Daily News on Net Zero, DeCarbonisation, Carbon Neutrality, Sustainability, Climate Change, ESG
  • Home
  • News
    • Sustainability
    • Featured
    • Carbon Offset
    • Net zero
    • Knowledge
    • Climate Change
    • Off Grid Solar
    • RoofTop & Distributed Solar
    • Technical
    • Manufacturing
    • Utility Scale RE
  • World
    • USA
    • UK
    • India
    • Europe
      • France
      • Germany
      • Austria
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • Italy
      • Netherlands
      • Spain
      • Switzerland
    • Middle East
      • Saudi Arabia
      • UAE
      • Qatar
      • Bahrain
      • Oman
    • Asia Pacific
      • China
      • Hong Kong
      • Australia
      • Indonesia
      • Japan
      • Malaysia
      • New Zealand
      • Singapore
      • South Korea
    • North America
      • Canada
      • Mexico
    • South America
      • Brazil
      • Chile
    • Africa
      • South Africa
      • Egypt
      • Kenya
      • Mali
      • Morocco
      • Nigeria
      • Uganda
  • Industries
    • Air Travel
    • Automobile
    • Banking
    • Cement
    • Energy
    • FMCG
    • Healthcare
    • Hospitality
    • IT & Computers
    • Shipping
    • Pharmaceuticals
    • Real Estate
    • Steel
  • More
    • Carbon Capture & Storage
    • Carbon Footprint
    • Carbon Tax
    • New Launches
    • Interviews
    • Job Opportunities
    • Policy & Regulations
    • Quarter Results
    • Research Reports
    • Tender
    • Web Stories
  • Climate Change
    Climate ChangeShow More
    Why Oil Stocks Aren’t That Hot
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Countries draw battle lines for talks on new climate finance goal
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Achieving MENA Climate Change Goals While Navigating Cashflow Challenges
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    TIME TO NAME THE SILENT KILLER: HEATWAVES
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    UNEA-6: multilateral actions to tackle climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
  • Sustainability
    SustainabilityShow More
    The Importance Of Sustainability In Manufacturing
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Sustainability Partnerships: What They Are, Why They Matter And How They Work
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    The Best And The Rest: The Sorry State Of Sustainability Today
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    It’s Time for Sustainability to Become a Core Part of MBA Programs
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Eight ways the sustainable economy is (still) taking over
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
  • Business & Finance
    Business & FinanceShow More
    Himachal CM seeks collaboration with UK on green hydrogen, e-vehicles
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    IndiGrid’s portfolio grows to 1.1 GWp with new 300 MW solar acquisition
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    EverEnviro, Thermax Bioenergy sign MoU with Danish firm to boost India’s CBG production
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Sajjan Jindal’s JSW Steel sounds out banks for $750 million loan
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    President accords sanction to Rs 20,773 cr RE Transmission System Project in Ladakh
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
  • Carbon Offset
    Carbon OffsetShow More
    Revealed: How Industry Lobbying is Reducing Nature to a Monopoly Board
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    OFFSETS PROMISE TO CUT CARBON FOOTPRINTS BUT CRITICS RAISE QUESTIONS
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Carbon offsets bring new investment to Appalachia’s coal fields, but most Appalachians aren’t benefiting
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Can clean cookstoves ride out the carbon markets storm
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Carbon removal sector buoyed by strong growth in corporate demand
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
  • Featured
    FeaturedShow More
    India will take up carbon tax issue ‘very strongly’ with the EU, says Piyush Goyal
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Unpacking The Truth Behind Climate Change Predictions And Carbon Taxes
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Ways for India to deal with EU carbon tax
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Taking Carbon Tax Off Home Heating Drops Saskatchewan Inflation to Under Two Per Cent
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Warming up to climate change: How does climate change impact extreme weather events?
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
  • Net zero
    Net zeroShow More
    India’s net-zero target: Here’s what the govt needs to prioritise
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Do Record Temperatures Mean Our Climate Goals And Net Zero Are Dead?
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    The dark cloud over Indonesia’s pledge to achieve net-zero emissions by 2060
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Net-Zero Is Pulling the Plug on America’s Electrical ‘Life Support System,’ New Documentary Says
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    SAP’s Journey to Net Zero 2030
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
  • Renewable Energy
    Renewable EnergyShow More
    Is Renewable Energy Actually Making Us Rely More on Fossil Fuels?
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Countries to promise clean energy boost at COP28 to push out fossil fuels
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    The UAE has committed to assisting Malaysia in establishing a 10 GW renewable energy capacity, valued at $8 billion, by 2025
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    Renewable energy sources and energy waste reduction accounted for 25% of the state’s electricity needs last year, showcasing a substantial shift towards sustainable energy practices and environmental responsibility
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
    The Ascendance of Renewable Energy: Exploring the Role of Electrification in Driving Sustainable Solutions
    Anand Gupta By Anand Gupta
Daily News on Net Zero, DeCarbonisation, Carbon Neutrality, Sustainability, Climate Change, ESGDaily News on Net Zero, DeCarbonisation, Carbon Neutrality, Sustainability, Climate Change, ESG
Aa
  • Climate Change
  • Sustainability
  • Business & Finance
  • Carbon Offset
  • Featured
  • Net zero
  • Renewable Energy
Search
  • Home
  • News
    • Sustainability
    • Featured
    • Carbon Offset
    • Net zero
    • Knowledge
    • Climate Change
    • Off Grid Solar
    • RoofTop & Distributed Solar
    • Technical
    • Manufacturing
    • Utility Scale RE
  • World
    • USA
    • UK
    • India
    • Europe
    • Middle East
    • Asia Pacific
    • North America
    • South America
    • Africa
  • Industries
    • Air Travel
    • Automobile
    • Banking
    • Cement
    • Energy
    • FMCG
    • Healthcare
    • Hospitality
    • IT & Computers
    • Shipping
    • Pharmaceuticals
    • Real Estate
    • Steel
  • More
    • Carbon Capture & Storage
    • Carbon Footprint
    • Carbon Tax
    • New Launches
    • Interviews
    • Job Opportunities
    • Policy & Regulations
    • Quarter Results
    • Research Reports
    • Tender
    • Web Stories

