
Climate Justice Taranaki Joins Urgent Waitangi Tribunal Hearing On Seabed Mining
'TTR does not have a social licence to operate in Taranaki. All of Taranaki is opposed to seabed mining. Every iwi and hapū have resisted it, community groups have taken a stand against this project for years, the South Taranaki District Council and Whanganui District Council have come out against it, and this week, the New Plymouth District Council has confirmed its opposition to seabed mining.'
'While the Fast-Track application is in motion, we are more determined than ever to stop this project from ever going ahead and are calling for large-scale civil action against seabed mining if this ever gets approved.'
'In our letter to the Waitangi Tribunal, we noted that Taranaki is home to important taonga species. The South Taranaki Bight is an important hotspot for marine mammal diversity within Aotearoa, including as a feeding and breeding location. There are a number of nationally vulnerable and nationally threatened and endangered species that reside within the moana, including a local population of Pygmy Blue Whales which are located within the South Taranaki Bight year-round.'
'Surveys by NIWA in South Taranaki Bight also reported new species of bryozoans, sponges, annelids, and algae, as well as new records for many groups for the region. A subsequent 2021 NIWA survey of Pātea Bank reefs, found that a deeper reef held high densities of juvenile blue cod, consistent with it providing important nursery habitat. Several other smaller nursery habitat areas were discovered on the edges of some reefs.'
'Considering the fast-changing ocean conditions, notably extended marine heatwaves and changing ocean chemistry undermining ocean food webs, the plight of Aotearoa's threatened and endangered marine species is dire, even without additional manmade impacts from seabed mining.'

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Scoop
08-07-2025
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Wanganui-Manawatu Sea Fishing Club Leader Raises Alarm Over Seabed Mining Project
The commodore of the Wanganui-Manawatu Sea Fishing Club is raising the alarm over a seabed mining project he never believed would happen. "With it being turned down by the Supreme Court and there being a court-ordered environmental hearing, I never, ever thought it would get to this point," Jamie Newell told Local Democracy Reporting. The Whanganui diver, fisherman and business owner said large areas of one of New Zealand's most important fisheries could be wiped out by an Australian miner's desire to mine minerals off the South Taranaki coast. Trans Tasman Resources (TTR) wants to extract up to 50 million tonnes a year of seabed material a year. It would recover an estimated 5 million tonnes of vanadium-rich titanomagnetite concentrate and then dump unwanted sediment back into the sea. TTR withdrew from an environmental hearing to apply for marine consents via the coalition government's new fast-track approvals regime. Newell, who manages family-run fishing and outdoors business Marine Services Whanganui, said low reefs in the South Taranaki Bight would be smothered by the dumping of 45 million tonnes a year of "dredge tailings" for 20 years. Recreational fishers and local businesses could be left reeling for decades, he said. "That's extremely concerning. I'm extremely worried for what that sediment would do to our marine environment and how dramatically it could change recreational fishing off there." Newell said he feared the impact of silt pollution on precious reef life. "I was brought up diving the coastline and my father dived it as well. I've done a lot of exploratory diving out to 45m. I've seen personally how clear it is out there - and I'm worried. "We have some very diverse ecosystems off this coastline - some of the most scenic you could ever hope to see. The reef life is some of the best in the world. "It's a very unreal place, one of the only places we have like this in the whole of the North Island. "You can be out there with 60 to 100 kingis swimming around you, being inquisitive. No movie could ever replicate that." Over the past six or seven years, Newell has mapped many of the reefs he's dived using new marine electronics. "The detail we can see now is far beyond what we've been able to see before. You can know every rock and gully and face on those reefs." Pumping 90% of the extracted materials back into the ocean would result in a huge volume of displaced sediment, he said. "Niwa and TTR have done research around and inland of that area, but I've yet to see any research on the reefs downcurrent of there - the ones that will be affected. "Most of the tailings will follow the east to west currents and flow back to Whanganui. "TTR knows there will be problems in those areas, so they've left that research undone." TTR proposes mining from waters 20m to 50m deep, between 22km and 36km offshore. While inner reefs were quite tall, with faces 5m to 15m high, and would not be as affected by the dredging, some deeper reefs were low and flat, lying only about a metre and a half high. "It won't take much at all to cover them." Ocean contours dropped off into a hole about 30-40m lower than the dredging zone, he said. "That's one of our main reef structure areas. The silt's going to settle on that area between the mining zone and the back of Graham Bank, and it will hit all the reefs there." Newell said from a depth of around 30m, wave action did not disturb the seabed. "Pumping silt back onto it will silt up reefs that don't naturally get silt on them." Niwa had reported that tailings dumped into water 35-70m deep would move up to 20km from the mining site and Newell feared the sediment would cover a swathe of low-lying reef structure. "Reef life will lose its habitat. The tailings are going to wipe out a large part of our reef fisheries, the likes of our blue cod, terakihi and hāpuka. It's where 90 percent of our terakihi get caught. "Our numbers of snapper and crayfish and kingis are recovering and growing faster than ever. We have an exceptional recreational crayfishery here. What's this going to do to them?" Newell has been with the sea fishing club in Whanganui for more than 10 years. "At no point has TTR engaged with us. We have more than 250 members, all fishing in that area. We would be the largest recreational user of the fishing grounds east of the seabed mining zone. "They've never talked to us. As part of a consent process, I would have thought that would have been part of what you'd need to do." Newell said smothering reef fisheries would affect his and other businesses. "If people can't go out to catch a feed of fish as easily, they're going to stop trying. We'll lose customers if the habitats are no longer there, and there will be flow-on effects for other businesses. "We've been a family business for 34 years. We employ 22 staff - that's 22 families that rely on our business." Newell has raised his concerns with Whanganui MP Carl Bates. He called a fishing club meeting on Thursday to discuss the issue and spoke with Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop during the Minister's visit to Whanganui on Friday. Bishop is one of the ministers overseeing the Fast-track Approvals regime.


