rarest parakeet, the kākāriki karaka, have been retrieved from a nest inside a Nelson sanctuary and flown to Christchurch in a bid to help the species recover.

More than 100 kākāriki karaka, or orange-fronted parakeet, were translocated into Nelson’s Brook Waimārama Sanctuary between 2021 and 2023, and their numbers have since doubled.

The kākāriki karaka is critically endangered and its estimated there are up to 450 birds left in the wild. There are two remaining wild populations in alpine beech forest valleys in Canterbury, the Hawdon and Hurunui South Branch.

Department of Conservation (DOC) and Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu lead the recovery programme which is focused on monitoring and protecting the sites where kākāriki karaka are found, breeding birds in captivity to release into the wild, research, and finding safe new sites where the species can be introduced.

DOC kākāriki karaka recovery programme lead Wayne Beggs said the number of birds in the wild populations fluctuated wildly, peaking in 2020 and 2021 at around 300 birds before plummeting due to the impact of predators. Current estimates have between 50 and 60 birds in each valley.

DOC biodiversity ranger Megan Farley has been working with kākāriki karaka for 16 years and said harvesting their eggs was “incredibly challenging”.

The birds nest inside tree cavities and sanctuary volunteers had identified 12 nests for rangers to check, but only one nest was suitable to harvest eggs from.

Sean McGrath / Department of Conservation

In February, Farley carefully extracted five eggs from the nest cavity, one at a time, with a small scoop on the end of a pole. They were placed in a pouch, lowered down via a rope, put into a special padded case and flown to Christchurch, where they were taken to The Isaac Conservation and Wildlife Trust centre.

Three of the eggs had since hatched under the care of a surrogate bird, an older infertile female who had raised most of the harvested eggs over the last few years.

She said it was the first time eggs had been taken from the sanctuary, as it was a relatively new population, and it had genetics that weren’t found anywhere else.

Farley said without harvesting eggs, the kākāriki karaka would be extinct.

“The purpose of the egg translocation is to keep the genetics flowing through the captive population and keeping all of our sites genetically viable because if that genetic transfer doesn’t happen, they start having more issues, like more infertility, as an example.”

The birds from the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary will remain in Christchurch and become breeding birds, with their offspring used to bolster the existing populations.

Brook Waimārama Sanctuary chief executive Chris McCormack said since the birds were first introduced into the sanctuary, they had seen remarkable growth in the population and a lot of work had gone in from staff and volunteers to ensure the first egg retrieval was a success.

Sean McGrath / Department of Conservation

Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu kākāriki karaka Species Representative Yvette Couch-Lewis said it was fantastic the population at the Brook Waimārama Sanctuary was at the point it could support the genetic diversity of the wild populations.

“While Ngāi Tahu fully supports the need for this mahi currently, it is our aspiration that one day the wild populations of these manu can grow to the point that there will be less need for these kinds of interventions.”

The Isaac Conservation and Wildlife Trust CEO Rob Kinney said the recovery of kākāriki karaka was a great example of what can be achieved when organisations work together with a shared purpose

“These kinds of collaborative partnerships are critical if we are going to see species like kākāriki karaka recover and thrive in the wild.”

As part of the recovery programme, 22 kākāriki karaka had recently been transferred from The Isaac Conservation and Wildlife Trust and Orana Wildlife Park to the South Branch in North Canterbury.

DOC is still in the process of investigating new predator free sanctuaries and islands where new populations could be established, in order to safeguard the species if the mainland populations have another serious decline.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/kakariki-karaka-eggs-flown-from-nelson-sanctuary-to-christchurch-to-boost-species-recovery/

Preparing Students for a Fast-Changing Future: Creative Schools Continuum Explores the Future of Learning at “Transforming Education 20/40” Symposium

Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 11 March 2026 – On 13 February 2026, the Creative Schools Continuum hosted its “Transforming Education 20/40” Symposium at Creative Secondary School (CSS), bringing together more than 200 educators, school leaders, and parents to discuss how schools should prepare their students for the age of artificial intelligence and rapid technological change.

The event, held as part of the 20th anniversary celebration of Creative Secondary School and the 40th anniversaries of Creative Primary School (CPS) and Creative Primary School’s Kindergarten (CPSKG), focused on a central question: How can schools equip students to navigate an unpredictable future while also cultivating their character, compassion, sense of purpose, and resilience?

Putting Humanity at the Centre of Learning

Mr. Victor Fong, School Supervisor of the Creative Schools Continuum, opened the symposium by stressing the importance of keeping humanity at the core of education in the AI era. He called for schools to prepare students for a more complex world where values, attitudes, and ethical thinking remain essential.

CSS Principal Stephen Hindes extended this vision, noting that schools should move beyond traditional teaching methods to create environments where young people are motivated to explore, question, and grow.

After a performance by students who took part in the 2025 Kuliang Friendship U.S.-China Youth Choir Week, Dr. Spencer Fowler, Head of Li Po Chun United World College, delivered the keynote address. He discussed the importance of finding purpose in an era of technological acceleration, arguing that while algorithms have their place, a clear sense of purpose remains the most vital element in student development.

From Theory to Practice: Educators and Students Respond

The symposium also featured keynote sessions by Dr. Cecilia Tam, Manager of Ph.D. Research Degree Programmes at City University of Hong Kong, and Mr. Maurice Chong, CSS alumnus and Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia honoree, who founded the sports technology company KNO.

Dr. Tam focused on mindfulness and the importance of staying focused in an information-saturated age, while Mr. Chong explored how students can adapt and grow alongside AI, drawing on his experience as an athlete, AI researcher, and entrepreneur.

Participants also joined two rounds of concurrent workshops led by AI and Ed-tech professionals, exploring topics such as digital mindfulness, character development, innovative classroom integration, and so on.