Top Stories

Maharashtra Secures Investments of Rs 3.53 Trillion at Davos

Business & Finance 22 January 2024

These 20 Cities Were Just Named the Most Sustainable in the World

Sustainability 7 November 2023

China’s top EV battery maker announced a breakthrough, but top boffin isn’t convinced

Battery 24 August 2023
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Copyright © Ruby Theme Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Daily News on Net Zero, DeCarbonisation, Carbon Neutrality, Sustainability, Climate Change, ESG > Blog > Climate Change > For New Zealand’s Maori communities, climate change is already hurting

For New Zealand’s Maori communities, climate change is already hurting

Anand Gupta
Last updated: 2023/10/28 at 7:12 AM
By Anand Gupta
Share
12 Min Read

In Short : Climate change is disproportionately affecting New Zealand’s Maori communities, impacting their traditional practices, cultural heritage, and way of life. Rising sea levels, extreme weather events, and changes in biodiversity are threatening the livelihoods of these indigenous communities. Urgent action is needed to address the specific vulnerabilities of Maori communities, preserve their cultural heritage, and ensure their resilience in the face of climate change challenges.

In Detail : TANGOIO, New Zealand : The wharenui, or meeting house, stood forlorn. Usually the hub of this remote Maori community, it had been stripped of its wooden carvings. The bare cinder block shell gave the building an unclothed appearance. Wind whistled through holes bashed out by floodwaters.

An official red notice prohibited entry to the adjacent dining hall, where the walls were askew, jammed with twigs and debris. The preschool was shuttered, the children gone. Down the valley, dump trucks whirred as they hauled silt from ruined fields.

