Mouse plague threatens rare skink

Source: Department of Conservation

Date:  05 February 2025

Mouse numbers have been tracking consistently high in the area where the skinks live. Mice are small enough to enter the small holes and burrows where the skinks live and eat them alive.

This operation, in Victoria Forest Park, will protect the only known population of the Alborn skink, which is at high risk of extinction. It’s classified as Threatened – Nationally Critical with the population estimated to be 30 individuals.

DOC Operations Manager Chris Hickford says that the 10-hectare pest control operation is an interim measure to protect the skinks, until a predator proof fence can be built.

“We are working with the New Zealand Nature Fund (NZNF) to raise funds to build a predator proof fence for the skinks. Once we can enclose an area, and remove any predators inside it, we’ll be able to protect the skinks without needing to use toxins.

“The pest control operation will utilise the toxin brodifacoum, placed in bait stations. Brodifacoum is the most effective toxin to control mice and is less likely to lead to bait shyness than other toxins.”

Map of caution zones
Image: DOC

Because brodifacoum persists in the environment, an area around the operation will become a “caution zone” for three years due to the risk of game animals consuming sub-lethal amounts of the toxin, which could then enter the food chain. There is a five-kilometre radius zone for pigs, and two-kilometre radius for deer.

Hickford says, “We have designed the operation to minimise this risk as much as is practical. We have evidence that pig and deer numbers are very low in the treatment area and will monitor for interactions with the bait stations throughout the operation.”

You can donate to this project to build a fence for the Alborn skink through DOC’s partner, New Zealand Nature Fund (NZNF). NZNF is a charitable trust responsible for funds donated to this project. Visit NZNF to secure the future of the Alborn skink

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

Fatal crash, Twin Lakes Road, Upper Hutt

Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

Police can confirm one person has died following a crash on Twin Lakes Road, Upper Hutt this morning.

The single vehicle crash was reported at about 7am.

The sole occupant of the vehicle died at the scene.

Inquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

New Zealand Harkness Fellowship applications now open

Source: Leadership Development Centre

The New Zealand Harkness Fellowship is for a high potential senior leader in any field of study or vocation (excluding health care policy and practice) to study or research in the US for between 3-6 months.

A New Zealand Harkness Fellowship, worth up to NZ$70,000, is being offered in 2025 (for travel in mid-late 2025) to a leader currently employed in the New Zealand Public Sector.  The length and total value of the Fellowship will be determined by the LDC and Harkness Trust Board, in conjunction with the successful applicant.

Applications are now open and will close 5pm, 31 March 2025.   

More information is available on our website .

