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Government delivers on promise to protect productive farmland from ETS

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Source: New Zealand Government

The Government has delivered on a key election commitment with the passing of the Climate Change Response (Emissions Trading Scheme Forestry Conversions) Amendment Bill, Minister of Agriculture and Forestry Todd McClay and Minister of Climate Change Simon Watts announced yesterday.

“This Bill strikes the right balance between protecting New Zealand’s most productive farmland and maintaining confidence in the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS),” Mr McClay says. 

“We campaigned on stopping the wholesale conversion of farms into pine forests, and we have delivered.

“This Bill restores balance. It protects food production, supports rural communities, and ensures foresters can continue to invest with confidence.”

“Both farming and forestry are important to our regional economies and we are working hard to support both sectors to create jobs and grow exports to benefit all New Zealanders,” Mr McClay says.

Key changes in the Bill include: 

  • Limits on exotic forestry registrations for actively farmed Land Use Capability (LUC) classes 1–6 — New Zealand’s most productive farmland.
  • Flexibility for farmers to plant and register up to 25% of their productive land in forestry.
  • Exemptions for certain classifications of Māori owner land.
  • Two annual ballots allowing up to 15,000 hectares of new exotic forestry on LUC 6 land.
  • Transitional provisions for those who invested in forestry in good faith before December 2024.
  • A review of the annual hectare limit in 2028, providing an additional safeguard to ensure the settings are working as intended.

“These are practical, common-sense measures. They back farmers to keep producing food, while also supporting foresters and ensuring the ETS continues to deliver credible climate outcomes,” Mr McClay says.

Climate Change Minister Simon Watts says the changes strengthen the ETS by providing certainty for both foresters and farmers – not just today, but for the long term.

“We are ensuring the ETS remains fit for purpose — rewarding good land use choices while safeguarding rural livelihoods. This Bill puts sensible limits in place that support meeting our climate commitments,” Mr Watts says. 

Mr McClay says the Government has heard the calls by landowners on the need to strengthen pest, weed, and fire management plans for forests. There is work underway, we are committed to ensure foresters manage risk, continue to improve management practices and give rural communities and landowners greater assurance.

The Government is backing rural New Zealand by restoring certainty, protecting farmland, and supporting farmers and growers to get on with producing high-quality, safe sustainable food and fibre. 

“When rural communities do well, it means stronger jobs, incomes, and opportunities for every New Zealander,” Mr McClay says. 

The legislation will enter into force from October 2025.

MIL OSI

Consultation on Amendments to the Specified Prescription Medicines List for Designated Registered Nurse Prescribers in Primary Health and Specialty Teams

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Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

Publication date:

The Ministry of Health wants to hear your feedback on proposed amendments to the lists of specified prescription medicines and controlled drugs for designated registered nurse prescribers in primary health and specialty teams.

The current schedule of prescription medicines came into effect in August 2024. Since then, new medicines have become available in New Zealand, to which wider access would benefit patients. The schedule needs to be amended to reflect these additional medicines. The Nursing Council has recommended a list of medicines it considers appropriate for designated registered nurse prescribers in primary health and specialty teams.

It is important to the Ministry of Health that we hear from the public and organisations such as your own during this process. On behalf of the Director-General, we are opening a consultation period for anyone who may be affected by the change to the specified list of prescription medicines. Once this period of consultation has closed, a legal change will be made by Gazette notice as specified in section 105E(1) of the Medicines Act 1981.

Please submit your feedback on the proposed amendments by 17 October 2025.

MIL OSI

Health and Independence Report 2024

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Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

Publication date:

The Health and Independence Report draws on a range of data and indicators to provide an overview of the health and wellbeing of New Zealanders and the performance of the health system. The 2024 report uses health-related data from internal and external sources for the 2024 calendar year. It supports the Ministry’s role in monitoring health system performance and supporting the Government to set the strategic direction and policy for health.

The report shows that the New Zealand health system is experiencing increased demand for services, which is driven by interrelated factors that span population needs, population health, and the wider factors influencing health and system performance.