The student panel, moderated by Ms. Ruth Benny of Top Schools, provided symposium participants with the opportunity to hear from students about their experiences studying at CSS. The students describe CSS as a place where they can learn from mistakes with the support of their teachers, while developing leadership, discipline, and a strong sense of responsibility. They also shared their concerns about staying competitive as AI advances, the anxiety brought on by social media, and the challenge of making ethical choices when using AI tools. Their reflections offered authentic perspectives on how young people are actually experiencing the changes that adults are planning for.

Teachers as Guides, Not Just Instructors

The second panel, moderated by Ms. Ruth Benny, brought together Dr. Cecilia Tam, Principal Stephen Hindes, and Mr. Maurice Chong. Their conversation explored a range of forward-looking issues: the reimagined assessments, AI-accelerated learning, and why human values matter more as automation spreads. The panel concluded that the role of educators must shift from delivering information to guiding students towards self-directed learning.

The “Transforming Education 20/40” Symposium underscored the Creative Schools Continuum’s commitment to preparing students not just for academic success, but for meaningful lives in a rapidly evolving world. As technology reshapes learning, educators are redefining their roles as mentors who prepare young people to understand AI, use it wisely, and contribute meaningfully to society.

Factual Highlights of the Creative Schools Continuum
Three Schools • One Philosophy • One Continuum

  • The motto of Creative Schools Continuum is “Nurture Future Minds • Build Boundless Capacity”, highlighting the continuum’s foresight and insights into quality education and our commitments to our students and parents.
  • Creative Primary School and Creative Secondary School are award-winning “Inviting Schools”. The award recognizes the schools’ commitments to providing an exceptionally caring, trusting, respectful, and positive learning environment for its students and staff.
  • As International Baccalaureate (IB) World Schools, Creative Primary and Creative Secondary Schools offer the IB Primary Years Programme (IB PYP), IB Middle Years Programme (IB MYP) respectively.
  • Creative Secondary School also offers the Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary School Examination (HKDSE) course in parallel with the IB Diploma Programme (IBDP) as pathways to university entrances.

Hashtag: #CreativeSchoolsContinuum #CSS #CPS #CPSKG

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

LiveNews: https://livenews.co.nz/2026/03/11/preparing-students-for-a-fast-changing-future-creative-schools-continuum-explores-the-future-of-learning-at-transforming-education-20-40-symposium/

‘We need to have a grown-up conversation about nitrate contmaination’, Greenpeace says

Source: Radio New Zealand

New Zealand’s current legal limit for nitrates in drinking water is 11.3 mg/L. HENDRIK SCHMIDT

Greenpeace is calling on the government to drastically cut the legal limit of nitrates in drinking water as the Danish government moves to drop its legal limit by almost 90 percent.

The Danish government plans to lower its limit to just over one milligram of nitrate-nitrogen per litre (mg/L) of drinking water, a steep drop from its current limit of 11.3mg/L.

New Zealand’s current legal limit for nitrates in drinking water is 11.3 mg/L, but there was growing evidence of health impacts at levels as low as 1mg/L.

An expert group commissioned by the Danish government in 2024 to examine nitrate levels reported back late last year and recommended reducing the nitrate contamination limit to 1.3 mg/L nitrate-nitrogen.

Danish state broadcaster DR reported Environment Minister Magnus Heunicke had received the group’s recommendations and has committed to adopting them.

“It is an urgent matter. When there is such a clear conclusion from our independent experts, of course we have to react to it. There is no other choice,” DR reported the minister as saying.

Greenpeace spokesperson Will Appelbe said the organisation had sent an open letter to Local Government Minister Simon Watts and Health Minister Simeon Brown, urging them to follow the Danish government’s lead.

RNZ approached Watts and Brown for comment.

“The Danish government aren’t operating off a secret playbook or anything, they don’t know anything we don’t know. They’re just following the scientific evidence and choosing to prioritise people’s health. Meanwhile, our government is burying its head in the sand,” Appelbe said.

The panel’s report quoted 2023 University of Copenhagen research, which found lowering nitrate contamination would save 2.2 billion Kroner ($580m NZD) by preventing approximately 127 cases of bowel cancer per year linked to the current nitrate levels.

Fertiliser use was the primary source of nitrate contamination, the report said.

Appelbe said there was overwhelming evidence that the same was true in New Zealand.

“Anyone suggesting otherwise isn’t being particularly honest about what the science is telling us,” he said.

“We need to urgently take measures to reduce that risk. That means reducing cow numbers and reducing synthetic nitrogen fertiliser.”

Appelbe said the government was more concerned with protecting dairy industry profits than human health and he called for reductions in the size of the dairy herd, an end to ongoing dairy expansions and limits to the use of nitrate fertiliser.

“The evidence is clear nitrate contamination is a risk to human health – there’s a growing body of evidence that says so – and the government needs to take action to lower the nitrate limit so people can rely on the drinking water they need.”

Greenpeace spokesperson Will Appelbe said nitrate contamination was a risk to human health. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

Rural communities were disproportionately affected and faced considerable costs installing filters to make their water drinkable, he said.

“We need, as a country, to have a grown-up conversation about nitrate contamination in drinking water – the evidence is pretty overwhelming on what’s causing it and there’s a growing body of evidence that links risks to human health.”

Appelbe said the current limit of 11.3mg/L is based on World Health Organisation guidance from the 1960s to avoid Blue Baby Syndrome, an acute illness that could affect babies.

A 2025 GNS Science research paper estimated there could be more than 21,200 people drinking water above the legal limit of 11.3 mg/L and 101,000 people drinking water above half that (5.65mg/L) across rural New Zealand.

The authors found Waikato, Canterbury and Southland were disproportionately affected by elevated levels of nitrate

Public health specialists had long advocated to lower the nitrate limit, primarily based on international research linking low levels of nitrate (5mg/L) with pre-term birth and colorectal cancer (0.87mg/L).

New research from Australia’s Edith Cowan University and the Danish Cancer Research Institute found a link to early-onset dementia as low as 1.2mg/L with nitrates from processed meat and drinking water posing a higher risk, while nitrates from vegetables were associated with a lower risk.