New Zealand Harkness Fellowships

New infrastructure research can aid disaster preparedness

Source: New Zealand Infrastructure Commission

New research from the New Zealand Infrastructure Commission, Te Waihanga shows how insurance can help us to manage natural hazard risks and choose how to prepare infrastructure for a changing climate.
“New Zealand has experienced some significant natural events in recent years,” says the Commission’s General Manager Strategy, Peter Nunns. “In dollar terms alone, we’ve seen at least $10 billion in infrastructure rebuilding costs from two large earthquakes and two storms since 2012. And that doesn’t of course include the impact of these events on people’s lives and businesses or the economy.”
Nunns says that not only is the likelihood and size of events such as storms expected to grow in coming years, but the replacement cost of infrastructure is growing too.
“On an inflation-adjusted, per-person basis, public infrastructure is now worth 70% more that it was in 1990. So, the cost of replacing it after a natural disaster is rising at the same time as the likelihood of a disaster is rising. It’s more important than ever to make good decisions about when and how to reduce risks and minimise costs.”
The Commission’s report Invest or insure? Preparing infrastructure for natural hazards looks at how insurance can help us decide if, when and by how much to invest in infrastructure adaptation or resilience.
The report shows that insurance prices rise as risks to assets, like the chance of flooding, and the cost to repair or re-build go up. Investing to make infrastructure more resilient or adapt to changing risks can bring down the cost of insurance. When infrastructure providers measure their risks and price them through insurance, they can make better risk management decisions by looking at whether the cost of resilience investments are matched by benefits from lower insurance premiums.
Providers must also factor in other costs – such as risks to public safety or damage caused by the failure of their infrastructure. These economic and social consequences can also be added to the providers’ insurance / resilience appraisal.
However, Nunns says that overall New Zealand has an incomplete picture of the hazards it faces, the risks these pose for our infrastructure, and how these are being managed. For instance, the last time a review of insurance coverage for public assets was undertaken – over 10 years ago – it found that less than half of public assets were insured.
“This is challenging, as our research shows that, in addition to helping to smooth out the costs of responding to natural hazards, insurance can also help infrastructure providers make better decisions about when and how to reduce risk and minimise costs.”
“Risks change over time. A risk management decision made yesterday might not be the best decision for tomorrow. It’s important that infrastructure providers consider this in their long-term asset management planning.”
Report key findings
– There is no single best approach to managing natural hazard risk to infrastructure. Instead, the optimal approach will vary depending on many factors, including likelihood and consequence of the hazard, and the relative cost of different options in different situations.
– To manage risk well, infrastructure providers need to have a good understanding of their assets and the risks to which they are exposed. They will also need the capability to assess their options and optimise their response to risks from natural hazards. However, at a national level, we lack comprehensive and consistent hazard data for providers to use to assess their risk.
– Quantifying risk and/or pricing it through insurance premiums, can help clarify the optimal risk management approach for infrastructure assets. Optimal resilience investments should reduce risk management costs, compared to continuing to pay risk related insurance premiums. When resilience investments are more costly than insuring risk, they may not be warranted.
– The optimal level of resilience will depend on the relative cost of resilience investments compared to the expected cost of (and the benefits we get from) the assets being protected. We can increase the case for resilience investment by focusing on keeping infrastructure delivery costs down. Conversely, rising infrastructure delivery costs will erode the case for resilience investments.
Background notes
– Our understanding of both the probability and severity of natural hazards continues to improve as scientific research progresses. Improving our scientific understanding and investigating hazards in more detail sometimes results in increased estimates of risk. For example, pre-2021 modelling estimated that there was a 30% chance of a major earthquake on the Alpine Fault over the next 50 years. More recent research has estimated the probability to be much higher, with a 75% probability of occurring over the next 50 years.
– In some cases, the underlying risks are also changing as climate change is expected to make severe weather events both more frequent and more severe.
– In recent decades, New Zealand has experienced annual reported losses equal to almost 0.6% of gross domestic product (GDP). These losses mainly reflect damage to residential property and businesses, as well as damage to infrastructure.
– Already, natural disasters cost New Zealanders more as a share of GDP than anyone else except Chileans. Some hazards will grow significantly in their frequency and intensity as our climate changes over the next 30-80 years.

