Dear MFE… Sincerely, Dunedin

Oil Free Otago Transcribes Consultation
Ministry for the Environment in Dunedin
Topic: Setting New Zealand’s post-2020 climate change target
Glenroy Auditorium, Dunedin
21 May 2015 6:30pm

Oil Free Otago noted that no government official filmed or recorded the consultation meeting, and therefore transcribed what was said so that the government, in particular the Ministry for the Environment is able to receive our messages in full. This transcription from Dunedin has been sent as a submission on behalf of the over 320 people present on the consultation evening, 21 May 2015.

Three of the officials present at the meeting were Guy Beatson, Deputy Secretary for the Ministry for the Environment, Bruce Arnold from the Ministry for Primary Industries and Pauline Dougherty from the Ministry for the Environment. The names of two additional officials was not clear. The meeting began with brief introductions from the ministry officials, then a two-minute explanatory video, after which the meeting was then opened for public input.

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Click here for the transcription document:

 Transcription_MFEconsultation_Dunedin_21052015

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Remember Wednesday 3 June at 5pm is the last moment to enter your submission.

Here is an online submission tool by the MFE and another online submission form by Greenpeace

Check out our previous post for GUIDANCE ON WRITING YOUR SUBMISSION.

Ministry for the Environment Consultation in Dunedin 21 May 2015 at 6:30pm. Consultation on New Zealand's Climate Change Targets

Ministry for the Environment Consultation in Dunedin 21 May 2015 at 6:30pm. Consultation on New Zealand’s Climate Change Targets

Waitangi Tribunal: NZ Govt breaches Te Tiriti, StatOil must Go Home

Waitangi Tribunal legal action aims to stop Statoil

Waitangi Tribunal: claims made that NZ Government is in breach of Te Tiriti and that StatOil must release its deep sea drilling permit.

Waitangi Tribunal: claims made that NZ Government is in breach of Te Tiriti and that StatOil must release its deep sea drilling permit.

Friday, 22 May 2015, 11:42 am
Press Release: Taikaha Communications
Waitangi Tribunal legal action aims to stop Statoil

A new Waitangi Tribunal claim is alleging breaches of Te Tiriti o Waitangi due to the New Zealand Government’s failure to actively seek the prior and informed consent of Maori tribes in relation to the issuing of deep sea oil drilling permits.

Filed today, the legal action is being taken by Te Ahipara Komiti Takutaimoana, who are the marae and hapū mandated tribal organisation that manage all issues concerning the marine environment for Te Rarawa.

Te Rarawa is one of the Far North iwi that strongly opposes the current deep sea oil exploration in Te Reinga Basin by Statoil, Norway’s biggest company.

The claim also alleges breaches of Te Tiriti o Waitangi by the New Zealand Government due to failing in the duty of the correct consultation process with Maori rights holders.

The decision to go to the Waitangi Tribunal demonstrates the resolve of the people of Te Hiku, and is a result of widespread opposition to deep sea oil drilling and ongoing discussions amongst northern tribal groups.

Te Reinga is one of the most sacred sites in Aotearoa -­ not only to Maori people -­ but also as a special place of pilgrimage for all New Zealanders and visitors alike.

As one of the Kaitiaki for the marine area, Te Ahipara Komiti Takutaimoana Chairperson Patau Tepania says the iwi wants Statoil to surrender their permits and go home.

“Stopping exploration for oil is vital if we are to provide a better more secure and fairer future for ourselves and for future generations.

Given expert climate change predictions and advice – fossil fuel exploration makes no sense,” he says.

An iwi delegation that includes Ahipara kaumatua and member of Te Ahipara Komiti Takutaimoana, Te Wani Otene, are currently in Norway in order to formalise a relationship of joint political and moral co-­ operation with the indigenous Sami people there.

On Tuesday the group also attended one of the biggest events on the oil calendar -­ Statoil’s AGM -­ where they had the opportunity to speak to the Board and CEO Eldar Saetre.