The Canterbury Regional Council declared a nitrate emergency last year and there have been calls for Southland to do the same since the release of a regional council report mapping nitrate pollution across the region.

Canterbury’s dairy herd has increased by about 1000 percent since 1990 to well over a million cows.

Between 1990 and 2022, Southland’s dairy herd increased by 1668 percent from 38,000 to 668,000 cows.

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‘He was dying right in front of my eyes’ – cancer patient’s last chance dash to Australia

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tawhai Reti says being away from his children to get treatment in Australia has been “horrible”. Supplied

A New Zealand blood cancer patient has been forced to leave his four children behind and make a last chance dash to Australia for treatment

His case has prompted dozens of doctors to write an open letter to the prime minister, pleading for change.

Tawhai Reti was 29 when he was diagnosed with myeloma in 2019.

After going through two stem cell transplants, Reti started on the last funded drug treatment available in New Zealand last year.

But his health continued to rapidly decline, and in December he developed pneumonia and sepsis.

Having exhausted all funded treatment options, he was told he had weeks to live.

The 37-year-old former shearer and his wife then made the difficult decision to leave their family and go to Australia to get drugs that are not funded here.

Reti’s wife Lani told Checkpoint they had spoken about moving to Australia in October, but were hesitant about leaving their children behind.

But after his rapid decline, Lani knew it was time to go.

“After a couple of weeks watching Tawhai just lying around, not able to do anything other than sleep and be in pain, I woke up and just realised I couldn’t accept it.

“He was dying right in front of my eyes.”

Tawhai Reti and wife Lani Reti. Supplied

Having lived and worked in Australia for a time while he was in remission, Reti still qualified for Medicare cover, and was able access daratumumab – the drug he needed for a chance at survival.

Daratumumab, or dara, is funded in Australia as well as more than 45 other countries, and has been on Pharmac’s “options for investment” list for years and is considered a high-priority drug – meaning it would fund it if it had the money.

Reti received his first dose of dara last week, something Lani said was a long-time coming.

“I can’t tell you how many tears we had when we found out that he was accepted for dara.

“It’s something that we’ve been fighting for such a long time and trying to spread awareness about and writing letters to the government to try and push for this so that we didn’t have to leave home. And within four weeks of being in Australia, he received his first dose.”

While finally being able to access the treatment has been a happy change for the couple, it had not been an easy ride.

The pair had to leave their four children at home in New Zealand with Reti’s sister.

In order for Reti to reach remission he will need to remain in Australia for at least a year, if not more.

He told Checkpoint being away from his children had been “horrible”.

“We’ve always sort of been a pretty close family… I see them every day, every night, every morning, know everything about them. Now it’s sort of just on the end of a phone.”

Fundraising done by the family through a Givealittle page helped them to travel to Australia, while still looking after their bills back home.

But now the money was running out.

“We have a mortgage, we have bills like everybody else, we also have four children at home.

“Sadly, I do have to come home. I am leaving next week and Tawhai will have to stay here by himself so I can come home and go back to work to help fund both our home and needs at home and [help] Tawhai stay here.”

Tawhai and Lani’s family have now set up another Givealittle page to help with their everyday expenses while Reti is in Australia.

‘Unnecessary loss of Kiwi lives’

Professor Judith Trotman, a New Zealand-trained haematologist working in Sydney, co-ordinated the open letter from 35 doctors, nurses and clinician researchers.

“We note with alarm the unnecessary loss of Kiwi lives,” it reads, because patients are deprived of access to treatments that are available globally and also missing out on clinical trials.

Professor Judith Trotman. Sam Hubel

Trotman is treating Reti, who suffers from myeloma, a form of blood cancer which disproportionately impacts Māori and Pacifica patients. Improving survival rates rested solely on access to drug treatments.

“I commend my patient and his wife on their grace and tenacity in facing this painful, progressive cancer. Having for so long been champions for New Zealand’s myeloma community, we now focus on his survival and recovery after his immunochemotherapy.”

Trotman said the “medical migrants” heading to Australia highlighted the fact that without access to medicines, they will die.

Meanwhile, doctors feel disempowered.

“The lack of modern medicine and technology access and the inability to run many clinical trials are key factors driving highly trained professionals away from New Zealand or prohibiting their return,” according to the letter.

A three-point plan put to the government calls for more funding for medicines that are considered ‘standard of care’ overseas, pointing out that only 0.4 percent of New Zealand’s GDP is spent on medicines, compared to the OECD median of 1.4 percent.

It also seeks a taskforce of experts to address blood cancer treatment in Aotearoa and asks for more support for research and development to make the country ”a credible and competitive destination for clinical trial research”.

The blood cancer specialists – backed by the Australasian Leukaemia Lymphoma Group and the Haematology Society of Australia and New Zealand – say Kiwi patients were also being left behind in accessing clinical trials.

“For these trials to return to New Zealand, access to what are now global standard-of-care comparator drugs is critical.”

Auckland haematologist Dr Rory Bennett was one of 35 healthcare professionals who signed the letter.

He told Checkpoint he was disturbed by the state of blood cancer therapy in New Zealand.

“We feel that there’s a clear gap between the standard of care that we can deliver here in New Zealand compared with what is achieved overseas, and that gap that is well established is continuing to widen.

“We are very worried about the future of blood cancer therapy in New Zealand and the welfare of New Zealanders with blood cancer.”

Bennet said he was frustrated by the situation, but ultimately it was about the patient, not the doctor.

“We find ourselves in difficult circumstances frequently and I feel incredibly sympathetic and sorry for the patients that we have that had they had they lived overseas would have been able to access a more successful or less toxic or frankly just even a therapy that wasn’t available in New Zealand.

“Those are hard conversations to have, but it’s not about us. It’s about the patients at the end of the day and what they are missing out on. And I think that that’s the hardest thing.”

He hoped that the letter will push the prime minister to work with healthcare professionals on moving blood cancer treatment forward.

“Engage with us… acknowledge the data, hear us out, work with us to try and work this through.

“We’re in a desperate, desperate state at the moment, New Zealanders are dying prematurely from blood cancer and we need to sort it out.”