ChildFund – Back to school? Not without clean water

Source: ChildFund New Zealand

‘Back-to-school’ means something different in parts of the Pacific
Children in remote areas of the Pacific, like the outer islands of Solomon Islands or Kiribati struggle to go back to school if they don’t have access to clean water, let alone access to pens, school books and a new school bag.
“The Pacific is our home too. It’s unacceptable that even one child in our region does not have easy access to the most important life-saving resource of all – water,” says CEO of ChildFund Josie Pagani
Some schools lack running clean water, and parents either cannot access or cannot afford bottled water. Children miss school to spend the day collecting clean water from sources many miles away.
“Lack of clean water has a domino effect. Dirty water impacts a child’s education, which then impacts their ability to work and earn an income, and even their lifelong health,” says Sharon Inone, CEO of Greenergy
Sharon has recently returned from working with the United Nations, to her home province of Temotu in Solomon Islands, where Greenergy is working with ChildFund New Zealand to bring clean water to her community.
“I made a promise to my mother that I would do something about the lack of clean water in our home, and that’s what I’m doing,” says Sharon Inone.
The lack of clean water in parts of Solomon Islands, Kiribati and other remote parts of the Pacific leads to dysentery, severe diarrhoea, hospitalisation and even death in children with their whole lives ahead of them.
ChildFund New Zealand is working with local communities across the Pacific to fix or build water infrastructure.
Without this work, too many children will miss out on an education, a career and even a full healthy life.
1 in 10 deaths for children under 5 years in parts of the Pacific is linked to diarrhoea, vomiting and dirty water. The Pacific has some of the highest rates of stunting in the world, with 33 per cent of children under the age of five in Solomon Islands suffering from stunting, and 15 per cent of children affected in Kiribati.
“Stunting doesn’t just affect physical growth. It affects a child’s brain development which makes it hard for them to learn. Preventing the illnesses that come from dirty water will help to reduce these rates. This is a fixable problem. So let’s fix it,” says Josie Pagani.
“I want our kids to grow up like normal kids, with access to the basics like clean water. Not to be born into the culture of looking for water every day. If they have clean water, kids will get the education they deserve. We are adding four to five more hours every day to their lives if they don’t have to search for clean water. These are hours that their parents can use earning an income instead of looking for water. It is adding more time to do more productive things,” says Sharon Inone.
“This is not just about water. It’s about people getting their lives back. It’s about stopping kids die. It’s about allowing parents time to make money, and the kids the time to learn. It’s about improving the standard of living and the health of children no matter where they live,” says Sharon Inone.
“Clean water changes everything.”
Give the back-to-school gift of an education to a child in the Pacific.

Fire Safety – Dry conditions prompt fire restrictions in Otago’s alpine area

Source: Fire and Emergency New Zealand

Fire and Emergency New Zealand has placed Otago’s alpine area into a restricted fire season from 8am, Wednesday 5 February until further notice.
A restricted fire season means anyone who wants to light an outdoor fire will need a permit authorised by Fire and Emergency, which they can apply for at checkitsalright.nz.
Otago District Manager Phil Marsh says the current warm, dry weather is forecast to continue over the next few weeks, raising the fire risk in Otago’s fragile alpine environment.
“Our highlands have some of the most beautiful tussock, grass and native forest in the country – and unfortunately it’s all quite flammable,” he says.
“Significant fires can ignite and spread quickly in these types of vegetation even when the fire danger isn’t that high.
“There’s very little rain expected, which means it’s especially vulnerable at present.”
Fires are already restricted or prohibited in the rest of the Otago district, due to the dry summer conditions.
“The Otago district can have large uncontrolled fires all year round, whenever there are periods of dry weather,” Phil Marsh says.
“The large vegetation fire on Mt Creighton in 2022 showed how quickly a significant fire can get started, with serious consequences for our environment and wildlife.
“The best way to prevent a wildfire is not to light an outdoor fire, which is why we’re restricting outdoor fires in the Otago alpine area.
“If you’re thinking about starting any kind of open-air fire, you must go to checkitsalright.nz first to find out if you can do that in your location, and what restrictions apply.
“We’re serious about protecting our people, property and environment, so we urge everyone to take extra care with fire this summer.”

Proposed changes to cost recovery settings: 2025 annual review

Source: Ministry for Primary Industries

Have your say

The Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) seeks your feedback on increases to:

  • the Dairy Standards Processor Levy and the Dairy Exporter Levy
  • veterinary service fees for establishments
  • veterinary service fees for live animal imports and exports, including germplasm
  • the Raw Milk Levy
  • the Homekill Levy.

We’re also proposing 6 relatively small design changes to ensure appropriate charging for the services provided.

Summaries of the proposals are on this page and full details are in the consultation document.

Consultation opened on 5 February and we must get your submissions by 5pm on 7 March 2025.