The report is organised into four main sections, these are:

  1. People of New Zealand – who we are and how we’re changing. This section provides an overview of the population, including population growth, ageing, and increased diversity.
  2. Health status – the health of New Zealanders. This section presents population health measures, and information about the key conditions affecting New Zealanders – non-communicable and communicable diseases.
  3. Health drivers – the broader factors that shape population health. This section includes the determinants of health, risk and protective factors, and unwanted differences between groups.
  4. Health system – the state of the health system. This section presents information related to key enablers and outputs of the health system, such as strategy, funding, workforce, primary care, and hospital care.

Health and Independence Report 2024: Online version

Indicator tables that provide key data with additional breakdowns of the statistics are also available.

MIL OSI

Consultation on Amendments to the Specified Prescription Medicines List for Designated Pharmacist Prescribers

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Source: New Zealand Ministry of Health

Publication date:

The Ministry of Health wants to hear your feedback on the proposed amendments to the specified prescription medicines list for designated pharmacist prescribers.

The current schedule of prescription medicines came into effect in May 2022. Since then, new medicines have become available in New Zealand, to which wider access would benefit patients. The schedule needs to be amended to reflect these additional medicines. The Pharmacy Council has recommended a list of medicines it considers appropriate for designated pharmacist prescribers.

It is important to the Ministry of Health that we hear from the public and organisations such as your own during this process. On behalf of the Director-General, we are opening a consultation period for anyone who may be affected by the change to the lists of medicines. Once this period of consultation has closed, a legal change will be made by Gazette notice as specified in section 105E(1) of the Medicines Act 1981.

Please submit your feedback on the proposed amendments by 17 October 2025.

MIL OSI

Andrew Szusterman appointed to RNZ Board

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Source: New Zealand Government

Andrew Szusterman is being appointed to the Radio New Zealand Board of Governors, Minister for Media and Communications Paul Goldsmith says.

“Mr Szusterman is an experienced media executive with extensive experience across television, commercial radio, and digital platforms in New Zealand and overseas. 

“His career demonstrates a deep understanding of audience engagement and the evolving media landscape, which will be relevant to RNZ as it navigates challenges in public broadcasting and adapts to changing audience behaviours.”

Mr Szusterman will join the Board from October 1st.

MIL OSI

AI Summit: Accelerating AI research and innovation

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Source: New Zealand Government

Good morning, everyone

Thank you for your warm introduction. I would also like to extend my thanks to the AI Forum’s Executive Council for their kind invitation to come and speak at today’s Summit.

The theme for this year’s Summit, “Putting Intelligence in Our Hands,” reflects our deepening understanding of how AI as a technology can spark innovation, drive productivity, and unlock new opportunities across all sectors of our economy. 

This theme is fully aligned with the Government’s priorities and reflects the intent behind New Zealand’s inaugural AI Strategy, which I launched in July.

We want to raise awareness of AI’s potential to boost business performance and create high-value jobs, and to empower more New Zealanders to adopt and leverage AI as a catalyst for sustainable growth, national competitiveness, and long-term prosperity.

AI is a digital evolution and an important element of this Government’s wider Going for Growth approach to turbo-charge the New Zealand economy.  

As our economy evolves, we recognise that future value creation will be driven by knowledge-intensive industries, and that technology and innovation will play a crucial role in building a more prosperous nation.

This is why we made innovation, technology, and science one of the pillars of Going for Growth, with a raft of initiatives under it to support our researchers, innovators, and businesses to produce real value for New Zealanders.

Technology-driven innovation enhances efficiency, lowers costs, and unlocks new avenues for sustainable growth. 

As global markets shift and competition intensifies, our ability to lift productivity, grow exports, and achieve long-term economic sustainability depends on accelerating the adoption and effective use of advanced technologies – particularly AI.

The risk of doing nothing is simply too great, and the choice is stark.