Immediately after the AGM, the President of the Sami Parliament of Norway, Aili Keskitalo, released a statement calling for Statoil to respect Māori rights.

She said it would be an embarrassment for Norway if its largest state-­owned company had a hand in undermining rights that are recognised through the United Nations Declaration of Indigenous Rights.

It would also not be in Statoil’s interests to build a reputation as a company that is contributing to the violation of indigenous rights, she said.

ENDS

According to Catherine Murupaenga-Ikenn “There’s an incorrect statement in there: our AKT mandate isn’t for the whole Te Rarawa iwi.

“The Kōmiti is the mandated group of Tangata Kaitiaki who manage the Customary Fisheries interests of ngā hapū o Ahipara. The area of interest is from Hukatere south to Titahi just north Herekino Harbour.”

Te Rarawa Taiao Website

Ministry for the Environment Consults on Climate Change

Hundreds of Dunedin people were heated about climate change and the government’s inaction. Every person in the room was on the same page with the same message:

Aotearoa must make a commitement to more than a 40% reduction of emissions, the time to act is now, and the government must STOP subsidising the fossil fuel industry!

Hundreds attend NZ Ministry for the Environment consultation on Climate Change in Dunedin 21 May at Town Hall.

Hundreds attend NZ Ministry for the Environment consultation on Climate Change in Dunedin 21 May at Town Hall.

When asked about the government organisation New Zealand Petroleum and Minerals’ existence undermining the mission of the MFE, the official representative reported no comment. When asked if by bilateral cooperation the MFE would be interested in seeing an end to government subsidies to the petroleum industry, the government official again had no comment.

mfe logo

Click the image to make a submission to the MFE before 3 June 2015.

Aotearoa has the responsibility to be a world leader. Make a submission to the MFE before 3 June 2015.

WANT SUBMISSION GUIDANCE?

 If you can only say one thing, say this:

The most important thing is to protect New Zealand from dangerous temperature and sea level rises. At the very minimum, a 40% emissions reduction by 2030 is necessary to prevent serious effects to our way of life, our economy and our environment. While this target is to start in 2020, the time to act is now.

WANT OTHER IDEAS?

Make it personal:

As a parent, I’m concerned about how climate change will shape my children’s future.

I’m concerned about climate change because it affects our native wildlife. According to Forest and Bird, tuatara and albatross are already suffering the effects.

As a Christian, I believe we must stand in solidarity with the people who are on the frontlines of climate change, like our neighbours in the Pacific.

As a doctor, I’m concerned about the increasing health risks to New Zealanders.

Mention the following:

1.The Government’s consultation document treats action on climate change as a cost. Actually, it is failure to take action that will cost us. Climate change is a threat to our economy and the things it most depends on, like tourism and farming. Our agricultural nation depends on a stable climate.

2. Responding to climate change is worth our while. A cleaner greener future offers huge opportunities for our country, including better transport choices, safer streets for cycling and walking, good jobs in the rail and renewables industries and export opportunities for green technology.

3. The Government consultation materials suggest that New Zealand’s unique circumstances make reducing carbon pollution challenging. This ignores the enormous gains we can make by investing in better transport choices, including rail freight, cycling and public transport.

4. I request that you stop downplaying our responsibility for climate change saying New Zealand is too small to make a difference. It’s not in our national character to sit on the fence and watch others get the job done.

5. Some public meetings were announced with less than a week’s notice and very little publicity. I’m concerned that you’re not taking the views of New Zealanders seriously.

6. The government must cease subsidising the fossil fuel industry.

Ask a question:

-Why is the government funding, recruiting and subsidising the fossil fuel industry when we know climate change is an issue facing us now?

-Can other countries take our commitments seriously if meanwhile our government organisation, NZ Petroleum and Minerals is recruit fossil fuel companies to drill up our EEZ?

-Why has the Government provided so little notice for this consultation?

– How will submissions to the consultation be used to inform the Government’s target?