‘Take us seriously and start listening’

Reti said the letter has left him with no words.

“It just blows me away every time.”

Lani hoped that after all their years of crying out for help, the letter will push the government into action.

“I really ask them. to take into consideration the 21,000 blood cancer sufferers in New Zealand that are dying every day because of the lack of funding, because of the lack of standard care.

“I would just strongly urge them to take this letter seriously, take us seriously and start listening and putting things in place for people to continue to be able to live long lives.”

Health Minister Simeon Brown said in a statement that improving cancer treatment and outcomes was a key priority.

“Last year we invested $27.1 million to expand stem cell transplant services, helping more patients access life-saving treatment sooner. This funding will strengthen the specialist workforce, increase hospital capacity, and upgrade infrastructure to support more timely transplants.”

Brown noted that Health New Zealand was actively recruiting for blood cancer specialist roles across the country.

“I encourage doctors currently working overseas who want to make a difference for Kiwi patients here at home to consider these opportunities.”

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Woman dies, child hurt after car crashes into cafe on Auckland’s North Shore

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A woman has died after a car mounted the curb and ploughed into a cafe in Auckland.

The crash, about 9am on Wednesday, closed William Souter Street in the North Shore suburb of Forrest Hill.

Three people were initially hurt – one critically, one with moderate injuries and one with minor injuries. Two were taken to hospital.

Police have confirmed one of those injured had since died.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

“We just heard a massive crash sound,” Jess, who works in a neighbouring store, told RNZ.

“I was out back and I thought maybe some of our shelves had fallen down, so I rushed out to the front of the store, and lo and behold, there’s just a car on the sidewalk.”

Jess said she and her manager both rushed out and could see that the car had “obviously” crashed into the cafe.

“The first thing we saw was obviously the lady that was really injured, she was lying on the ground and there was, like, another girl, it looked like quite a young girl, whose face was bleeding as well so there were like two very noticeably injured,” she said.

“And the first thing was just to call 111, just because obviously we saw that the lady who was hit was in a not so good situation, she was in a lot of pain and she kind of looked super, super confused so we called emergency right off the bat.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

“The car obviously has taken out the door area, the whole glass panel, it’s almost like a split glass panel and the one glass panel is literally floating in mid-air.”

Jess said they then tried to keep people away from the entrance so there were no further injuries.

She credited another nearby worker.

“The cat doctor next door to us, there is a cat nurse, she was brilliant in that situation, she ran right across from the cat doctor and she sat on the ground with the injured lady and she just sat with her and talked her through it. She was amazing,” Jess said.

RNZ / Marika Khabazi

A worker at the cafe that was hit by the car said a woman and her daughter were sitting at the time.

“Very sad news to see today. Thinking of all those involved,” North Shore MP Simon Watts said in a post on Facebook.

St John sent three ambulances and two rapid response units.

Police said only one vehicle was involved.

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Peeni Henare tells MPs to move away from ‘gotcha style politics’ in valedictory speech

Source: Radio New Zealand

Peeni Henare calls for politicians to “work to devolve power to communities and families”. (File image) VNP / Phil Smith

Outgoing Labour MP Peeni Henare has farewelled Parliament, telling MPs they needed to move away from “gotcha style politics” in his valedictory speech, saying they had a “role and responsibility” to rebuild trust in the institution of politics.

“I have seen this place work hard for the benefit of this country,” he told the House.

“I see it as a true mechanism of change, and we must protect it as a bastion of representative democracy when the world is turning against it.

“I am not surprised to see, however, the waning of trust and belief in this institution. We have a role and a responsibility each and every one of us to rebuild that trust.”

He also called for politicians to “work to devolve power to communities and families”.

Henare’s shock resignation was announced at Waitangi, after he confirmed he wasn’t contesting the Tāmaki Makaurau seat.

Following a messy media standup with Labour leader Chris Hipkins, Henare announced he was calling time on his 12-year Parliamentary career, citing exhaustion and a desire to spend more time focusing on his family and future.

Henare began his valedictory by speaking at length about all the staff who had worked with him.

“Mr. Speaker, in my 12 years here in Parliament, I have been truly blessed to have been served by so many amazing people.

“So with your indulgence, I would like to acknowledge them, for without them, my time here would have been very different, and I suspect, very difficult.”

The public gallery was filled with rangatira from Ngāpuhi, such as Waihoroi Shortland, Pita Tipene and Julian Wilcox, along with Henare’s family and his pick for who should replace him as the Labour candidate for Tāmaki Makaurau, Nathaniel Howe.

He acknowledged his son and daughters, and teared up while acknowledging his partner.

“Taku taringi [my darling], for too long, my dreams have been your dreams. It is now time for your dreams to be our dreams.”

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Armed police descend on Kāpiti Coast property

Source: Radio New Zealand

Armed police are at a property on Rangiuru Road. Google Maps

Police say armed officers are at an Ōtaki Beach property on the Kāpiti Coast.

A police spokesperson said the officers are armed as a precaution, as negotiators engage with a person at the property.

They said the person is there alone and there is no risk to the public.

Cordons are in place on Rangiuru Road and people should avoid the area.

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Christchurch mosque attack terrorist is ‘like no other witness’, lawyer says

Source: Radio New Zealand

Al Noor Mosque. RNZ / Nate McKinnon

The families of victims of the Christchurch mosque shootings say the terrorist is a witness “like no other” and he should not be allowed to give oral evidence at a coronial inquest.

But a lawyer appointed to assist the court said the public deserves the most thorough and rigorous coronial inquest possible to ensure a similar horror does not happen again.

Survivors and families of victims of the March 2019 terror attack are fighting in the Court of Appeal to prevent terrorist Brenton Tarrant from giving evidence at the inquest into their loved ones’ deaths.

They are seeking judicial review of Deputy Chief Coroner Brigitte Windley’s decision to call him as a witness.

The High Court dismissed the application last year.

The second-phase inquest began in October 2024 and is examining how the terrorist came to obtain the guns used in the massacre.