Act now and develop a competitive advantage, or risk falling further behind.

There are generally three parts to a major policy setting, the people, the parts and the policy. I will start with the policy first. 

The first national AI Strategy that I announced earlier this year outlined the broad approach the Government will take. It was never an investment plan or a business case, but rather describing the regulatory settings as light touch, risk proportionate, industry-led and grounded in the five OECD principles. 

New Zealand’s AI Strategy signals a commitment to harnessing AI’s opportunities through a balanced, agile, and internationally informed regulatory approach. The Strategy supports using our existing legislation—such as privacy, consumer protection, and competition laws—to provide clarity and confidence for businesses and the public as AI technologies evolve.

Rather than imposing speculative restrictions that could stifle innovation, the New Zealand Strategy focuses on enabling responsible AI use. Recent activities demonstrate how the government will continue to update existing regulations to make sure they are fit for purpose. 

These include the Privacy Commissioner’s Biometric Privacy Code 2025, which ensures safe application of biometric technologies, and clarifying that existing prohibitions under the Commerce Act apply to businesses using AI for pricing, holding firms accountable for algorithmic behaviour.

Of course, AI is a global technology, requiring global solutions.

That means we will continue to work with our international partners on global norms on AI, which is why we are a signatory to the OECD AI Principles, and the Bletchley, Seoul and Paris Statements and Declarations.

International alignment on key AI policies is also important for trade.

Greater trans-Tasman alignment is a priority of both current Australian and New Zealand governments. As part of this, Standards New Zealand, established a committee of subject matter experts from both private and public sectors to review 47 international standards relating to AI, Cyber Security and Risk, Biometrics, and Cloud Computing that have now been adopted. 

I would like to commend the work of the AI Forum Executive Council and others, who have contributed to this harmonisation work.

Trust is a core objective: research shows New Zealanders are wary of AI, so the National AI Strategy and Responsible AI Guidance for Business documents aim to foster responsible practice and public confidence. I am mindful of the importance of social licence and as organisations demonstrate the benefits of AI, broader social acceptance is expected to grow.

I want to further acknowledge the work of the AI Forum, and the organisations represented here today, in leading the way – giving New Zealanders more opportunities to engage with AI, experience its benefits firsthand, and develop a clearer understanding of what responsible AI looks like.

Beside the policy settings we also need the physical infrastructure to support uptake of AI. 

We rank highly in some international AI indices for our digital connectivity which is critical. We currently have 56 data centres in New Zealand with as many as 20 more planned.

We can look at other Asia-Pacific jurisdictions for how our data centre infrastructure compares across 4 domains of political stability, temperature (noting cooler climates being more suitable for cooling data centres), renewable energy and business electricity cost. 

Across these four areas we are top or close to the top for political stability, temperature and renewable energy, and in the bottom half for electricity cost. 

Maintaining New Zealand’s competitive advantage in renewable energy is important. I recently announced a $10 million science project to explore the science of supercritical energy in the Taupo Volcanic Zone with a grant from the Endeavour Fund. This is alongside $60 million from Minister Jones and the Regional Investment Fund.

A few weeks ago, I enabled one of the fastest supercomputers in the Southern Hemisphere, a $20 million supercomputer, hosted by Earth Sciences New Zealand to service weather and the science sector. The specifications for this supercomputer also take into account AI functionality. 

I have covered the policy and the infrastructure parts, which leads into the most important component – the people. 

Through Budget 2025, as the Minister for Universities, I announced a $64 million increase in funding specifically for STEM subjects – a clear signal the Government wants universities to strengthen and expand their STEM courses. The Minister of Education has announced a similar change to the primary and high school curriculum to strengthen STEM subjects and explore courses specifically in AI. 

We must build a workforce that’s skilled in the use and development of AI, and this Government is focused on forging the education pathways to do that. 

These efforts are of course in addition to industries providing training and looking at how they can upskill staff to adopt AI, and I want to thank you for your endeavours.