– Will the results of the consultation be made public?

– When will the Government announce the results of the consultation and New Zealand’s target?

– Has the Government done any analysis to assess the cost of not acting on climate change? Such as the impact of drought and floods on our farming sector?

– Has the Government done any analysis to assess the benefits of acting on climate change? Such as more jobs in the green tech sector or health benefits through reduced air pollution?

Helpful facts and stats:

– According to Ministry for the Environment projections, current policies are putting New Zealand on course for a 50% increase in greenhouse gas emissions. This is happening at a time when all the technology exists for us to reduce our pollution.

– According to the New Zealand Climate Change Centre, time in drought could triple in NZ by 2040, extreme rainfall and flooding could increase by 32%.

– According to the journal, Science, one in six species is at risk of extinction due to climate change. Risks are highest in New Zealand, Australia and South America.

Aotearoa has the responsibility to be a world leader. Make a submission to the MFE before 3 June 2015.

Read the ODT article: Climate Change Target Moral Not Economic Question

Check out this blog FossilFools for student and supporter, Siana’s take on the meeting.

FossilFools blog by Siana

 

 

Hands Across the Sand Dunedin 2015

‘Twas a great morning at the beach with the community holding hands across St. Clair Beach. That day we did #joinHANDS in the name of a clean energy future. We we will continue to unite as a community in a strong stance to say: NO to fossil fuel exploration and YES to a swift transition to renewables.

Thank you to the collaborating organisations:

Our Seas Our Future
Students for Environmental Action at the University of Otago (S.E.A. Otago)
Generation Zero
Autonomous Collective of North Ōtepoti
Forest & Bird
Wise Response

Check out our press release: Hands Across the Sand turned Hands Across the Sea Wall on Scoop

Check out this blog FossilFools for student and supporter, Siana’s take on the day!

hands across sands 2015

http://www.handsacrossthesand.com

#joinHANDS

Event: Hands Across the Sands Dunedin 17-May-2015 Sunday 11:30am

Hands Across the Sands Saint Clair, Dunedin, New Zealand Sunday 17 May 2015 11:30am #JoinHANDS #NoDeepSeaDrilling #CleanEnergy

Hands Across the Sands
Saint Clair, Dunedin, New Zealand
Sunday 17 May 2015 11:30am #JoinHANDS #NoDeepSeaDrilling #CleanEnergy

Join us for a family friendly international tradition next Sunday 17 May 2015 at 11:30 on our St Clair beach as we say NO to deep sea drilling and YES to clean energy!

This event is in collaboration with the following community groups:

Our Seas Our Future
Students for Environmental Action at the University of Otago (S.E.A. Otago)
Generation Zero
… more to be confirmed…

http://www.handsacrossthesand.com/

Facebook Event Page

Oil Free Otago Press Release 28 April 2015

Oil Free Otago Press Release 28 April 2015

Dunedin Divests

photo 2

A proud day for Dunedin; a win for the planet – and for the ratepayers

Oil Free Otago is proud the Dunedin City Council has voted to divest from fossil fuel extraction, along with tobacco, arms, gambling and pornography, in their Waipori Fund.

we-did-it

“This is a proud day for our city” said Oil Free Otago spokesperson Annabeth Cohen. “Our councillors have made a sound ethical and economic decision. Cities, universities and organisations worldwide are divesting from fossil fuel extraction companies because they are stranded assets. There are more fossil fuels in known reserves than we can afford to burn. In financial terms, as climate change increases and hard-to-reach fuel reserves become more costly to extract, fossil fuels will become high risk investments that will likely earn poor returns.”

