Taxpayer funded satellite likely lost in space
A methane-tracking satellite that recieved $29 million of funding from the government is lost in space. RNZ's climate change correspondent Eloise Gibson spoke to Charlotte Cook.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Otago Daily Times
an hour ago
- Otago Daily Times
15,000 pupils compete to become maths 'rock stars'
By Adam Burns of RNZ The education minister was a keen observer as thousands of school pupils from around the country were put through their mathematical paces. About 15,000 students, between the ages of 7 and 13, took part in the Times Tables Rock Stars Mathematics competition on Thursday morning. The event consisted of two corresponding 30-minute questionnaires across the North and South islands, involving about 300 schools. Education Minister Erica Stanford and South Island Minister James Meagher watched competition proceedings at Christchurch's Somerfield Te Kura Wairepo. School principal Meagan Kelly said her students were "very focused" ahead of the competition. "This is the second Rock Star competition that we've done, so they're pretty keen, they're pretty well practised, and they do love it," she said. "That sense of competition is really amazing, so they really enjoy that." The UK-based competition has been touring the world. Underlining the high-pressure nature of proceedings, the event was live-streamed over YouTube. The times table competition was also rejuvenating old rote learning techniques, Kelly said. "There is a bit of a revival in that we want them to have all of these facts locked into their brains, so it makes maths later on, a little bit easier for them as things get more complex." Ten-year-old Haval said he was put to the ultimate test. "I'm not at my best today. I'm usually 70 to 80 questions a minute, now I'm 40 to 50." Other pupils RNZ spoke to explained the competition was both "exciting, challenging, and nerve-wracking". Stanford and Meagher were later strapped to their devices, their math skills were put under scrutiny in the ultimate North-South battle, as several pupils watched on. "We've got a South Island representative here in Minister James Meagher, I'm representing the North Island. But maths is the winner on the day right," Stanford said. It is understood Stanford earned bragging rights over her junior minister. Although it was all fun and games on Thursday, problem-solving of a different kind has been needed by Stanford. Eighteen errors were discovered in brand new ministry-funded maths resources. Mistakes include incorrect sums, a wrong number labelled in te reo Māori, and incorrectly saying "triangles" instead of "rectangles" in an answer. Speaking to reporters, Stanford defended the failure, explaining the sector had moved fast. "There was a very small handful of errors found by keen-bean mathematicians, good on them," she said. "These are existing resources and it was likely they were there for some time. "Actually we've been responsive, receptive. We've gone out to the classrooms and the schools and said if you find anything we'll fix it immediately, which we have.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Chatham Islands building materials rusting 50 times faster than rest of NZ
BRANZ senior scientist Zhengwei Li. Photo: Supplied Building materials on the Chatham Islands are rusting up to 50 times faster than on the mainland, according to research by locals and the Building Research Association. Surrounded by sea and exposed to the elements 800 kilometres out in the South Pacific, the working theory is that salt-laden winds are to blame. Denis Prendeville, a sixth-generation Chatham Islander, had spent 23 years building fences for the Department of Conservation - so he knew well the island's rugged environment . "A hundred years ago, it was forested," he said. "Well, through clearing bush for grazing, the wind has actually finished off a lot of the remaining bush on the Chathams, so it's quite bleak in places." Now, reforestation work was underway, and pests needed to be kept out. "You haven't got anything if you haven't got a fence," Prendeville said. But using all the normal materials, a fence on the coast could rust through in seven years. Prendeville had learned ways around it - using thicker wire, and plastic inserts to keep metal from touching metal, which were the areas which tended to rust first. In the swamps, he usually skipped the bottom two lines of wires, as they tended to rust through in a year. But across the board, things needed replacing more often . "The expense on the Chathams, well you just double it to the New Zealand standards," Prendeville said. Building Research Association (BRANZ) team leader Dr Anna de Raadt said the working theory was that the salt-laden winds could be to blame, with gales picking up the sea spray and throwing it onto fences and roofs, speeding up that rusting process. She said their research has been a collaboration with the community. "Talking to the people living there, it's amazing to hear stories," she said. "One of them really brought it home for me. They were saying, 'Oh we buy a car, bring it over from the mainland to the island, and within three years it's rusted out.'" Scientists set up four racks of metal squares around the island, and left them out in the elements for a year. The metal testing samples. Photo: Supplied De Raadt explained one set was set up at a local school. "And it was really fantastic to see their eyes light up and actually hold the samples and look at them, because they'd see something like a beautiful, shiny metal coupon, and they'd compare it to one looking like a swiss cheese." The results showed corrosion levels were off the