New Zealand has a developing expertise in AI R&D, and we are committed to making the most of this by actively investing in AI, and positioning science to play a central role in future innovation and national prosperity.

As part of the science system reforms, we are establishing a new public research organisation: the New Zealand Institute for Advanced Technology.

As the name suggests, the Institute will focus on frontier technologies – such as AI, quantum, and synthetic biology, with a central hub which funds a series of research platforms. It will play a critical role in driving world-leading technology research with strong industry relevance and economic potential, to help lift New Zealand’s economic growth and productivity.

The Advanced Technology hub will be headquartered in Auckland. I announced the Institute’s first platform earlier in the year, which is a $71 million investment over seven years, hosted by the Robinson Research Institute. This funding will build on the Institute’s world-leading expertise in cryogenic superconductors, magnetics, and advanced materials, positioning New Zealand at the forefront of global innovation.

Effectively the Institute’s research platforms are centres of excellence with a focus on advanced and emerging technologies.

I am delighted then to announce today that I have accepted advice from the Prime Minister’s Science Innovation and Technology Advisory Council, including from our newest member Grant Wright the Group Executive of Artificial Intelligence at SEEK, and that the second investment from the Institute of Advanced Technology, will be a platform in artificial intelligence. 

With the funding reprioritised from Callaghan Innovation and contestable funds to form the Institute of Advanced Technology, the Government will be more than doubling its contestable AI R&D funding, by dedicating up to $70 million to AI over 7 years, through the Institute for Advanced Technology, with the specific objective to strengthen New Zealand’s research capability and commercialisation in AI to build enduring competitive advantage. 

Implementation will be a two-phase process to identify the investment, where a handful of ambitious consortia will receive seed funding, and then the second phase where the platform is finalised. 

This funding sits alongside $49 million over 7-years of current science funding in AI through the Strategic Science Investment Fund, Data Science Platform, including:

$13 million to support artificial intelligence for advanced open environmental science.
$16 million in a data science driven evolution of aquaculture for building the blue economy, with fundamental research in data science and AI.
$10 million for explanatory and transparent data science to improve conducting and reporting research, such as developing digital twins and the relationship between genomics and disease.

One of the 5 OECD AI principles that we have signed up to includes international collaboration. This collaboration currently involves:

$12 million in AI in health with Singapore.
$6 million across multiple countries, again AI for health.
$1 million with Canada around AI abundance intelligence.

I am also pleased to announce another international collaboration between the Auckland Bioengineering Institute and the Oden Institute at the University of Texas, developing virtual models of the human body using AI. 

Many, if not all, of the 19 projects recently awarded part of the $183 million Endeavour Fund, described the use of AI. 

In announcing this new $70 million AI platform, direct Government funding in AI is now well over $100 million which as a proportion of Government funded R&D is over 10%. 

I have seen reports from other advanced economies with similar levels of AI Investment. For context, the United States recently announced $100 million  of funding that they have made available to 5 AI Centres of Excellence.

A final metric assessing the current AI R&D environment in New Zealand derives from analysis of the Research and Development Tax Incentive, for AI related industry-led research expenditure. I am informed that for the tax year 2025, AI related R&D expenditure is up 37% at $228 million.

Further details on the $70 million AI platform will follow shortly but let me issue a challenge now: as a sector how might we forge a strategic partnership between research and industry to conduct world-leading AI research and in an area where New Zealand holds a competitive advantage? Would such an investment be weighted towards foundational or applied technologies? Would we seek to leverage our existing science strengths in primary industries or carve more new ground in say pharmaceuticals? 

Officials tell me that the United States National Science Fund are interested in collaborating in AI applications where they perceive New Zealand has particular strengths which they identify as biotechnologies and geosciences. 

Overall then this new platform is your opportunity to push boundaries and help New Zealand realise its advanced tech AI potential, by helping to create novel intellectual property and capabilities that translates into frontier businesses, drive better integration into global value chains, and achieve stronger economic performance.