It adjourned part-heard after objections were raised to the terrorist giving evidence.

A lawyer for some of the families, Nikki Pender, told the Court of Appeal on Wednesday that it was highly unusual for a coroner’s decision to be reviewed.

“This is an exceptional case, these are extraordinary circumstances, this particular witness is like no other witness.”

Pender said Sunday marked seven years since the massacres at Al Noor Mosque and Linwood Islamic Centre, and the coronial inquest was extremely important to survivors and their families.

Tarrant not only murdered 51 people, he did so by invading and violating “a sacred place” during prayers, she said.

“That has resonated for years for the community.”

The therapeutic nature of the coroner’s court was highly visible in this specific inquest, and calling the terrorist as a witness would breach that, Pender said.

Each phase of the inquest started with a karakia and a recital from the Quran from Al Noor Mosque Imam Gamal Fouda, as well as a roll call of every victim’s name.

“They [the families] are at the heart of this… this is a safe space and therefore any decision to bring in this individual, to have him appear as a witness, needs to take account of the fact just how significant that is to the arena, to the jurisdiction that has been created, and to the safe space that has been created to those family members,” Pender said.

The coroner should have started from a presumption of whether it was absolutely necessary to invite Tarrant as a witness, Pender said.

Calling someone as a witness in an inquest could afford them a degree of mana and could dilute the aims of his life-without-parole sentence, as well as risking platforming his message of hate, she said.

“He has lost his right in public society, in civic society, and yet, if you call him as a witness too readily, what signal does that send?” Pender said.

“He does seem to enjoy the occasion in terms of the questions and answers and the interrogatories, and the community believe that it sends mixed messages – and if they’re a proxy for the public then … [the Coroner has] got to take note of that and just got to be really careful around that.”

The lawyer appointed by the court as a contradictor, Kerry Cook, said the Coroner’s decision to allow written and oral evidence from the terrorist was one that was “lawful, reasonable and proportionate”.

“The Coroner’s Act prioritises the public good associated with a full and independent investigation into the causes of death, and it prioritises that over subjective feelings – no matter how reasonably held – of abhorrence or difficulty in hearing from that particular person.”

Cross-examination was the best tool for testing the terrorist’s claims and excluding that evidence would leave a gap in the inquiry, Cook said.

The process of hearing live evidence and subjecting it to cross-examination might reveal information or bring to light inconsistencies and details otherwise not known, he said.

Coronial inquests were rigorous, fact-finding inquiries and required the coroner to make evidence-based recommendations or comments in public, he said.

Constraining evidence in the inquest risked the coroner making incorrect decisions and the conclusions might reflect only “what was allowed to be seen, rather than what actually occurred”.

“To stop something similar happening in the future, you must clearly understand what caused it to happen in the past,” Cook said.

The community wanted a thorough inquiry and to have all relevant evidence before it, even if it was uncomfortable, he said.

Another lawyer assisting the court, Sarah Jerebine KC, said any oral evidence the terrorist gave in the inquest and the cross-examination could be restricted to suppression orders decided by the coroner.

She said she had huge sympathy for what survivors and families had experienced and the test of deciding whether the terrorist should be orally cross-examined fell on whether the evidence was necessary, whether it met the interests of justice and balanced against the harm done to the families.

Justice Sarah Katz, Justice Jillian Mallon, and Justice Matthew Palmer reserved their decision.

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Selwyn District could drastically limit rates rises but it comes at a cost

Source: Radio New Zealand

Selwyn mayor Lydia Gliddon says hard conversations need to be had. Supplied/ Facebook

Selwyn District Council is attempting to drastically limit rates rises this year but the plan comes with some caveats.

Councillors agreed on Wednesday to consult the public on an average rates increase of 5.4 percent.

Ratepayers would also be asked to give feedback on options of 4.9 percent and 6.5 percent – all had different trade-offs.

The preferred option was less than half of last year’s hike of 14.2 percent.

However, all options excluded water charges which were now handled by a separate company – Selwyn Water Ltd.

Councillors were also searching for savings by possibly shifting some costs from general rates to user-pays.

That could result in increases to building consent costs, aquatic and fitness class fees, and dog registration fees.

The council would also have to reduce its library programmes and exhibitions to achieve the 5.4 percent increase.

Selwyn mayor Lydia Gliddon said there would need to be some hard conversations with the community.

“My view around community services is not to try and cut everything but to look at how we do it and work smarter with what we do have to provide benefit for our community as well,” Gliddon said.

Achieving lower rates hikes required careful prioritisation and difficult decisions, Gliddon said.

“This is our first annual plan as a new council and it reflects what we heard clearly during the election – that rates affordability matters and the council must live within its means while continuing to deliver essential services,” she said.

The draft plan said the rates increase could be reduced to 4.9 percent by significantly reducing recruitment at Selwyn District Council for the next year, removing some roles from budgets and significantly reducing consultant costs.

It was not recommended by staff, who said it could affect the council’s ability to meet its legal obligations and deliver services.

The plan included investments in roading upgrades and maintenance, Lincoln’s town centre, replacement of the Whitecliffs Bridge and remediation of the Leeston Medical Centre.

The plan said they were needed to support the district as it was one of the fastest growing areas in the country.

The council was predicting $213.6 million in revenue during the next financial, while it would spend $196.5m on operating expenses and $86m on capital infrastructure.

Consultation opens on Monday.

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Wise Response Society calls for immediate fuel rationing as war continues in Middle East

Source: Radio New Zealand

RNZ / Dan Cook

There are calls for fuel rationing following the effective closure of Hormuz Strait as a result of the war in the Middle East which has caused the price of oil to fluctuate.

The Wise Response Society has already said it the government should activate the National Fuel Security Plan, which was released last November to ensure New Zealand would have reliable access to fuel in case of global or domestic disruption.

Chairperson Nathan Surendran told Checkpoint on Wednesday the plan and rationing should be activated as a precaution.

