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Geology – Discovery of Hidden Faults Sheds Light on Mystery of ‘Slow Earthquakes’

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Source: Earth Sciences New Zealand
Discovery of Hidden Faults Sheds Light on Mystery of ‘Slow Earthquakes’ – “This is a major step forward in understanding the geological processes happening beneath our coastlines”
Scientists have uncovered a key piece of the puzzle behind the unusual ‘slow earthquakes’ occurring off the east coast of New Zealand’s North Island.
A new international study, published in Science Advances, identifies hidden fault structures called polygonal fault systems (PFSs) as a major influence on the behaviour of the northern Hikurangi subduction zone. These shallow geological features, found in sediments entering the subduction zone, appear to play a critical role in where and how slow slip earthquakes occur.
“This discovery helps explain why slow earthquakes occur where they do,” says Dr Philip Barnes, marine geologist at Earth Sciences New Zealand (formerly NIWA) and co-author of the study. “It also shows that these events may be influenced by the reactivation of old fault structures that formed much closer to the surface than the present depths of the subduction zone.”
In the Hikurangi subduction zone, the Pacific Plate is diving beneath the Australian Plate. While the southern section of this zone remains locked and capable of producing massive earthquakes over magnitude 8, the northern part behaves differently. It regularly produces slow slip events, movements that unfold over days to months, releasing tectonic stress without sudden shaking.
“Slow slip events do not cause violent shaking themselves, but they can increase stress on nearby faults and may trigger more damaging earthquakes. Understanding what controls them is vital to improving earthquake and tsunami warnings.”
The international study was a collaboration between researchers from China, the US, and Earth Sciences New Zealand, using data from the International Ocean Discovery Program and the high-resolution three-dimensional NZ3D seismic survey conducted off Gisborne. Using high-resolution 3D seismic imaging, deep-sea drilling data from the International Ocean Discovery Program, and advanced computer modelling, the research team was able to map out PFSs in unprecedented detail and to evaluate their role in the subduction zone.
“These faults form over millions of years during sedimentation, long before and initially away from the subduction zone. But as the seafloor is dragged into the subduction zone during the convergence of the tectonic plates, they can be reactivated and evolve into major thrust faults. Our analysis also shows they provide important pathways for fluids, which play a major role in fault slip.”
This connection between fault structure and fluid migration offers new insight into one of the key processes thought to trigger slow earthquakes, says Dr Barnes. The study also confirms that these fault systems create a complex and variable structure along the megathrust, which can influence stress patterns and strain distribution.
“Until now, we lacked the imaging resolution to link these features directly to slow slip behaviour,” says Dr Barnes. “This study changes that, and gives us a new lens to better understand subduction zone dynamics.”
While scientists first identified the PFS type of fault at subduction zones 20 years ago off the southwest coast of Japan, they couldn’t determine how these complex structures influenced subduction and seismic slip, says lead author Maomao Wang, a marine geologist at Hohai University in China. “It wasn’t until we analysed these beautiful 3D seismic images that we confirmed their widespread presence along New Zealand’s north Hikurangi margin, revealing their potential role in shaping slow earthquakes.”
The findings may also have implications beyond New Zealand. “Similar fault systems have been observed in subduction zones around the world, including Japan’s Nankai Trough. By highlighting the mechanical and hydrological effects of PFSs, the study adds a missing piece to the global understanding of how slow earthquakes work.”
“This is a major step forward in understanding the geological processes happening beneath our coastlines,” says Dr Barnes. “With better models and better data, we are now in a stronger position to understand how subduction zones work.”

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Education and Employment – Teachers strike important to ensure quality education – NZCTU

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Source: NZCTU Te Kauae Kaimahi

The NZCTU Te Kauae Kaimahi is today supporting PPTA members across the country who are striking for fair pay increases, more subject specialist advisors, and greater teacher-led professional development funding.

“The union movement stands in solidarity with secondary teachers who are fighting for a quality education system,” said NZCTU President Richard Wagstaff.