Eight months have passed since a powerful cyclone struck northern New Zealand, killing 11 people and displacing more than 10,000. The storm’s path across the Hawke’s Bay region was indiscriminate: it pummeled low-rent housing alongside million-dollar homes, wineries, orchards and factories. But the barriers to recovery here highlight the double whammy dealt to Indigenous communities by climate change, as extreme weather events exacerbate already high rates of homelessness and economic disadvantage.

In parts of Hawke’s Bay, February’s cyclone is in the rearview. Streets have been tidied up. Insurance claims lodged. Levees repaired. Meanwhile, communities like Tangoio face painful choices about their future after authorities declared their land too risky to reinhabit.

Tangoio and dozens of Maori communities are on the front lines of climate change, a dark legacy of British colonization which saw Indigenous people consigned to inhospitable land. Many are on flood plains or near the sea. Historically, tribes moved between coastal villages and fortified hilltop settlements when they faced bad weather or enemy attacks. Colonial land confiscations changed that.

“Some of these marae don’t have any other land if you take them off that flood plain,” said ​Bayden Barber, chairman of Ngati Kahungunu, the main Maori tribe in the region. (The marae is a sacred Maori meeting ground for tribal gatherings, encompassing a wharenui, dining hall and urupa, or burial grounds.)

“They used to own that whole region. That in itself is a travesty. And now climate change is pushing our people off the last little bit of whenua [land] that they actually own,” Barber said.

The government has agreed to split with local authorities the cost of buying out homeowners affected the most to get them to relocate. But the plan doesn’t account for Maori communities’ deep spiritual connection to ancestral land, or for shared land ownership. Nor does it consider previous legal settlements the government has signed with Indigenous groups guaranteeing access to tribal land and resources, including seafood. The government has been compensating tribes across the country since the late 1980s as redress for colonial wrongs.

In 2013, officials came to Tangoio to apologize for a brutal history of military attacks and land confiscations that had left them “virtually landless,” according to the government minister in charge at the time.

Although the buyout plan is voluntary, categorizing land as uninhabitable has made it problematic to insure against future disasters.

“We don’t want to build a marae, which is priceless, on a piece of land where the insurers won’t touch us,” said Hori Reti, chairman of Tangoio Marae, which counts 6,373 people in its community.

Relocated by force during colonial times, climate change is forcing another kind of relocation on Tangoio. Experts call it “managed retreat.”

‘They call me Moses’

When the storm struck Tangoio in February, Reti was trapped as a wall of water approached like a freight train. He huddled with his wife in the pitch dark. Somehow, trees uprooted by the storm piled up like a dam behind their home, parting the floodwaters around them.

“They call me Moses,” Reti said wryly.

For Reti, 44, the cyclone is a reminder of historic loss: firstly through colonial land confiscations, and later the Public Works Act, which allowed land to be claimed for roads.

He pointed toward a vacant plot where his great-grandmother’s house once stood. Authorities plowed a road right through her front garden, Reti said with exasperation. Similarly, a coastal highway that curves into the valley, away from the Pacific, cut so deeply into the hillside that a historic home atop it had to be demolished.

When municipal valuers visited after the cyclone, Reti said he couldn’t fathom their language. They spoke of assets: a bridge and the state highway. For Reti, value is in the spot in the river where his ancestors gave birth and the sacred ground where they’re buried.

“How will we get that mirror effect on another piece of land?” he said.

Reti is set on restoring the Tangoio Marae for its people to return to. But they’ve weathered six big floods since they were hemmed onto this plain. With their landholdings reduced from around 275,000 acres to a mere four acres, Reti asks, where can they go?

Climate warriors

Tangoio’s struggles highlight the difficult issues around managed retreat: Who decides when to retreat and on what basis, and how do you pay for it?

It foreshadows the troubles that could befall other low-lying communities as storms intensify and seas rise. In the United States, the Biden administration last year gave a number of Native American tribes money to help them relocate away from rivers and coastlines.