Together, the AI Strategy, the Guidance, and the Advanced Technology Institute represent a forward-looking vision. They reflect our belief that science, innovation, and technology are not optional extras. 

They are essential tools for solving our biggest challenges, seizing our greatest opportunities, and enabling economic growth. 

In closing, I have described the future AI landscape in terms of the people or human capital, the parts or infrastructure, and the policy settings, including doubling current contestable funding in AI with a new $70 million AI investment platform.

Our collective task is to both increase and support the safe and responsible citizen use of AI, while at the same time developing domain specific AI expertise that we can lead the world on, and that supports economic growth. 

I look forward to working with you on this.

Thank you again for the invitation.

Kia ora mai tātou.

MIL OSI

Always make the right decision when disposing of beacons

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Source: Maritime New Zealand

In New Zealand there are more than 150,000 registered beacons. These are lifesaving tools to assist people if they get into trouble while undertaking activities in the great outdoors.

When someone needs assistance, they activate their beacon, which notifies the operations room at Maritime NZ’s Rescue Coordination Centre (RCCNZ).

Search and Rescue Officers then determine what action needs to be taken. The initial step is to check with the beacon’s emergency contact. 

“If a search is required, we then decide which asset is best to help those in need,” Alex Taylor, Search and Rescue Officer, says.

With more beacons in use, there will be more that eventually need to be disposed of at the end of their useful lives.

“Over the last couple of years, we’ve seen an increase in the number of beacon activations after they have been disposed of. 

“If a beacon is sent to the landfill with other everyday items, it can get knocked and activate.

“As with all activations it requires us to undertake steps to determine whether assistance is required. If it’s an inadvertent activation, such as what occurs at a landfill, this takes search and rescue officers away from other jobs where people may be in need or could send responders such as emergency helicopters to undertake a search,” Alex says.

This is why it’s important to both register your beacon, and to dispose of it appropriately when it comes to the end of its useful life.

This year alone, RCCNZ has had about three dozen activate from landfills up and down New Zealand.

“Fortunately, most landfill jobs can be closed off quickly, especially if the beacon has been registered. If it hasn’t, we’re unable to ask the owner whether it’s been disposed of, which means we may progress search and rescue action unnecessarily, as there is a chance someone could require our help,” Alex says.

If you’ve finished using your beacon, please send it to RCCNZ for disposal. To find out how to register your beacon and where to send it for disposal, go to beacons.org.nz.

MIL OSI

Police seek public’s help to find Tracy

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Source: New Zealand Police

A large-scale search is ongoing for a missing Christchurch woman, whom Police hold grave fears for.

Tracy, 66, was reported missing about 1.20pm on Wednesday 17 September, after missing a pre-planned lunch date. Her Tesla was found along Taylors Mistake Road in Scarborough about 2pm, but there was no sign of Tracy.

Constable Kieran Palmer said Police, Search and Rescue volunteers, Fire Emergency New Zealand, and Sumner Coastguard volunteers have been involved in the search.

“We’re very concerned for Tracy’s welfare, and her family wants her to return home.

“Police have carried out enquiries through the night, and searchers are back out there this morning looking for Tracy, and we ask anyone with information to contact us immediately.”

Tracy is of a small build, with grey curly hair, and may still be in the Whitewash or Scarborough area.

Anyone who sees Tracy should call 111 immediately, referencing 250917/1820.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre

MIL OSI

Accelerating AI research and innovation

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Source: New Zealand Government

Science, Innovation and Technology Minister Dr Shane Reti has announced a major investment in AI research to build New Zealand’s AI capability, fast-track commercialisation, and drive economic growth.

The Government will invest up to $70 million over seven years through the New Zealand Institute for Advanced Technology to support innovative AI research and applications, develop world-class expertise, and sharpen New Zealand’s competitive edge.

“AI is transforming economies worldwide, and New Zealand must be bold and seize the opportunities,” Dr Reti says.

“Our existing AI research is expanding, with innovative work already under way in areas such as precision health and agriculture.