“Workers never make the decision to strike lightly. PPTA members are rightly taking action to ensure that schools can attract graduates and retain experienced teachers.

“It is unacceptable that teachers are being offered the lowest pay increase in a generation at the same time as they are facing an overhaul of NCEA.

“A quality education system affects all of us. Students, parents and communities all benefit from teachers having what they need to support our young people.

“The Government is prioritising tax cuts for the rich over essential public services. Everyone should be grateful to the teachers who are taking strike action this week,” said Wagstaff.

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Legislation – Law change could save farmers and taxpayers millions – Federated Farmers

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Source: Federated Farmers

Federated Farmers is throwing its support behind a new Member’s Bill that could bring much-needed clarity to New Zealand’s climate change laws – and save millions in legal costs.
National MP Joseph Mooney’s Climate Change Response (Restriction on Civil Proceedings) Amendment Bill aims to confirm a common-sense principle: if a person or business is complying with national climate change laws, they can’t be sued for causing climate-related damage.
“It sounds very obvious, but that’s not how the law appears to be working right now,” Federated Farmers climate change spokesperson Wayne Langford says.
“It’s crazy that companies like Fonterra and Dairy Holdings, who are fully meeting their legal climate obligations right now, can still be dragged into court and sued for allegedly causing harm through emissions.
“We fully support Joseph Mooney’s Bill, which will restore some much-needed common sense and save farmers, food processors and taxpayers millions of dollars in court costs.”
Climate activist Mike Smith is taking seven major New Zealand companies, including Fonterra and Dairy Holdings, to court over their greenhouse gas emissions.
He says the emissions are harming Māori land and culture, and is claiming public nuisance, negligence, and breach of a duty to stop contributing to climate change.
The High Court threw out two of the claims but allowed the third to proceed.
After appeals from both sides, the Supreme Court has now reinstated all three claims, allowing the case to go to trial, and the matter is now back in front of the High Court.
Federated Farmers says the case sets a dangerous precedent.
“Every New Zealander contributes to climate change in some way,” Langford says.
“When you turn on a light switch, cook dinner, drive your car – even an EV – you’re using energy and consuming goods. All of that has emissions behind it.”
In most cases, those emissions come from companies operating within New Zealand’s legal framework – following rules set out under the Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS), reporting requirements, and other regulatory obligations.
“So, it’s silly stuff to then try and sue those law-abiding companies,” Langford says.
He points out that long-lived carbon dioxide emissions are already captured under the ETS, and the Government is actively investing in research and tools to help farmers reduce their short-lived methane emissions.
“If these companies are following the rules, there has to be some certainty and protection in that, or the legal risk becomes unmanageable.”
Mooney’s Bill would provide that certainty by spelling out in law that private legal action cannot be taken against individuals or companies for their greenhouse gas emissions, provided they’re complying with climate laws already set by Parliament.
“Rather than force the courts to debate and decide what the law in New Zealand is, this Bill would allow Parliament to exert its authority and define the law,” Langford says.
He says it’s no different from how things work in other areas of law.
“If a property developer gets resource consent to build a high-rise apartment, the neighbours can’t turn around and sue them for the shade or noise.
“That’s because we recognise the developer has done everything required under the law to get permission.
“Why should climate law be treated any differently?”
Smith’s lawsuit covers major electricity generators, petrol retailers, dairy farming and dairy processing.
Langford warns that if Smith’s case is successful, it would see a host of vital industries face major cost and risk.
The case could open the floodgates to further lawsuits against other industries that also produce emissions, even if they’re fully compliant with New Zealand’s climate regulations.
“In practice, the only way for those industries to avoid legal risk would be to stop emitting entirely – meaning they’d effectively have to shut down overnight.”
He says that would be economically disastrous and would leave the Government scrambling to urgently rewrite the law to protect the economy.
“If the case is successful, Parliament will simply be forced to urgently change the law. Let’s not wait for that crisis. Parliament should clarify the law now, before this goes any further.”
Federated Farmers is urging the Government to adopt Mooney’s Bill as a Government Bill, which would significantly speed up its passage through Parliament.
“Rather than wait for Fonterra and Dairy Holdings to go through a lengthy and expensive High Court process – something that will also cost taxpayers dearly – the Government should step in now and provide certainty.
“We need to focus our time, energy and taxpayer dollars on solutions that actually reduce emissions, not on endless litigation against companies doing everything the law requires.”