Consultation document

Annual review 2025: Proposed changes to MPI’s cost recovery settings [PDF, 1.9 MB]

What’s being proposed?

Fee/levy Current rate Proposed rate

Dairy Standards Processor Levy total revenue per annum 

$4,279,580

$5,576,268

Dairy Exporter Levy revenue per annum 

$834,567

$1,541,334

Establishments fees (vets) per hour

$128.15

$152.42 or $155.80

Establishments fees (supervising vets) per hour

$136.45

$169.89 or $173.71

Veterinary service fees for live animal imports and exports, including germplasm per hour

$186.30

$216.84

Raw Milk Levy per annum

$581.25

2% increases per annum for 3 years.

$616.83 by 2027–28.

Homekill Levy per annum

$100

2% increases per annum for 3 years.

$106.12 by 2027–28.

Summaries of proposed regulatory design changes to 6 other cost recovery settings

1. Clearance of increased regulatory interest and high regulatory interest foods (for example, frozen berries)

Regulations currently include an administration activity fee for importing of increased regulatory interest food or high regulatory interest food. Under the regulations, charging is specified as being for “each consignment”. The administration activity is often done for groups of consignments, for example, where a group of consignments comes from a single origin, rather than for each consignment within that group. This saves time and reduces the bill for the importer. It is proposed to amend the regulations to clarify that charging is done for “each consignment or group of consignments of a single origin”.

2. Levy waiver relating to the former Meat Industry Initiative Fund

Regulations state amounts to be charged for a now-ended Meat Initiative Fund. A permanent waiver is in place so that these amounts are not actually charged. The design change proposes to replace the waiver with a change to the regulations to clarify that these charges have ceased.

3. Food export exemptions

It is proposed to add a new charge of $135 per application plus $33.75 per quarter hour beyond the first hour to recover the cost of the work undertaken by MPI officials to process exemption requests under section 347 of the Food Act 2014. For example, if food is destined solely for export, it should comply with standards in the destination market and could be given an exemption from meeting New Zealand standards where these differ from those prevailing in the destination market. The new fee will increase revenue by about $34,000 per annum.

4. Agent collection rate (Domestic Food Business Levy)

A change is proposed to clarify that the $11 collection charge for the Domestic Food Business Levy currently described in regulation is GST-exclusive. Charges in regulations are routinely recorded as GST-exclusive because businesses are generally the one charged and claim back GST (the price businesses are concerned about is the GST-exclusive price). This will also future-proof charges in case of future GST changes. This charge was intended to be GST-exclusive.

5. Animal products: charges for use of electronic system

The proposal is to amend the Animal Products (Dairy Industry Fees, Charges, and Levies) Regulations 2015 and Animal Products (Fees, Charges, and Levies) Regulations 2007, to enable certification costs to be recovered at the same level during 2025–26, as the certification system transitions from the AP e-cert system to the new trade certification system. The proposals include removing the “cost per second” component of the charging formula, and to amend the definition of “cost per request” as the cost per second component is not compatible with how the new system will operate.

6. Food Importer Levy

Three changes are proposed to the new Food Importer Levy. The changes improve efficiency around who pays, what data is used in the calculation of the levy, and the due date for levy payment. The changes reflect original intentions when the Food Importer Levy was approved last year, but which were not given effect at the time. The changes are as follows:

  • extend the levy to importers who are registered but who do not import any amount of food. Despite importing no food, these importers generate some cost by interacting with the food safety system
  • charge importers at the start of each financial year according to their import amounts from the previous year. This is expected to reduce administration costs for importers and MPI.

We also propose to standardise the date the levy is payable to within 20 working days of the date of the annual levy invoice.

Making a submission

We welcome submissions on the proposals contained in the consultation document. Submissions must be received by 5pm on 7 March 2025.

You can make a submission by completing a submission form and either:

  • sending it to us by email, or
  • posting it to us.

