
Seabed mine fears ignite coast towns on Ocean Day
A match lit six weeks ago in the coastal Taranaki town of Ōpunakē has ignited fires the length of the North Island – and far across the Pacific – with seabed mining opponents taking to the coast on World Ocean Day.
South Taranaki's 15-year fight against an Australian mining bid was picked up by more than 200 surfers, stand-up paddleboarders, body boarders, waka ama crew and kayakers at eight spots along the coast between Wellington to Auckland on Sunday.
As they paddled-out from Island Bay, Whanganui, Pātea, Pungarehu, New Plymouth, Raglan, Port Waikato and Muriwai hundreds more rallied on shore, with organisers saying strong turnouts in New Plymouth and Raglan took total numbers over 1200.
Four-thousand kilometres away, supporters in Tāhiti also hit the waves, they said.
Fiona Young of Protect Our Moana Taranaki said coastal communities jumped on board after the first paddle-out at Ōpunakē in April.
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Surfboards and water craft spelled-out 'no seabed mining' on the black sand of Autere. (Source: Courtesy Tania Niwa Photographer)
'It's important being connected together for this, because if given the greenlight here it would set a very dangerous precedent for all the rest of our coast and the Pacific.'
'It's a new experimental extractive industry that doesn't belong in our oceans.'
Trans-Tasman Resources (TTR) has approval to vacuum up 50 million tonnes of sand annually from the South Taranaki seabed for 35 years to extract iron, vanadium and titanium.
But the company still needs consent to discharge 45 million tonnes of unwanted sediment a year back into the shallow waters – 160,000 tonnes daily of a recognised pollutant.
After a decade failing to win discharge consent right through to the Supreme Court, Trans-Tasman last year quit the latest environment hearing to seek consent via the new Fast-track Approvals Act.
Many locals feared sediment would smother reefs and stunt marine photosynthesis by filtering sunlight.
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TTR's executive chairman Alan Eggers said the discharge wouldn't bother the marine ecology.
'De-ored sands will be returned immediately to the seafloor in a controlled process to minimise the generation of suspended sediment … the plume generated is localised,' said Eggers, who's also executive director of TTR's new owners, Australia miner Manuka Resources.
The mining ship would work as close as 22 kilometres off Pātea.
Saturday's cold snap cloaked Taranaki Maunga with winter's first heavy snowfall but, after dawn karakia, 20 surfers shrugged off the chill at Pātea Beach and formed Sunday's first circle on the water.
Among them was Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.
Shay King (centre) was with Rachel Arnott and MP Debbie Ngārewa Packer at Pātea, saying Trans-Tasman Resources is a two-legged version of the ocean whirlpool Te Korokoro o Te Parata that almost destroyed the ancestral waka Aotea on its journey to Aotearoa. (Source: Te Korimako o Taranaki)
As a Ngāti Ruanui leader, she fought the miners for a decade before entering Parliament.
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Ngarewa-Packer said World Ocean Day helped highlight that the proposed mine was an untested precedent, here and internationally.
'Seabed mining leaves behind the sludge, or the mud. Imagine 45 million tons of sludge… a lot of our magic reef life and our marine life will be absolutely annihilated.'
Sand extraction was common but didn't involve dumping most of what's taken back into the environment, opponents say.
Among the 100 supporters on Pātea's beach and dunes was onshore oil driller Hayden Fowler.
Despite working in an extractive industry, Fowler brought his teenage daughter Amelia to Pātea to oppose the marine mine.
'I just don't think it's the right thing to be doing.'
'A lot of people don't actually understand what will take place if it happens… so it's probably a little bit misunderstood as to how bad it could be.'
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Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Ruanui kaiwhakahaere Rachel Arnott said TTR kept losing in court because judges found environmental safety evidence unconvincing.
'TTR had nothing and in the Fast-track application we still haven't seen any sign that they've adapted to the courts' demands for proof – nothing fresh in terms of evidence.'
On Sunday afternoon, 500 gathered at New Plymouth's Autere, or East End Beach, to cheer more than 130 taking to the waves.
Fiona Gordon, Tasman Van Bergen and Jane Bowden-Dobson paddled out to oppose seabed mining on World Ocean Day. (Source: Te Korimako o Taranaki)
Surfer Fiona Gordon said she was there to celebrate the ocean.
'The beautiful things that it brings to our lives and the risks that are posed when we start interfering with that, in ways we don't fully understand.'
Many travelled from Pātea to join the Ngāmotu event including Bruce Boyd, head of community underwater science researchers Project Reef.
