0800 KAI TAHU (0800 524 8248)
The National Iwi Chairs Forum is inviting whānau Māori around Niu Tīreni to take part in a series of online webinars focusing on climate change challenges and issues facing our moana, whenua, and taonga species.
Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu Kaiwhakahaere Lisa Tumahai is one of eighty-three iwi chairs that make up the national forum and is encouraging Ngāi Tahu whānau to engage on this kaupapa.
These webinars and briefings are a great opportunity for you to learn about the national mahi and policies underway to address climate change. Discussions with the National Iwi Chairs Forum during these webinars will drive our engagement with the Crown, as we seek better climate change outcomes for whānau Māori and all New Zealanders.
Click the links below to join the live webinars.
This hui looks at the success of the recent rāhui established over scallop beds in the Far North and Hauraki Gulf, and the subsequent agreement by the government to enforce these declarations of Mana Māori Motuhake, together with an update on the recent rāhui over kaimoana beds in Taranaki. This will be the first of a series of hui addressing critical issues facing our oceans.
Te Pou Take Āhuarangi team would like to invite you to attend a briefing on this issue at:
6:30 – 8:00pm Tuesday 26th April
The government climate change policy reforms are ramping up and the government is currently considering a raft of changes that will have a significant impact on our social and economic development. This includes a new policy on managing exotic afforestation incentives by changing the forestry settings in the NZ Emission Trading Scheme.
Some of the key issues being explored are;
The new policy settings could be crucial in providing equitable options for Māori landowners wanting to replant natives as carbon sinks and enjoy remuneration at the same level as exotic forest carbon farming. The government is seeking input on key policy and its implications on Iwi/ hapū/whānau forestry plantations and this is a good time to interrogate officials on their thinking and influence decision making.
This hui will be open to all interested and affected Māori. This session will comprise a briefing and Q&A with key government officials, after which they will leave the meeting and a general discussion with occur.
Te Pou Take Āhuarangi team would like to invite you to attend a briefing on this issue at:
6:30 – 8:00pm Wednesday 27th April
New Zealand has significant exposure to natural hazards such as floods, wildfires and droughts. The impacts of these are felt by those living on the coast, inland, in rural areas and in major urban centres. It is increasingly clear that climate change is making these natural hazards more frequent and severe.
The National Adaptation Plan will address the need to develop national and local risk assessments and mitigation regarding:
Te Pou Take Āhuarangi team would like to invite you to attend a briefing on these issues at:
6:30 – 8:00pm Wednesday 11 May
These sessions will comprise a briefing from the officials developing the National Adaptation Plan to be followed by a discussion by participants.
It is crucial that climate action is transformational and that it considers transitional pathways away from the systemic problems associated with climate change. This presents an opportunity to reframe change within a Māori worldview that includes traditional, contemporary, and visionary lenses over this period of change.
Te Pou Take Āhuarangi team would like to invite you to attend a briefing on:
There are many Māori communities in coastal fringes and lowland areas who are already exposed to flooding, erosion and sedimentation, and these risks are projected to increase with sea-level rise. Other Māori-owned land is steep and susceptible to damage from high-intensity rainstorms. About 80 per cent of land and ocean-based resources owned by Māori are held in multiple or communal ownership. Some Māori are less able to ‘retreat’ to other areas which can increase the complexity of managed retreat.
Te Pou Take Āhuarangi team would like to invite you to attend a briefing on this:
Additionally, we will be hosting a further series of online hui/webinars over the coming months including sessions to the following;
Addressing the collapse of species and habitat due to climate change – Time and Date TBC
The critical issues facing our marine environment – Time and Date TBC