“So rather than waiting for us to hit an issue, if we did not receive one of the deliveries that we are supposedly contracted to do, but which force majeure measures implemented by our suppliers may lead to not arriving, then, yeah, it’s something that we really should take seriously.”

Having an adequate fuel supply was critical for New Zealand’s economy, Surendran said.

“The critical question isn’t what’s here now, it’s whether the next round of deliveries will arrive.

“Australia’s wholesalers are rationing deliveries to petrol stations, despite that nation having 36 days of reserves and two domestic refineries, New Zealand has neither, and I’d rather be accused of raising the alarm too early and being wrong than staying quiet and being right.”

The Wise Response Society was calling for the government to tell the public how much physical fuel was in New Zealand, as well as to activate the National Fuel Security Plan, and begin rationing.

“We’ve got the Petroleum Demand Restraint Act, which gives the government the power to implement rationing by order of the Governor-General,” Surendran said.

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Some Aucklanders ‘very wound up’ over housing intensification plans

Source: Radio New Zealand

An apartment on Hobson Street in central Auckland. RNZ / Yiting Lin

Aucklanders are having mixed reactions to Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown’s plan to push ahead with intensification in inner-city suburbs.

Last month, the government agreed to reduce Auckland’s minimum housing capacity from roughly two million to 1.6 million in the coming decades. That is still 400,000 more than the 1.2 million under its current Unitary Plan.

Mayor Brown said his council would be asking the government to allow more housing density within 10 kilometres of the city, where there is good public transport and infrastructure.

Sally Hughes, from the Auckland heritage group the Character Coalition, said she was worried about what the council’s plans would mean for suburbs with historic architecture.

“We’re very concerned about Kingsland, Mount Eden, and the North Shore, which are all included in that 10km where intensification isn’t going to be reduced. We’re very unhappy about that decision,” Hughes said.

Auckland Councillors are yet to see any of the more than 10,000 public submissions it received on a future housing plan for Auckland last year.

About 50 council staff were working to summarise the feedback for councillors to review in the next few months.

Mayor Wayne Brown said his council would be asking the government to allow more housing density within 10 kilometres of the city. RNZ/Marika Khabazi

Hughes said the public’s concerns should be heard before any decisions are made.

“A number of councillors have expressed concern that they were making this decision, including the arbitrary 10km, without seeing any of the submissions,” she said.

“That’s our concern, too. We fear Aucklanders aren’t being listened to.”

Long-time Parnell resident Laurie Mayne said he, along with two other people, including his wife Stephanie, had brought on a lawyer and an economist to put an alternative proposal to the council and the government.

They are proposing that intensification be restricted to the city centre, metropolitan centres, and within 800 metres of rapid transit stops, with greenfield development making up the rest of the housing capacity required.

“The threat for the likes of my wife and I, and every other Parnell resident and every other Ponsonby and Mount Eden resident, is not that we will be inundated with 15-storey buildings. We’re not concerned about that because that’s not an issue. That will never happen,” Mayne said.

“What we’re concerned about is the theft of our property rights by a developer coming in, being enabled to and encouraged to build a 15-storey apartment building right on my boundary.

“That’s what’s getting people in Auckland, rightly very wound up.”

St Georges Bay Road in Parnell, Auckland. RNZ / Marika Khabazi

He said their proposal could deliver the 1.6 million capacity needed.

But Jon Reeves, of the Public Transport Users Association, welcomed the council’s decision.

He said the government had invested a lot in improving the city’s public transport network, including the City Rail Link, which was due to open later this year.

“It would make logical sense to increase housing and intensification around the public transport nodes. We obviously want more bums on seats to help pay for the investment,” Reeves said.

But he said there was a balance to strike.

“We don’t want to just demolish every heritage area to put up large apartment blocks. Places like Parnell, you have to weigh it up. Do we want to demolish what character is left there or not, and that’s a question that not only the council but residents should have a say about.”

Director of the transport advocacy website Greater Auckland, Matt Lowrie, also agreed with the mayor’s approach.

“It makes sense that the focus of intensification will be in the areas closest to the city centre, on good public transport routes, and in town centres. Those are the areas where there’s the highest amenity and the most attractiveness for development, and also the best transport links to the city centre, where a lot of people are working,” Lowrie said.

“There’s a whole lot of noise that’s gone on from people who have been successful in the past in forcing development out to the fringes in places like Flatbush, leading to people having long commutes because they’ve tried to prevent housing in their areas.

“What we’re seeing now is housing being put in the places where it should be put, which is close to the city.”

He believed people did not need to be fearful about suburbs being taken over by high-rises.

“Just because something is zoned for an apartment doesn’t mean that it’s going to be built.

“For example, we’re already seeing where zoning allows for five-and-six-storey apartments, two to three-storey townhouses are being built instead.

“That’s a key point that often people miss about this. It’s just allowing development, should people want to. But those locations close to train stations and busway stations are ideal for more homes.”

Final decisions about Auckland’s housing needs aren’t expected to be made until mid-2027.

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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/2026/03/11/some-aucklanders-very-wound-up-over-housing-intensification-plans/

KCM Trade Awarded “Best Forex Trading Platform 2026” by FX Daily Info

Source: Media Outreach

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 11 March 2026 – KCM Trade, a leading global CFD broker, has been honored with the “Best Forex Trading Platform 2026” award at the 2026 Industry Awards hosted by international financial media outlet FX Daily Info in March 2026, underscoring the Group’s brand strength and industry influence built over a decade of development.

Regulated by both the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) and the Financial Services Commission (FSC) of Mauritius, KCM Trade remains committed to compliance, operational integrity, and sustainable growth. This latest recognition further reinforces the Group’s accumulated expertise and expanding presence in the global market.

Driven by the Market, Recognised by Industry Authorities

FX Daily Info has long been dedicated to research and evaluation within the global forex industry. Its annual awards are widely respected for their transparency and fairness, carrying significant industry influence.