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Bruce Boyd says he doesn't want one iota of change on the rich reefs of the Pātea Banks revealed by his citizen science group Project Reef. (Source: Te Korimako o Taranaki)
'I dive off Pātea, that's my playground, and I don't want to see what's there changed in any way, shape, or form. Especially not covered by that sludge.'
TTR expected to earn US$312 million a year before tax, giving shareholders a near 40% rate of return on investment of US$602 million.
The company promised an economic boost in Taranaki and Whanganui, creating over 1350 New Zealand jobs and becoming one of the country's top exporters.
Opponents believed the financial benefits would land with mostly-foreign shareholders.
LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ on Air
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1News
6 hours ago
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Seabed mine fears ignite coast towns on Ocean Day
A match lit six weeks ago in the coastal Taranaki town of Ōpunakē has ignited fires the length of the North Island – and far across the Pacific – with seabed mining opponents taking to the coast on World Ocean Day. South Taranaki's 15-year fight against an Australian mining bid was picked up by more than 200 surfers, stand-up paddleboarders, body boarders, waka ama crew and kayakers at eight spots along the coast between Wellington to Auckland on Sunday. As they paddled-out from Island Bay, Whanganui, Pātea, Pungarehu, New Plymouth, Raglan, Port Waikato and Muriwai hundreds more rallied on shore, with organisers saying strong turnouts in New Plymouth and Raglan took total numbers over 1200. Four-thousand kilometres away, supporters in Tāhiti also hit the waves, they said. Fiona Young of Protect Our Moana Taranaki said coastal communities jumped on board after the first paddle-out at Ōpunakē in April. ADVERTISEMENT Surfboards and water craft spelled-out 'no seabed mining' on the black sand of Autere. (Source: Courtesy Tania Niwa Photographer) 'It's important being connected together for this, because if given the greenlight here it would set a very dangerous precedent for all the rest of our coast and the Pacific.' 'It's a new experimental extractive industry that doesn't belong in our oceans.' Trans-Tasman Resources (TTR) has approval to vacuum up 50 million tonnes of sand annually from the South Taranaki seabed for 35 years to extract iron, vanadium and titanium. But the company still needs consent to discharge 45 million tonnes of unwanted sediment a year back into the shallow waters – 160,000 tonnes daily of a recognised pollutant. After a decade failing to win discharge consent right through to the Supreme Court, Trans-Tasman last year quit the latest environment hearing to seek consent via the new Fast-track Approvals Act. Many locals feared sediment would smother reefs and stunt marine photosynthesis by filtering sunlight. ADVERTISEMENT TTR's executive chairman Alan Eggers said the discharge wouldn't bother the marine ecology. 'De-ored sands will be returned immediately to the seafloor in a controlled process to minimise the generation of suspended sediment … the plume generated is localised,' said Eggers, who's also executive director of TTR's new owners, Australia miner Manuka Resources. The mining ship would work as close as 22 kilometres off Pātea. Saturday's cold snap cloaked Taranaki Maunga with winter's first heavy snowfall but, after dawn karakia, 20 surfers shrugged off the chill at Pātea Beach and formed Sunday's first circle on the water. Among them was Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer. Shay King (centre) was with Rachel Arnott and MP Debbie Ngārewa Packer at Pātea, saying Trans-Tasman Resources is a two-legged version of the ocean whirlpool Te Korokoro o Te Parata that almost destroyed the ancestral waka Aotea on its journey to Aotearoa. (Source: Te Korimako o Taranaki) As a Ngāti Ruanui leader, she fought the miners for a decade before entering Parliament. ADVERTISEMENT Ngarewa-Packer said World Ocean Day helped highlight that the proposed mine was an untested precedent, here and internationally. 'Seabed mining leaves behind the sludge, or the mud. Imagine 45 million tons of sludge… a lot of our magic reef life and our marine life will be absolutely annihilated.' Sand extraction was common but didn't involve dumping most of what's taken back into the environment, opponents say. Among the 100 supporters on Pātea's beach and dunes was onshore oil driller Hayden Fowler. Despite working in an extractive industry, Fowler brought his teenage daughter Amelia to Pātea to oppose the marine mine. 'I just don't think it's the right thing to be doing.' 'A lot of people don't actually understand what will take place if it happens… so it's probably a little bit misunderstood as to how bad it could be.' ADVERTISEMENT Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Ruanui kaiwhakahaere Rachel Arnott said TTR kept losing in court because judges found environmental safety evidence unconvincing. 'TTR had nothing and in the Fast-track application we still haven't seen any sign that they've adapted to the courts' demands for proof – nothing fresh in terms of evidence.' On Sunday afternoon, 500 gathered at New Plymouth's Autere, or East End Beach, to cheer more than 130 taking to the waves. Fiona Gordon, Tasman Van Bergen and Jane Bowden-Dobson paddled out to oppose seabed mining on World Ocean Day. (Source: Te Korimako o Taranaki) Surfer Fiona Gordon said she was there to celebrate the ocean. 