Lectures, discussions and actions coming up
Eastern Bays Climate Resonse Network

In this update

  • Discussion: Climate Friendly Transport for All - 1st May, Green Party
  • Architecture & Design : Design Experience - Tuesday 2nd May (Sky Stadium)
  • Lecture: Cyclones, land use and forestry - how do we adapt? - Wednesday 3rd May
  • Discussion: Dealing with the impacts of climate change – Prof Jonathan Boston & Climate Minister James Shaw - Tuesday 9 May
  • South Coast Climate Adaptation Briefing Sunday 21 May 2023

GWRC are still looking for nominees for their Public Transport Advisory Group, so even if you applied before, try again here

Tupua Horo Nuku

There are two updates to read, one covers the current project progress, the other is more about the planned weekend work and possible disruption (aimed at local business).

Consultation

The Thin Ice screening last Sunday was a huge success with over 75 attending. Big thanks to Simon Lamb, James Renwick, Peter Barrett, Anna Sutherland and Susan Ewart for their contributions. The video is well worth watching (again) and is available on the website  https://thiniceclimate.org/

Coastal Restoration video series. Another well attended event. Information and the video series can be viewed at Southlight Studio website.

Climate-friendly Transport for All - discussion

Wellington Regional Councillor Thomas Nash and Julie Anne Genter will be discussing the role of transport in creating an equitable, sustainable, Green future.

When: Monday 1 May, 6:00pm - 7:30pm
Where: Waitoa Social Club, 32 Waitoa Road, Hataitai, Wellington 

Let them know if you're coming along!

How do we reverse our dependence on private vehicles? Can we eliminate the use of fossil fuels in transport? Are Green solutions affordable? There is so much to discuss.

Design for a changing world: 10 meta trends that will transform the future of cities

Keynote speaker: Anthony Browser | Gensler. Global Climate Action and Sustainability Practice Area Leader.

2 May 2023, Wellington Sky Stadium, 5-8pm

In times of radical change, it’s not surprising that vision is in short supply. As new tensions fill the void that the pandemic left, it’s natural to focus on tackling what’s right in front of us. We’re being pulled along from crisis to crisis out of necessity. While it’s never smart to see the world through rose-coloured glasses, it’s important for those of us who are shaping the future of cities to recognise the critical role we play as we face the challenges of climate, societal upheaval, and economic uncertainty. To do that, we need long-term thinking, ideas, and vision.

Join us at Design Experience in May to hear what the biggest architecture firm in the world thinks about the trends that are shaping the human experience and the built environment. You don’t want to miss it!

Register online

Royal Society Te Apārangi Wellington Branch and the Royal Society Te Apārangi

Joint Public Lecture Invitation

Cyclones, land use and forestry – how do we adapt?
Dr Tim Payn, Principal Scientist, Forest Ecology and Management, Scion Research

Wednesday 3 May 2023, 6.00 - 7.00 pm at the Royal Society Te Apārangi premises, 11 Turnbull St. Thorndon, Wellington

The Royal Society Te Apārangi Wellington Branch and the Royal Society Te Apārangi will host a free public lecture. We hope that you will attend and contribute to the discussion afterward. Please come along. Full details of the lecture are given below.

In the last few years New Zealand has been hit by a number of extreme weather events, the latest being ex cyclones Hale and Gabrielle. Massive damage has been caused, especially on the east coast of the North Island, and recovery will require a very long-term effort. The intensity and frequency of these storms are expected to increase under climate change. A Ministerial Inquiry into Land Use is underway for the Gisborne/Wairoa regions which will assess causes and effects and make recommendations to Government based on their findings.

Forestry is one of the land uses affected by the extreme events and one of the land uses affecting the wider environment. There has been widespread media coverage of damage to infrastructure from logs and accumulations of logs on beaches and calls for changes to the way we manage our forests. This talk will focus on the history of production forestry in New Zealand, how forests are managed today, and what changes could be made to reduce impacts from these extreme events in the future.