This year’s selection process engaged forex investors worldwide, with all awards determined through public voting. KCM Trade stood out with a significant lead of over a thousand votes ahead of the runner-up. This accomplishment not only signifies strong industry recognition of KCM Trade’s sustained commitment to technological advancement and continuous optimisation of the trading experience, but also reflects a clear endorsement from the market through an open and transparent voting mechanism. The result further consolidates KCM Trade’s leadership position in the global forex market.

KCM Trade has consistently upheld a client-centric service philosophy. Receiving the “Best Forex Trading Platform” award reflects global clients’ strong recognition of the Group’s trading execution efficiency, system stability, client service standards, and diversified product offering. It also serves as a driving force for the Group’s ongoing refinement and innovation.

A Decade of Excellence, Looking Ahead

As KCM Trade marks its tenth anniversary, this recognition as “Best Forex Trading Platform 2026” carries special significance. Looking ahead, the Group will continue to drive intelligent technological innovation, further enhancing trading experience and service quality, and remains committed to providing global clients with a more efficient, reliable and trusted trading environment.

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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/2026/03/11/kcm-trade-awarded-best-forex-trading-platform-2026-by-fx-daily-info/

NRL: NZ Warriors coach Andrew Webster responds to Will Warbrick contract rumours

Source: Radio New Zealand

Will Warbrick scores a try for Melbourne Storm in the NRL Grand Final. AAP/Photosport

With his NZ Warriors linked to a high-profile signing across the Tasman, coach Andrew Webster warns to take the NRL rumour mill with a grain of salt.

Australian media reports the Auckland club has made strong advances on Melbourne Storm wing Will Warbrick, who is off contract this season and looking for a landing place in 2027.

Warbrick, 28, is a former All Blacks Sevens star, who won Olympic silver at Tokyo 2020, before switching codes and bringing up 50 games with the Storm last year. When he debuted for NZ Kiwis in 2024, he effectively became a triple international – he had also played for the NZ Aussie Rules side as a teenager.

Webster usually steers well clear of discussing contract rumours and was clearly in neither-confirm-nor-deny mode at the Warriors’ weekly media session, but also urged caution over such speculation.

“If he were to come here or if it were to eventuate, I would comment more, but at this stage, he’s off contract, as are another 40-50-60 players in the NRL,” he said. “Every player we get tagged to, we just can’t be commenting straight away.”

Often, these rumours are simply a case of managers creating a market for their players by driving up demand. If a player is supposedly talking to one club, he can leverage that to ask more from another.

“I honestly believe most of the time it is, but not all the time,” Webster agreed. “Because I’m in the know, I look at it case by case, and I’ll either laugh or say, ‘Jeez, they’re onto something there’.

Warriors coach Andrew Webster. DAVE HUNT/Photosport

“A lot of the time, we’re linked to players that we’re not even close to signing or I get a text message from someone saying, ‘I heard so-and-so is starting tonight’, but no, they’re not.

“I don’t know where it comes from, but sometimes where there’s smoke, there’s fire and sometimes they’re just miles off. Sometimes they’re just trying to pump up the price.”

That same rumour mill has current Warriors co-captain Mitch Barnett landing with the Brisbane Broncos next year, when he leaves the club early and returns across the ditch for family reasons.

The Warbrick signing would make sense for the Warriors, with veteran wing Roger Tuivasa-Sheck also off contract this year.

“Will’s career so far has been awesome, going from rugby and given a shot at rugby league with Melbourne,” Tuivasa-Sheck said. “He’s been awesome.

“I can’t fault how he’s been playing and big ups to him for getting these big-deal chats.

“There’s nothing negative about it. I’ll just stay here and make sure I focus on my footy, and see how it all falls out.”

The former All Black will celebrate his 150th game for the club this week against Canberra Raiders and has been linked with a switch back to rugby union for the proposed R360 rebel tournament, which has now moved its launch back to 2028.

The NRL has threatened a 10-year ban on any player signing for the breakaway competition, and Kangaroos and NSW Origin star Zac Lomax has had to switch to Western Force in Super Rugby Pacific in the meantime.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/nrl-nz-warriors-coach-andrew-webster-responds-to-will-warbrick-contract-rumours/

Life Sciences Summit 2026

Source: New Zealand Government

Thank you for the opportunity to speak here at the Life Sciences Summit today.  As Minister of Science, Innovation and Technology, I see the contribution our scientists, researchers and innovators make to New Zealand’s life sciences ecosystem.  The work you do at the intersection of science, technology and markets matters to our future.  

I also want to acknowledge the event organisers – BioTech NZ and NZTech.  This summit comes at a pivotal moment.  Around the world, advances in biology are converging with powerful new technologies such as AI and Quantum computing. These are reshaping healthcare, transforming food and agricultural systems, and opening new pathways to sustainable growth. For New Zealand, life sciences are important to our economic resilience, our health security and our ability to compete in a rapidly changing global landscape. 

Why life sciences matter to New Zealand 

New Zealand has long been recognised for the quality of its science and the ingenuity of its researchers. From medical breakthroughs that improve lives, to bio-based innovations that support high value exports, the life sciences sector already delivers real benefits for New Zealanders. It plays a critical role in the backbone of our economy and our living standards. Yet too often world class research has not translated into the scale of impact it should, with promising ideas struggling to move from the lab into the market. This is a challenge that this Government is determined to address. 

Reforming and refocusing the science system 

Over the past year, I have been undertaking the most significant reform of New Zealand’s science and technology system in more than 30 years to deliver greater focus, impact and long-term direction. These reforms are about ensuring public investment in science delivers outcomes that matter for New Zealand’s economy, our environment and our communities. In a similar structure to other small advanced economies, we have established the Prime Minister’s Science, Innovation and Technology Advisory Council, to provide one-place for strategic oversight and advice on national science priorities. This work will result in clear, actionable research priorities that give researchers and investors, confidence about the long-term direction of the system. 

Strategic direction of the science system and streamlined funding 

Alongside this strategic direction-setting, we are simplifying how science is funded. Research Funding New Zealand has been established as a single, independent decision maker for most government science, innovation and technology funding. For researchers, it means a clearer pathway to support. For government, it means investment decisions that are better aligned with national priorities and long-term impact.  