“This investment will accelerate that work by bringing our best researchers and businesses together to build capability, fast-track commercialisation, and create high-value jobs and new opportunities for Kiwi researchers.”

Dr Reti cited a recent partnership between the Auckland Bioengineering Institute and the Oden Institute at the University of Texas, supported by the Catalyst Fund, as an example of how AI can lift productivity, reduce costs, and deliver better outcomes for New Zealanders.

“New Zealand researchers, drawing on international AI expertise, are developing real-time digital models of the human body to personalise treatment, cut hospital costs, and generate millions in licensing revenue.

“Teams behind the project estimate that AI-driven public health solutions could deliver between $80 million and $160 million in annual healthcare savings. By combining AI with advanced modelling, this project could save up to $32 million a year in hospital costs through better management of chronic diseases and generate up to $16 million in annual licensing revenue from digital twin tools.

“The $70 million investment in AI through the Advanced Technology Institute can help scale up exactly this sort of ambitious, world-class research that strengthens our economy and positions New Zealand as a global leader in next-generation technologies,” Dr Reti says.

Investment in AI was recommended by the Prime Minister’s Science, Innovation and Technology Council, which recently appointed Grant Wright—an expert in digital transformation and product innovation through AI and emerging technologies.

“I am pleased to welcome Grant Wright as the newest member of the Council, which is working to shape a future-focused, resilient, and globally competitive science and technology ecosystem.”

MIL OSI

New Auckland rail line to benefit freight and passengers

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Source: New Zealand Government

The new Third Main Line in Auckland will be a game changer for rail freight and will enable more frequent passenger trains, Rail Minister Winston Peters and Transport Minister Chris Bishop say. 

The Third Main was opened by the Ministers at an event in South Auckland this morning, followed by a passenger train trip down the 6.5km line from Wiri to Middlemore Station. 

“We funded this $328 million project in 2020, adding a third track in the busiest part of Auckland’s rail network to ensure a busier passenger network does not derail our economy by blocking rail freight,” Mr Peters says.

“Auckland is our largest city and congested roads are no good for locals, tradies or anybody else, and it is also New Zealand’s largest domestic market where efficient freight connections here enables benefits from Northland to Southland. 

“Rail moves 17 per cent of the freight task to and from Auckland with 4 million tonnes hauled last financial year equating to 2.7 tonnes for every Aucklander, and our efforts to optimise KiwiRail’s freight business means there is real opportunity to grow volumes and get more trucks off our roads.

“We extend our thanks on behalf of the Government to KiwiRail for its work delivering the project,” Mr Peters says.

Minister Bishop says more frequent passenger trains will be a breakthrough for transport in Auckland. 

“Major cities across the world, including those we like to compare ourselves to, have far more frequent train services than anything we’ve seen to date in New Zealand. 

“Opening the Third Main means we can look forward to seeing reliable peak services every 5 – 8 minutes across the city, giving Aucklanders more transport options and improving productivity. It’s a necessity if our largest city is going to grow sustainably, while lifting the economy.

“The Third Main also provides an alternative route for trains to run during planned or unplanned disruption, providing resilience in our transport system and keeping services and people moving through this busy part of Auckland.

“Alongside other recent investments in Auckland’s transport network, including the Papakura to Pukekohe rail electrification project, rail upgrades and renewals in Auckland through Budget 2025, and the City Rail Link, the Third Main will help keep our biggest city moving.”

The Third Main project, which was funded in 2020, includes a third rail line between Wiri and Westfield junctions (including Puhinui and Middlemore Stations); track upgrades at Quay Park (where the Eastern Line passes) to enable flexibility for freight moving in and out of Port of Auckland; track upgrades at Wiri and Westfield Junctions; and the redevelopment of Middlemore Station to include a new, third platform. 

Approximately 6.5km on new track has been laid and 50 pieces of track infrastructure (turnouts), which improve flexibility by allowing trains to switch between tracks, have been added.

MIL OSI