'The beautiful things that it brings to our lives and the risks that are posed when we start interfering with that, in ways we don't fully understand.' Many travelled from Pātea to join the Ngāmotu event including Bruce Boyd, head of community underwater science researchers Project Reef. ADVERTISEMENT Bruce Boyd says he doesn't want one iota of change on the rich reefs of the Pātea Banks revealed by his citizen science group Project Reef. (Source: Te Korimako o Taranaki) 'I dive off Pātea, that's my playground, and I don't want to see what's there changed in any way, shape, or form. Especially not covered by that sludge.' TTR expected to earn US$312 million a year before tax, giving shareholders a near 40% rate of return on investment of US$602 million. The company promised an economic boost in Taranaki and Whanganui, creating over 1350 New Zealand jobs and becoming one of the country's top exporters. Opponents believed the financial benefits would land with mostly-foreign shareholders. LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ on Air

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In Australia, the players decided to ditch the end of the game group huddle ahead of this year's Super Netball Competition. Former Australian Diamonds legend turned commentator Cath Cox told a Fox Sports panel show that from an optics point of view, the players felt it looked out of place as professional athletes. Players also said it could be 'awkward'. Cox said it came off the back of last year's Constellation Cup between the Diamonds and Silver Ferns. 'They play each other every two or three days and discussions started then around is it too much to be coming into a huddle when you're still in the heat of the battle and after every single game?' Cox said. Former Silver Ferns captain and coach Yvonne Willering said in her day they thanked the opposition and the umpire and then went back to their own team. 'Why would you at that stage want to get in a huddle with the opposition and people sort of say it's all about the game out on court and afterwards you can be mates, but to me it's too soon after the game. It's a bit like I have a problem with a team doing high fives when they really haven't played that well in a particular quarter. 'While it's not a major, I totally understand why the Australians are no longer doing that. I think players themselves [in New Zealand] have been looking at that. I think a handshake and then just moving on has more merit,' Willering said. Tactix captain Erikana Pedersen said it could feel forced at times. 'Sometimes I question why we do that, and is it a bit of a just kind of a nice way to end things out but when you lose you don't want to be in a huddle with the people you just lost to so I can see why the Australian teams have stopped that this season and maybe that's something we need to look at doing,' Pedersen said. But some people in the sport, such as Mystics captain Michaela Sokolich-Beatson, believe it's one of the things that makes netball so unique. 'We're trying to play the best brand of netball that we can play to make it a really strong game in our country and I think a part of that is doing it as a collective so I think to come together at the end of the game and congratulate each other and just celebrate each other I think is powerful in a women's sport and any sport in general so I'm happy to keep doing it,' Sokolich-Beatson said. Pulse captain and Silver Fern veteran Kelly Jackson said she liked the act of camaraderie and respect between the sides. 'I think it's nice to acknowledge the team and everyone goes out there to put their best foot forward so I think it shows a lot of sportsmanship to be able to be I guess humble in victory, gracious in defeat,' Jackson said. Magic midcourter Georgie Edgecombe said she liked what the Australian teams had done. 'Of course shake hands and pay respect to each other after the game but there's probably no need for a huddle and chat, the same thing gets said every week,' Edgecombe said Mystics shooter Filda Vui said when her side played the Stars in round one, it was an opportunity to empathise with their opponents. 'Three of their players got injured and got carried off the court. Mickey [Michaela Sokolich-Beatson] shared a few words just to say we felt for them because those are our sisters and we used to play and grew up with them in Auckland so that's why it's kind of nice too, to just share a few words because that was really sad,' Vui said. Former Silver Fern and current Tactix coach Donna Wilkins, also used to play basketball for New Zealand. Wilkins said you don't see it in any other sport and wondered how authentic it was. 'It's just always what you do in netball and it is a wee bit weird. Like you always shake hands etc in other sports but you don't normally come together. Normally the captain says something but you know we've just been in the heat of the battle – do they really mean what they are saying? 'I know it's something that some of the players have discussed and talked about but I guess we've just always done it so it will be interesting to see if we follow that same path,' Wilkins said. Mirroring what happens in most other sports, the Australian players now get around to one another to shake hands. It remains to be seen whether hip hip hip, ray ray ray is here to stay in New Zealand for years to come. But it's safe to say netball won't go down the NBA route of simply heading down the tunnel to the dressing rooms immediately after the game is done.