Tim Payn is a Principal Scientist at Scion in Rotorua. His research focusses on sustainability, climate change and the environment. He is a Fellow of the New Zealand Institute of Forestry.

We look forward to seeing you there.
David Lillis
Royal Society of New Zealand Wellington Branch

Dealing with the impacts of climate change – Prof Jonathan Boston & Climate Minister James Shaw

Climate change poses unparalleled policy challenges and demands urgent action.

Prof Jonathan Boston’s recent work has focused on adaptation, and especially the funding of managed retreat. This is a major policy challenge which has in the past months been highlighted by the impacts of the Auckland floods and the devastation in Hawkes Bay.  ‘Time and the tide are running against us’ is his opening quotation.

We will have no choice but to move tens of thousands of people out of harm’s way. But how do we create a fair system of managed retreat.  Managed retreat will often be costly, controversial, and challenging. Communities will be displaced.

Moving towns like Westport, moving whole suburbs like South Dunedin or South Shore in Christchurch, or Petone in Wellington, significant parts of Whakatāne or Whanganui or Whangārei, will almost certainly require central government involvement, because the central government will be paying for at least some of the costs.

"In my view, it's going to probably bear the burden of paying for property buyouts in the main because I just don't see local government having resources to do that.”

Planning regulations, fairness, good public housing in safe areas and avoiding costly and ineffective defensive measures, will need the buy-in of politicians across the spectrum, he says.

Jonathan Boston is Emeritus Professor of Public Policy at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University. You can read his recently released report on managed retreat here. He has also contributed to a working paper which you can read here.

James Shaw is Minister for Climate Change and co-leader of the Greens. He will respond on the issues surrounding managed retreat as part of the necessary adaptation to the impacts of climate change.

Come and hear these two discuss what this country needs to do in the next two to five years.

Date: Tuesday 9 May. Please note the timing - the session runs from 6pm to 7pm to fit the break in Parliament.

Venue:  2/57 Willis Street - our usual Wellington venue.

Register for the event here.

If you cannot attend in person, the event will be livestreamed on youtube, the link is here.

South Coast Climate Adaptation Briefing

Hapori Takutai – Huringa Āhuarangi

 

Agenda

Sunday 21 May 2023 at 3.00 - 4.30pm

Wellington South Baptist Church Hall, 284 The Parade Island Bay

 

90 minute information session. We will have a few speakers to bring us up to speed with a number of climate-related issues.

 

Professor Jonathan Boston, ONZM

Our key speaker is Professor Boston, a member of the Expert Working Group on Managed Retreat, which is advising our Ministry for the Environment on how NZ should prepare for the storms of the future and accelerating sea level rise. Jonathan spent several days recently in Napier/Hawkes Bay surveying some of the extensive damage from Cyclone Gabrielle, which struck in mid-February. 

“Some of the destruction and devastation we witnessed near Napier was sobering, confronting ... almost unbelievable. It is a terrible harbinger of what is in store for countless communities around the world over the coming decades and beyond, especially those living on or near the coast and in river valleys and flood plains. This is why it is essential to take precautionary measures to move people and property out of harm's way ... and, of course, reduce our GHG emissions.”

 

Wellington City Council

We will have a short update from WCC on where we are at with much-needed impact assessments, and the City’s Climate Change Adaptation road map.

 

Julie Anne Genter MP

Green MP Julie Anne Genter will give her perspective on the The Big Picture – the factors that are driving climate change, as well as what it means to communities like ours, and the need to devolve funding and responsibility to local levels – the need to resource communities.

 

Fleur Fitzsimons

Former Councillor and candidate for Rongotai, Fleur Fitzsimons will share her thoughts on the need for communities to organise to face these kinds of challenges. 

 

Come and find out and ask questions. If you can’t make it, let us know and send your questions to: 4cwelly@gmail.com.

 

Invitation as PDF 

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