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Canterbury's Lincoln to be new Bioeconomy Science Institute HQ, Scion to leave Christchurch
Canterbury's Lincoln to be new Bioeconomy Science Institute HQ, Scion to leave Christchurch

RNZ News

time01-07-2025

  • Business
  • RNZ News

Canterbury's Lincoln to be new Bioeconomy Science Institute HQ, Scion to leave Christchurch

Plant and Food Research chief executive Mark Piper now holds the role at the helm of the new Bioeconomy Science Institute. Photo: SUPPLIED/PLANT & FOOD RESEARCH The board behind the new Bioeconomy Science Institute - which merges public research organisations has picked its new headquarters. AgResearch's Tuhiraki building at the Lincoln University Campus in Canterbury will become head office to the new institute, the board has decided. It comes as the science sector overhaul , considered one of the most significant reforms to the sector in decades, came into effect officially on Tuesday. The Bioeconomy Science Institute merges AgResearch, Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research, Scion and Plant and Food Research. The institute's new chief executive Mark Piper said it shared the board of directors' decision with staff after several weeks of deliberation, on Tuesday. He said the decision was more of a legal formality, as it had many sites and facilities scattered across New Zealand, and all were important. "We will have a head office because we need to have one, but we will have distributed leadership," Piper said. "And so, when we looked through it, Lincoln is our largest site in the Bioeconomy Science Institute. It's co-located with an excellent university, and our biggest collection of scientists. So it makes a lot of sense that would be our representative head office." Further assessment of bringing together sites and facilities like laboratories of the former Crown Research Institutes was expected. Piper said 70 percent of the Institute's 2300 people were scientists, and 560 people were already at Lincoln. He said Scion would be leaving its Christchurch office, for Lincoln. "Within walking distance, AgResearch, Manaaki Whenua and Plant and Food all have facilities [there] today, and Scion is just down the road in Christchurch, and moving into Tuhiraki building down in Lincoln in the near term. "All four of the institutes that have come together today in the bioeconomy, we have some representation down there." Piper, the outgoing Plant and Food cihef executive, said Auckland or Wellington may host high profile visitors, while forestry work would likely remain in its Bay of Plenty hub. Speaking to the Economic Development, Science and Innovation select committee on Monday, before the announcement, outgoing AgResearch chief executive Sue Bidrose said there had been a lot of discussion about the new head office location. "Lincoln is our largest campus with the beautiful new Tukaki building on site there, which is a location co-located with Lincoln University," Bidrose said, during the review briefing on its 2023/24 annual review. "The work being done to suggest that that head office or a proportion of the agency should be in the South Island was certainly heard by the people who were involved in making that decision, so it certainly got a good hearing." "These changes are about sharpening our focus and lifting performance," Minister Shane Reti says. Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii But Bidrose said the organisation's previous work to understand the location choices for research found that "scientists aren't widgets" and any attempts to move the workforce had to be carefully considered. "They're people and they have children in the local schools and they have partners who work in the local businesses as well, and so on and so forth." Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research outgoing chief executive, James Stevenson-Wallace also told the select committee, Lincoln was its innovation hub. "For Landcare, our strategic base is and always will be in Lincoln, so there's a critical mass. There are particular anchor scientists who are highly competitive," Wallace said. "And likewise, there's very clear rationale for what we have anchored and Auckland, particularly around our biological collections, and there in Palmerston North where we have distinct capabilities around our geospatial." With 600 projects still currently running, Stevenson-Wallace said the key was about having researchers and scientists in the right places, and it would bring its many specialist facilities to the new entity. "There is no active downsizing of our offices. That hasn't been a campaign," he said. "The highly specialised nature of those labs drives the workforce that's actually attached to it. So there's an infrastructure and human capability component." Barry Harris, former chairman of NIWA (now Earth Sciences New Zealand) with extensive governance experience chaired the new Bioeconomy Science Institute board, alongside directors Kim Wallace and Andrew Morrison of AgResearch, Candace Kinser of Plant and Food, and Gray Baldwin of Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research. Science, Innovation and Technology Minister Dr Shane Reti said on Tuesday, the new organisations were designed to unlock innovation, drive economic growth, and improve the lives of hardworking New Zealanders. "These changes are about sharpening our focus and lifting performance," Minister Reti said. "By bringing together complementary research skills and infrastructure, we're enabling greater collaboration, better alignment with Government priorities, and stronger commercial outcomes. "These new organisations will be set up to deliver real-world value, creating jobs, boosting exports, and helping New Zealand compete globally." Tuhiraki was built on independently-owned land on the campus and was opened in September 2023.

Rochelle Humes is the spitting image of her two sisters and brother as she shares sweet family snap years after reuniting with her long-lost siblings
Rochelle Humes is the spitting image of her two sisters and brother as she shares sweet family snap years after reuniting with her long-lost siblings

Daily Mail​

time04-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Rochelle Humes is the spitting image of her two sisters and brother as she shares sweet family snap years after reuniting with her long-lost siblings

Rochelle Humes looked the spitting image of her two sisters and brother as she shared a sweet family snap. The This Morning presenter, 36, reunited with her half-siblings Lili, 29, Sophie, 26, and Jake years ago after spending their childhoods apart. But showing they have now developed a close bond, Rochelle took to Instagram on Tuesday to share a weekly photo round - which featured several sibling selfies. And the siblings couldn't look anymore alike, with fans commenting their shared father's genes are 'strong'. The selfies showed Rochelle, Lili, Sophie and Jake beaming as they hugged while out at dinner together. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the Daily Mail's showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'A lil bit of everything over the past week,' Rochelle captioned the snaps, as sister Lili replied: 'Love you so much ❤️.' The siblings' father Mark Piper left Rochelle and her mother Roz Wiseman when the star was just three years old. He went on to have three more children, Sophie, Lili and Jake, with his new partner. Rochelle grew up separately from her siblings and actually ended up connecting through Love Islander Kem Cetinay. By pure coincidence, Kem went to school with Lili and approached Rochelle at an event after he found fame on Love Island. Fans were stunned by the resemblance between the siblings, commenting: 'The genes are STRONG!'; 'Copy, paste, repeat,'; 'Omg quadruplets orrrr,'; 'Yall really said copy paste,'; 'Are you triplets?'; 'You and your sis look like twins,'; 'OMG the genes are strong, Absolutely beautiful,'; 'Everyone literally looks just alike !'; 'Gene pool be strong af,'; 'Your families genes are strong as hell.' Rochelle recalled finally meeting her siblings during an appearance on Giovanna Fletcher's Happy Mum Happy Baby podcast. She said: 'I've never told anyone this before. Two years ago, I was at our management's Christmas party and Love Island's Kem was there. 'He was chatting away and said, "I got to talk to you... as soon as I became a celeb, I promised my friend Lili that I would talk to you as she's your sister on your dad's side".' 'I knew of her and met up with her when I was five, but it was so complicated as they were a lot younger and my dad wasn't involved.' Sophie - who appeared on Love Island - previously spoke to MailOnline about getting back in touch with Rochelle. She said: 'There was a period where we weren't in contact. 'It was weird growing up not knowing Rochelle but since we have spoken we speak every day so it is nice all of us being in each other's lives now. 'My middle sister Lili went to school with Kem so that's how we know him. Obviously he was at the same school as me. It's funny how it's all linked together.'

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