Cost recovery submission form [DOCX, 110 KB]

How to submit your completed form by email

Attach your completed form to an email and send it to costrecovery@mpi.govt.nz

How to submit your completed form by post

Post your completed submission form to:

Cost Recovery Directorate I Corporate Branch
Ministry for Primary Industries
PO Box 2526
Wellington 6140.

Submissions are public information

Note that all, part, or a summary of your submission may be published on this website. Most often this happens when we issue a document that reviews the submissions received.

People can also ask for copies of submissions under the Official Information Act 1982 (OIA). The OIA says we must make the content of submissions available unless we have good reason for withholding it. Those reasons are detailed in sections 6 and 9 of the OIA.

If you think there are grounds to withhold specific information from publication, make this clear in your submission or contact us. Reasons may include that it discloses commercially sensitive or personal information. However, any decision MPI makes to withhold details can be reviewed by the Ombudsman, who may direct us to release it.

Official Information Act 1982 – NZ Legislation

Firearms and ammunition recovered in Levin

Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

Police have recovered stolen firearms and a large amount of ammunition from a house in Foxton, thanks to two members of the public making the decision to call 111.

Horowhenua Prevention Manager Acting Senior Sergeant Peter Vine says thanks to those calls, Police have prevented weapons and ammunition falling into the wrong hands.

The calls were made about 7:30am on Tuesday 4 February.

“A young man was seen going between houses carrying armfuls of firearms. They thought it was strange so got in touch with us.”

A Police team went to the Mark Perreau Place property where they located an 18-year-old Foxton man, 5 firearms and a large amount of ammunition.

“The firearms and ammo had been stolen a day earlier. To get that tip off from a member of the public is just fantastic – they’ve prevented these weapons from getting into the wrong hands and all the harm that goes with that.”

The 18-year-old Foxton man was taken into custody without incident. He has been charged with burglary, four counts of unlawfully possessing a firearm, two counts of unlawfully possessing ammunition, unlawfully being in an enclosed yard, and unlawfully getting into a motor vehicle.

He is due to appear in the Levin District Court today (5 January). 

Acting Senior Sergeant Vine urged anyone who sees suspicious behaviour to report it.

“If it looks illegal, dodgy, or strange, tell us. Call 111 if it’s happening now, or make a report to 105 if it’s after the fact. Your call could make a huge difference.”

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Name release: Fatal crash Acacia Bay, Taupō

Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

Police can now release the names of the two people who died following a crash in Acacia Bay, Taupō on Friday 17 January.

They were Purity Anne Te Pairi and Tamatoa Kimi, both aged 19, from Taupo.

Our thoughts are with the whānau of those involved.

Inquiries into the circumstances of the crash are ongoing.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Police continue investigation into Birkenhead incident

Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

An investigation into the wounding of a man in Birkenhead on Tuesday afternoon will continue today.

A man suffered multiple stab wounds outside an address on Birkenhead Avenue at around 2pm.

North Shore Area Commander Inspector Stefan Sagar says the victim underwent surgery at Auckland City Hospital last night.

“The victim is now in a serious but stable condition in hospital, and we will be looking to speak with him in the coming days as we continue our enquiries.”

Police will be visible again in the Birkenhead community today with an area canvas as part of the investigation.

“From what we have established so far in our enquiries, we do not believe this is a random incident,” Inspector Sagar says.

“We are continuing to make enquiries into information about a vehicle that left the area, but at this point we do not have further information to release.”

Police acknowledge the Birkenhead community, with many people coming forward to assist the investigation.

“We have had good support from the neighbourhood, and this information is assisting us in progressing the investigation,” Inspector Sagar says.

“I know when these events take place in our communities that this can be unsettling, but we believe it is an isolated event and Police are continuing to work hard to identify and hold this offender to account.”

Police welcome further information to assist with the investigation.

Anyone that can assist enquiries can update Police online now or call 105.

Please use the reference number 250204/5489.

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

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police