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Legislation – Collins admits plans to restrict the right to strike – PSA

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Source: PSA

Public Service Minister Judith Collins’ admission in Parliament that the Government is looking at restricting public sector workers’ fundamental right to strike is deeply concerning and demands further explanation, says the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi.
In response to questions in Parliament yesterday from Camilla Belich, Collins stated the Government is “looking at how we can strengthen the bargaining system so that people might have better options available before racing off to strike, such as, for instance, mediation or any other sorts of facilitated bargaining.”
PSA National Secretary Fleur Fitzsimons says Judith Collins needs to come clean about exactly what the Government is planning, as mediation and facilitation already exist and are regularly used.
“Judith Collins admitted in Parliament that the Government is looking to further limit the right to strike. This is a very serious matter and demands an urgent explanation.
“The right to strike is a cornerstone of our democratic workplace relations system. Any attempt to restrict this fundamental right would be a direct attack on working people’s ability to negotiate fair wages and conditions.
“This Government has already shown it is willing to remove basic rights without consultation when it stripped away women’s pay equity rights in the dead of night. It has also already undermined the right to strike by introducing pay deductions for partial strikes.
“Collins talks about ‘better options’ but what she’s really talking about is forcing workers into new processes that favour employers and which remove the remaining few tools workers have to push back. There are already significant limits on the right to strike in New Zealand.
“The right to withdraw labour is fundamental to the balance of power in workplace negotiations and should not be further restricted.”
The PSA is calling on Collins to rule out any further restrictions on the right to strike and to instead focus on ensuring public sector workers receive fair pay rises that keep pace with the rising cost of living.
“Public sector workers provide essential services to New Zealand and face the same cost of living pressures as everyone else. They deserve to be paid fairly and treated with respect, not have their rights stripped away,” Fitzsimons said.

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Further victims identified in Tasman fraud investigation

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Source: New Zealand Police

Tasman District Police investigating a couple alleged to have defrauded a person of more than $1 million have now identified 10 potential victims of the pair.

Following media coverage of the pair’s arrest last week, Detective Senior Sergeant Shane Dye says four more potential victims have come forward, while Police enquiries have identified another three potential victims.

“This is on top of the three people who had already made complaints to Police, and resulted in the arrests of the pair,” he says.

The 28-year-old man and 38-year-old woman arrested last week are due to reappear in Christchurch District Court on Monday 25 August, on multiple charges of obtaining by deception.

A search warrant conducted on a storage unit in Wanaka as part of the enquiry last week located a .22 rifle, restricted weapons, and over 2000 rounds of ammunition. Further enquiries in relation to the warrant are ongoing, and charges are likely to be filed in coming weeks.

“I would like to thank those who have contacted Police as a result of media coverage last week,” Detective Sergeant Dye says.

“Members of the Tasman Organised Crime Unit are in the process of contacting all identified victims in order to obtain statements in relation to any offending.”

ENDS

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Appeal for information following shots fired at Wigram house

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Source: New Zealand Police

Attribute to Detective Sergeant Luke Vaughan:

Christchurch Central Police investigating an incident where shots were fired at a house in Wigram are appealing to the public for information.

Police responded to the incident on Brian Keogh Lane around 12:45am on Thursday 14 August, after receiving multiple 111 calls reporting loud bangs being heard in the vicinity of the address.

Thankfully, no one at the address was injured.