Scoop
26-06-2025
- Scoop
Climate Justice Taranaki Joins Urgent Waitangi Tribunal Hearing On Seabed Mining
The community group Climate Justice Taranaki is joining hapū and iwi from across the motu as an interested party to Waitangi Tribunal urgent hearing regarding the proposed seabed mining of the Taranaki coast by Trans-Tasman Resources (TTR) under the Fast-Track legislation. 'TTR does not have a social licence to operate in Taranaki. All of Taranaki is opposed to seabed mining. Every iwi and hapū have resisted it, community groups have taken a stand against this project for years, the South Taranaki District Council and Whanganui District Council have come out against it, and this week, the New Plymouth District Council has confirmed its opposition to seabed mining.' 'While the Fast-Track application is in motion, we are more determined than ever to stop this project from ever going ahead and are calling for large-scale civil action against seabed mining if this ever gets approved.' 'In our letter to the Waitangi Tribunal, we noted that Taranaki is home to important taonga species. The South Taranaki Bight is an important hotspot for marine mammal diversity within Aotearoa, including as a feeding and breeding location. There are a number of nationally vulnerable and nationally threatened and endangered species that reside within the moana, including a local population of Pygmy Blue Whales which are located within the South Taranaki Bight year-round.' 'Surveys by NIWA in South Taranaki Bight also reported new species of bryozoans, sponges, annelids, and algae, as well as new records for many groups for the region. A subsequent 2021 NIWA survey of Pātea Bank reefs, found that a deeper reef held high densities of juvenile blue cod, consistent with it providing important nursery habitat. Several other smaller nursery habitat areas were discovered on the edges of some reefs.' 'Considering the fast-changing ocean conditions, notably extended marine heatwaves and changing ocean chemistry undermining ocean food webs, the plight of Aotearoa's threatened and endangered marine species is dire, even without additional manmade impacts from seabed mining.'


Scoop
24-06-2025
- Scoop
E Tiriti Through Two Lenses: A Kōrero Between Tangata Whenua And Tangata Tiriti
Whare Wānanga, Central Library, Level 2, 44 Lorne Street, Auckland CBD Saturday 28 June 2025 | 2:00pm – 3:00pm This Matariki season, Aucklanders are invited to deepen their understanding of Te Tiriti o Waitangi at Ka mua ka muri: Moving forward with Te Tiriti o Waitangi — a timely and energising conversation between two of Aotearoa's most thoughtful commentators on Tiriti justice, education, and the evolving relationship between Māori and Pākehā. Held in the Whare Wānanga at Auckland Central Library as part of the Tāmaki Untold series, the event features Roimata Smail, author of Understanding Te Tiriti, in conversation with Avril Bell, author of Becoming Tangata Tiriti. Together, they will explore the significance of Te Tiriti in 2025: how we honour its principles, hold power to account, and move forward in partnership — ka mua, ka muri — by learning from our past. Roimata Smail (Ngāti Maniapoto, Tainui, England, Scotland, Ireland) is a lawyer who has specialised in Te Tiriti o Waitangi for over 20 years. She represented lead claimants in the Waitangi Tribunal's WAI2575 inquiry, which led to the establishment of Te Aka Whai Ora, the Māori Health Authority. Her commitment to public education is reflected in her Tiriti workshops ( and the creation of a free online resource for schools covering Te Tiriti, New Zealand history, te reo Māori, and financial literacy. 'What most surprises me about the response to Understanding Te Tiriti,' says Roimata, 'is how good it seems to make people feel. Even though it covers some very dark parts of our history, the consistent feedback is that it leaves people feeling hopeful, positive and energised — simply by knowing the facts.' She adds, 'It feels really special to be presenting this kōrero with Avril. Having Tangata Whenua and Tangata Tiriti together, each bringing a different perspective and book, is exactly the kind of partnership Te Tiriti calls for.' Joining Roimata is Avril Bell, a Pākehā sociologist and Honorary Associate Professor at the University of Auckland, whose work explores Pākehā identity and the long shadow of colonialism. Her latest book, Becoming Tangata Tiriti (Auckland University Press, 2024), invites Pākehā to engage in the hard but necessary work of becoming genuine Tiriti partners. 'One thing my research has taught me, is how lucky we are to have Te Tiriti o Waitangi as a guide to what our relationships might be. And, like Roimata, I have been struck by how positive and hopeful people are in response to Becoming Tangata Tiriti. There is definitely a growing understanding of how significant te Tiriti is for all of us and interest in contributing to a more positive future of Tangata Whenua-Tangata Tiriti relations.' Reflecting on the road ahead, Roimata says, 'I think what's next for Aotearoa is more of what has already begun — especially in response to the Treaty Principles Bill. People are starting to expect more from our politicians and are holding them to a higher standard, in how we treat each other and honour Te Tiriti in real, everyday ways.' This event marks Roimata's third collaboration with Auckland Libraries. 'It's always been a really positive and energising experience — great people, good kōrero,' she says. 'And this time, it's going to be fun to have a friend and partner with me for the conversation.' Avril likewise says 'I'm really looking forward to this conversation with Roimata – and those who come to the event. I love the fact that te Tiriti always gives us plenty to talk about.' Tāmaki Untold is a curated monthly talk series hosted by Auckland Libraries' Research and Heritage Services, celebrating the taonga, stories and creativity of Tāmaki Makaurau.