charts. An unprotected carbon steel plate, a millimetre thick, was completely gone within a year, despite lasting more than 50 in rural inland areas. BRANZ established more sites, and confirmed the results - the corrosion rates were among the highest defined by international standards. Carbon steel, used in common building products like beams, framing, and nuts and bolts, corroded at a rate more than 22 times faster than inland New Zealand, and more than three times the rate at our harshest coastal sites, like Oteranga Bay in Wellington, and nearly double the highest corrosion rate recorded at marine sites in Europe. "We are testing other materials to see how they will perform on the Chatham Islands environment," de Raadt said. "This then can help inform people's choices about what material to use where." "I guess the main point for us is: the right material in the right place." The current rating system fell short. BRANZ senior scientist Zhengwei Li said materials approved for Zone D - the classification long-held by the Chathams - just didn't hold up. "If you use materials approved for Zone D corrosivity in the Chatham Islands, you will have early material failure." The Chatham Islands Photo: RNZ/ Matthew Theunissen Building company owner Leith Weitzel moved to the Chathams from Wellington just over a decade ago, and said it was definitely an eye-opener. "So up in the eaves of sheds or houses, where you would have some sort of mild steel product or galvanised steel product, if it's not getting rain washing on it, it will start to show corrosion in a few years." It changed the materials they used. "We always opt to use stainless steel externally as much as we can, and we find that's made a huge difference." But even using marine-grade stainless, tea staining - that is, those patchy orange streaks that appeared on metal like water from a tea bag - still occurred. Weitzel said people were often tripped up. "They might buy a flatpack shed or they'll buy a tiny home, something that's of a kit-set nature, and they express that it is quite corrosive and windy and wild over here, and these manufacturers don't supply some of these buildings, these units up to standard, and they find over time that they have used the wrong nails and structural fittings." It was an awareness problem, he said - something the building research association hoped to improve as it took on further tests. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
15 hours ago
- RNZ News
15,000 students compete in Times Tables Rock Stars Mathematics competition
The education minister was a keen observer as thousands of school pupils around the country were put through their mathematical paces. About 15,000 students, between the ages of 7 and 13, took part in the Times Tables Rock Stars Mathematics competition on Thursday morning. The event consisted of two corresponding 30-minute questionnaires across the North and South islands, involving about 300 schools. James Meagher and Erica Stanford competing against each other and putting their maths skills to the test. Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon Education Minister Erica Stanford and South Island Minister James Meagher watched competition proceedings at Christchurch's Somerfield Te Kura Wairepo. School principal Meagan Kelly said her students were "very focused" ahead of the competition. "This is the second Rock Star competition that we've done, so they're pretty keen, they're pretty well practised, and they do love it," she said. "That sense of competition is really amazing, so they really enjoy that." Students at Christchurch's Somerfield Te Kura Wairepo competing in the maths competition. Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon The UK-based competition has been touring the world. Underlining the high-pressure nature of proceedings, the event was live-streamed over YouTube. The times table competition was also rejuvenating old rote learning techniques, Kelly said. "There is a bit of a revival in that we want them to have all of these facts locked into their brains, so it makes maths later on, a little bit easier for them as things get more complex." Ten-year-old Haval said he was put to the ultimate test. "I'm not at my best today. I'm usually 70 to 80 questions a minute, now I'm 40 to 50." Other pupils RNZ spoke to explained the competition was both "exciting, challenging, and nerve-wracking". Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon Stanford and Meagher were later strapped to their devices, their math skills were put under scrutiny in the ultimate North-South battle, as several pupils watched on. "We've got a South Island representative here in Minister James Meagher, I'm representing the North Island. But maths is the winner on the day right," Stanford said. It is understood Stanford earned bragging rights over her junior minister. Although it was all fun and games on Thursday, problem-solving of a different kind has been needed by Stanford. Eighteen errors were discovered in brand new ministry-funded maths resources. Photo: RNZ / Nate McKinnon Mistakes include incorrect sums, a wrong number labelled in te reo Māori, and incorrectly saying "triangles" instead of "rectangles" in an answer. Speaking to reporters, Stanford defended the failure, explaining the sector had moved fast. "There was a very small handful of errors found by keen-bean mathematicians, good on them," she said. "These are existing resources and it was likely they were there for some time. "Actually we've been responsive, receptive. We've gone out to the classrooms and the schools and said if you find anything we'll fix it immediately, which we have. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.