We would like to speak with anyone that may have seen a person, or people, running west towards Carrs Road along the Southern Motorway near the Awatea Road overbridge, or any suspicious activity in the Carrs Road or Wigram Road areas.

Police are also appealing for anyone that may have dashcam footage, who were traveling on the Southern Motorway between 12:35am and 1am on Thursday 14 August, to please contact Police immediately.

If you have any information that could assist Police, please contact us via 105, either over the phone or online. Please reference file number 250814/6432.

Information can also be provided anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 0800 555 111.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

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Cabinet approves next steps on greyhound racing industry

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Source: New Zealand Government

Cabinet has formally agreed this week to the closure of the greyhound racing industry in New Zealand. 

A bill will be drafted to bring this decision into law. The move follows last December’s announcement of the Government’s in-principle decision to end greyhound racing as of 31 July 2026.

The decision was made following ongoing concerns about animal welfare and three reviews of the industry (2013, 2017, 2021) which all outlined significant safety issues.

Cabinet also agreed in full to the recommendations contained in an interim report of the Ministerial Advisory Committee – set up to plan the transition away from greyhound racing 

Racing Minister Winston Peters says the Committee’s report provides a clear path to ensure the welfare of the dogs, and certainty around the wind-down process.  

“Having a comprehensive plan is crucial. First, a key part of this work is the re-homing of racing greyhounds and now we have a clear way forward. Second, it gives those involved in greyhound racing the certainty to plan their transition to other work,” Mr Peters says. 

The Committee has been consulting with representatives of the greyhound racing sector, rehoming agencies, animal welfare groups and government agencies to develop its recommendations. 

The Committee’s report outlines the changes to the law needed to close the industry. These recommendations include setting up a Transition Agency funded by the TAB.  The agency would manage the re-homing programme and support of industry participants through the closure process

Mr Peters says he intends to appoint Committee members Heather Simpson (Chair), Murray Johnson and Lindsay Burton to the board of the Transition Agency when it is established.

The Bill to formally end greyhound racing will be introduced to Parliament later this year. The public will be able to make submissions to the select committee as part of the process.

“It is important people get the opportunity to have their say. The decision to end greyhound racing was not one Cabinet took lightly. I acknowledge the impact that closing the industry will have on those involved. 

“But globally the industry is winding down, with Tasmania recently announcing an end to greyhound racing.  The bottom line is too many dogs continue to die and be seriously injured, and it is time to do the right thing,” says Mr Peters. 

The Ministerial Advisory Committee’s report can be found here.  Further information on the review of the greyhound racing industry can be found on the Department of Internal Affairs website.

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Canterbury Police thank public and staff for feedback on proposal

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Source: New Zealand Police

Submissions on Canterbury Police’s redesign proposal closed on Monday, and Police are now working their way through the feedback.

Canterbury Police District Commander Superintendent Tony Hill thanks staff and the public for their engagement as local Police leaders look to ensure our people and resources are well organised to meet the community’s needs.

“We received around 200 staff submissions and 800 submissions from the public or external parties, including some petitions.

“This was a very important process for our staff, as the people directly impacted by these proposals. Staff sent in very well considered, high quality feedback.

“Members of the public have also sent in some outstandingly articulate and thoughtful feedback which demonstrated people have taken the time to look over the proposals in detail.

“All this feedback has been invaluable and has reinforced for me that we need to take more time with some aspects of the proposal and to keep tracking with others.

“While we are keen to provide decisions as soon as possible, we also need to allow enough time to consider all the feedback thoroughly.

“Our team is now working through the feedback for us to consider before any final decisions are made. I hope to be in a position to provide an update on next steps and indicative timeframes in the coming weeks.”

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

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Whitebaiter tales urge respect for the river

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Source: NZ Department of Conservation

Date:  20 August 2025

Two blokes with a tale to tell are urging whitebaiters to stay safe on the river this whitebaiting season (1 September to 30 October).