“Today’s decision by the DCC shows long term thinking and makes us proud. It’s a win for the planet and a win for ratepayers. Thanks DCC!”

photo 1

Oil Free Otago Press Release 27 April 2015

Oil Free Otago Press Release 27 April 2015
Kayaktivism in Otago Harbour

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Oil Free Otago were out on Otago Harbour today practicing kayak formations and ready response manoeuvres.
“We’re practising so that we can safely and effectively protect our oceans when we need to” said Oil Free Otago spokesperson Rosemary Penwarden.
Anadarko, NZ Oil and Gas and Woodside, Australia’s biggest petroleum company, have been seismic testing off the Otago coast all summer.
“We want Anadarko, NZ Oil and Gas and Woodside to know we don’t like what they are doing in our ocean.” Ms Penwarden said.
“Our ready response kayak team is in solidarity with the kayaktivists of Port Angeles, Washington, where local people took to the water last week to blockade Shell’s giant drill rig on its way to the Arctic.”
“Global warming is melting the Arctic. Now Shell wants to drill in the newly exposed ocean and cause more global warming. That’s the definition of insanity” said Ms Penwarden
We can’t even burn most of the oil and gas we already have and stay within two degrees of global warming. The easy oil is gone, but now oil companies are going to extremes to get what’s left, like the Arctic and our frontier southern region. Lower oil prices make short cuts and accidents more likely than ever.
On the fifth anniversary of the Gulf of Mexico Deepwater Horizon disaster, Oil Free Otago are demonstrating it’s up to the people to say “No more. Such a catastrophe must never happen again.”
“We will oppose Anadarko, NZ Oil and Gas and Woodside every step of the way,” said Ms Penwarden.

“They should expect resistance. New Zealand’s future is not deep sea drilling. Our future is clean energy”

Action Alert: Harbour Blockade Practice

Power to the people!
It’s up to us to protect our ocean, our coastline and our future from dangerous deep sea drilling. Join the Oil Free Otago Ready Response Team at Back Beach, Port Chalmers, Dunedin, Monday 27 April 10:30am for a harbour blockade practice.

Back Beach Blockade Practice 2014

 
Last summer Anadarko drilled off Taiaroa Head. This summer they are back,
3D seismic blasting up and down our coast and our Otago marine creatures are in the firing line.

Sometimes saying NO is the most positive thing we can do! Say NO to deep sea drilling. Together, we have the power to stop this.

1794751_430587003739176_1441611675_n
Next meeting this Wednesday, 22 April 7pm at BlackStar Books,
111 Moray Place, Corso Building behind The Kitchen Table

 

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Oil Free Otago asks for a moment of silence in memory of the travesty that was the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill of 2010.

5 year anniversary Gulf Mexico Disaster

Seismic Vessel in port Now!

polarcus_notwelcom

 

Seismic Vessel in port now.

Let’s discuss Nonviolent Direct Action options. The time to act is now.

Meet at Blackstar Books, 111 Morray Place, 15th Wed 7pm.

Can’t make it this time? Oil Free Otago will meet regularly at Blackstar Books on Wednesdays at 7pm. Come along or email to see how you can get involved: OilFreeOtago@gmail.com

Want more information about Seismic Ocean Blasting?

Articles
Otago Daily Times: Warning of danger to dolphins
Stuff.com: Seismic surveys ‘white noise for whales’

Video
Underwater Noise Pollution

Map
Govt Agency, NZPAM’s 2015 Commercial Drilling Offer (429,298 square kilometres)

 

seas for sale by govt

OIL FREE OTAGO PRESSES APPLES AT BLUESKIN

This Sunday 12 April, Oil Free Otago will be at the Blueskin A & P at Bland Park from 10am – 4pm working the apple press to raise funds.

apple, juice, Oil Free Otago, Blueskin, Bland Park

Fresh Pressed Apple Juice, this Sunday 12-Apr, 10am -4pm at Bland Park in Waitati for the Blueskin A&P

 

Not only will we be raising funds but we’ll be building strong muscles for when we next blockade a ship or climb an oil rig like Zoe from Australia zipping up the Shell oil rig.

#thecrossing

Oil Free Otago support the 6 activist aboard the rig that threatens to be the first to drill the Arctic.