Strengthening connection and boosting productivity through our PROs 

Just as you have come together at this summit to share ideas and make connections, our new Public Research Organisations bring together talent, infrastructure, and capability across the system. The Bioeconomy Science Institute is a key part of this shift. By bringing together our strengths in agriculture, horticulture, food innovation, forestry, biomaterials and ecosystem resilience – the Institute is accelerating innovation across the bioeconomy, in what I am told is the second biggest bioeconomy institute in the world. 

This work matters.  

I am also committed to extending our science reach through new platforms. That is why we are investing in cutting‑edge science through the Biodiscovery Platform, supported by $42 million over seven years.  This platform, hosted by the Bioeconomy Science Institute, will help transform New Zealand’s unique biological resources into high-value products and support innovative Kiwi businesses. New Zealand has 80,000 indigenous flora and fauna, of which only 30,000 are scientifically described.  We’ve already seen the success stories, from mānuka in the honey sector to emerging bio-based materials, and nanocellulose from seaweed. I am convinced the next cancer drug and next nutraceutical will be bio-sourced. This platform also speaks to the head start that Māori and matauranga will have with biosourcing.    

Health security and resilience 

Life sciences are also important for our national resilience.  I have newly committed $75 million over seven years to strengthen New Zealand’s preparedness for and resilience to infectious diseases and pandemics.  The Infectious Diseases Research Platform, hosted by Public Health and Forensic Science (PHF Science), builds on the strong foundation of Te Niwha and reflects the lessons of recent global health challenges. 

It is encouraging to see the capability of PHF Science recognised. Digital twin platform ALMA won the Trailblazer in AI Innovation award at the Aotearoa AI Awards 2025. This demonstrates how we can leverage advanced technologies to support better decision-making in complex and evolving situations.  

Advanced technology and the future of science 

The convergence of life sciences with advanced technologies such as AI, synthetic technologies and quantum is transforming how research is conducted – enhancing efficiency, improving decision-making and providing new tools to tackle existing and emerging challenges. To ensure New Zealand captures these benefits technologies, I have established the New Zealand Institute for Advanced Technology. Through initiatives such as the development of an AI platform, the Institute is building on New Zealand’s existing strengths and enabling cross-sector collaboration that drives productivity and innovation.  

Achievements  

A year ago, I was tasked as the new Minister for Science, Innovation and Technology, to implement the biggest science reforms in 30 years. In the past year, these are 10 actions I have taken: 

  1. Amalgamated seven CRIs, including forming one of the biggest bioeconomy institutes in the world, to better serve the needs of industry and the community.
  2. Created a multimillion dollar biodiscovery platform to discover the next generation of cancer drugs.
  3. Funded a new emerging technology organisation for new research, including advanced materials, AI and quantum.
  4. Created and published a national IP policy supporting inventors.
  5. Created and published a national AI strategy to guide uptake.
  6. Deployed a new applied doctorate programme, to better align PhDs with industry and entrepreneurship.
  7. Created Prime Minister’s Science, Innovation and Technology Advisory Council as a one-stop national science strategy group, similar to those in other smaller advanced economies.
  8. Created Research Funding New Zealand as a one stop science funding administrator to reduce bureaucracy.
  9. Completed the first ever Memorandums of Co-operation between Antarctica NZ and the United States, and Antarctica NZ and the United Arab Emirates, and advanced new polar research projects to these agreements.
  10. Completed the first reading merging NIWA and Metservice to improve meteorological reporting. 

It has been a busy year! 

Gene tech reforms 

We also know that innovation requires modern, fit for purpose regulation. As part of the Government’s commitment to updating New Zealand’s outdated rules surrounding gene technology, we introduced the Gene Technology Bill to Parliament as a framework to deliver a more modern, risk-proportionate regime.  

I have received the Select Committee’s report. It is a complex bill and that reflects that this is a complex issue. I am taking time to consider its recommendations to improve the proposed regime, because this a once-in-a-generation opportunity and it is important that we get it right. Fundamentally, we are 20 years behind the Australian legislation. In real terms, if we don’t change, our competitors will ‘eat our lunch’ by producing quicker and more resilient species.  The next step will be for the Gene Technology Bill to proceed to its second reading, with the timing to be confirmed. 

Closing remarks 

The work represented at this summit reflects excellent New Zealand science. Your research, innovation and collaboration are helping to address some of the most significant challenges we face, while opening new opportunities for growth and prosperity. I wish you a productive summit and look forward to the ideas, partnerships and ambition that will emerge from your discussions. 

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/life-sciences-summit-2026/

AI company Anthropic expands to NZ and Australia

Source: Radio New Zealand

Anthropic insists its technology should not be used for the mass surveillance of US citizens. NIKOLAS KOKOVLIS/AFP

US artificial intelligence company Anthropic is expanding its presence in Australia and New Zealand.

The company, which is in the midst of suing the US government over its retaliation for a dispute about safeguards in its AI technology, says it is opening an office in Sydney.

“The expansion reflects strong demand from businesses in Australia and New Zealand, and will help us better serve the country’s unique AI ecosystem,” says a company statement.

Anthropic says Australia and New Zealand rank 4th and 8th globally in Claude usage, relative to population, according to the company’s latest Economic Index.

It lists current Australia-based clients as Canva, Quantium, and Commonwealth Bank of Australia.

“We’re excited by the ways organizations in Australia and New Zealand are applying AI to areas of national importance-financial services, agricultural technology, clean energy innovation, healthcare delivery, cutting-edge deep tech and scientific research, along with AI transformation in the enterprise,” said Chris Ciauri, the company’s managing director of international.

Anthropic’s court action against the Pentagon comes after it labelled the company a supply chain risk, which affects how it does business with other firms working with the Department of Defense.

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

LiveNews: https://nz.mil-osi.com/2026/03/11/ai-company-anthropic-expands-to-nz-and-australia/