Stephen Leggett has been whitebaiting for about 35 years. “I love it. One of my favourite parts is the camaraderie,” he says.

Early one morning in October last year, Stephen was at the Styx River, Canterbury, manoeuvring his whitebaiting gear, when he slipped, went down on his knees and couldn’t get up. The water was rapidly filling his waders.

Fortunately for Stephen, there were people on the shore who rushed to help him.

“Three pairs of hands lifted me. If they hadn’t been there, I wouldn’t be here today. I would have drowned.

Stephen says he didn’t go back on the river until he had a life jacket. “Respect the river, wear a life jacket and respect the underfoot conditions.”

Brent Hogg has a similar story.

“At Tukituki River (Hawke’s Bay), apart from eating whitebait, it’s about the camaraderie. We all help each other.”

Last year, Brent witnessed a near miss at the river.

“I was helping another fisherman put his whitebaiting stand in. When he got into the water, he slipped backwards. The water came up and into his waders.”

Luckily, Brent and two other whitebaiters were on the bank to help, otherwise, he says, it could have been tragic.

“Before you go whitebaiting, pack your commonsense in your bag first. Always take it with you,” Brent says.

Water Safety NZ’s Communications Lead Elizabeth Collins says safety around water is a shared responsibility.

“Every community, whānau, and individual enjoying the beauty of whitebaiting can be helped by strengthening safety culture.

“Unfortunately, New Zealand’s drowning data reveals some stubborn patterns in land-based fishing drownings. Neglect of safety gear is a big one – lifejackets are the single preventative measure that could drastically reduce fatalities.”

DOC Freshwater Species Manager Emily Funnell says whitebaiting is a great way to catch a good feed and enjoy being in nature.

“Make sure your memories of this whitebaiting season are happy ones. No matter where you’re whitebaiting this season – whether it’s on the shore, in the surf or on a stand – be water safe.”

Whitebaiting safety tips:

  • Don’t fish from wet rocks – waves are likely to wash over them.
  • Wear a life jacket and wader belt.
  • Carry two waterproof communication devices at all times, such as a mobile phone in a waterproof bag, a VHF radio, or a distress beacon.
  • Fish with a mate who knows the area, and share any plans and expected time of return with a trusted person. Ask them to look for you at your expected location and to call 111 if you don’t return.

Whitebaiting rules, safety information and check, clean, dry guidance are available at www.doc.govt.nz/whitebaiting.

Email whitebait@doc.govt.nz for a brochure on the rules.

You can also visit Water Safety NZ’s websites for practical information about keeping safe near, in or on the water: www.watersafetynz.org.

Contact

For media enquiries contact:

Email: media@doc.govt.nz

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Concoction of drugs found in stolen vehicle

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Source: New Zealand Police

Driving in a stolen vehicle is the least of one Auckland man’s problems, as he faces serious drugs charges in court today.

On Tuesday afternoon, Police received information about a stolen vehicle travelling in the Ellerslie area.

Auckland City East Area Prevention Manager, Inspector Rachel Dolheguy says the vehicle was located on Robert Street by the Police Air Support Unit.

“Ground units were directed to where the vehicle was stopped, and the sole male occupant was spoken to,” she says.

“Police established the vehicle had allegedly been stolen during a burglary in Onehunga earlier this month.”

The predicament quickly changed for the 28-year-old man.

Inspector Dolheguy says a belt bag the man was allegedly carrying was found to contain a crystal-like substance.

“It was suspected to be methamphetamine, and a further search of the vehicle was invoked.

“There, Police found a large quantity of methamphetamine, cocaine and cash.”

The 28-year-old man will face the Auckland District Court today.

He has been charged with possession for supply of both methamphetamine and cocaine, as well as possession of cannabis and methamphetamine utensils.

“Possession for supply of class A controlled drugs is a serious offence, which carries a maximum penalty of life imprisonment,” Inspector Dolheguy says.

Police enquiries remain ongoing into the earlier burglary in Onehunga.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

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