This 200-mile stretch of coastline has one of the highest rates of erosion and sea level rise in New Zealand. Tens of thousands of people are expected to have to move out of harm’s way around the country in coming decades. So far, New Zealand’s only case of managed retreat — after a massive landslide — took nearly two decades to resolve.

“Are we going to be courageous enough, as the elected leaders, to say we’ll do something different, or will we just be another footnote in history?” said Nigel Bickle, the chief executive of Hawke’s Bay District Council. “What is going to mark out the countries globally are those that are going to be prepared to deal with this.”

Bickle, who has clashed with tribal officials over relocation proposals, understands the quandary. “We’ve come in and said there’s an intolerable risk to life and you shouldn’t be living there,” he said. “And they’re saying: ‘Who is going to help us find a piece of land that is safe?’”

For years, the Tangoio community has been exploring ways to protect the settlement from climate change — including relocating to higher ground. They approached several landowners about repurchasing land within their traditional borders. All three declined.

Before the cyclone, the community was preparing to redevelop the meeting house on a raised platform. Those plans are now in doubt. Even before local authorities ruled the area unsafe, some were questioning the merits of rebuilding in a flood zone. They’re seeking regulatory support to purchase “resilient land.”

The previous center-left Labour administration was looking to include Indigenous knowledge in its climate change planning to avoid a repeat of past wrongs. But Tom Fitzgerald, a climate expert, said officials are “building the plane as they are flying it,” combining their disaster response with climate plans still under development. A national election in October that moved New Zealand sharply to the right adds to the uncertainty.

Hilltop fortresses

For many Maori communities, relocation is not an unfamiliar concept.

There is evidence of managed retreat occurring as far back as the 1800s, when a volcanic eruption forced Maori communities to relocate, said Akuhata Bailey-Winiata, an Indigenous scholar at Waikato University. Other tribes offered land to those whose settlements were buried in tons of ash and debris.

About 35 miles south of Tangoio, the Omahu Marae community is planning a 10-year retreat to a historic hilltop fort after the cyclone inundated their meeting house and burial grounds, exposing human bones. North of Tangoio, plans are afoot to move the community — and possibly the entire town of Te Karaka — to higher ground.

For some Maori, the cyclone underscored their resilience. At Omahu, around 1,200 people came to help. Within days they were providing meals and shelter to families displaced by floodwaters.

At nearby Waipatu Marae, Tane Tomoana had just completed civil defense training when an army truck carrying 120 flood survivors turned up. That training was no longer academic. “We remembered who we were meant to be. It’s a really good reset. Maori, catering for everybody, with joy and gusto,” he said.

Eight months on, some flood survivors are still living at Waipatu, including 69-year-old Hiria Tumoana, whose home was inundated by head-high waters. She was rescued by a neighbor who saw her candle flickering and found her clinging to an upturned bed.

Returning to Maori village life felt like a homecoming, she said. At night, she sleeps in a communal space with other families. That companionship helps, she said, especially when it rains — a sound many survivors find triggering.

TAGGED: Climate Change, New Zealand’s

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email Copy Link

Categories

  • Africa
  • Air Travel
  • Asia Pacific
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Automobile
  • Bahrain
  • BANGLADESH
  • Banking
  • Battery
  • Brazil
  • Business & Finance
  • California
  • Canada
  • Carbon Capture & Storage
  • Carbon Footprint
  • Carbon Offset
  • Carbon Tax
  • Cement
  • Chile
  • China
  • Climate Change
  • Denmark
  • Editors Choice
  • Egypt
  • EMobility
  • Energy
  • Energy Storage
  • Europe
  • Featured
  • Finland
  • FMCG
  • France
  • Germany
  • Healthcare
  • Hospitality
  • Hydrogen
  • India
  • Interviews
  • IT & Computers
  • Italy
  • Laos
  • Malaysia
  • Manufacturing
  • Mexico
  • Middle East
  • Morocco
  • Net zero
  • New Launches
  • New Zealand
  • North America
  • Off Grid Solar
  • Oman
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Philippines
  • Policy & Regulations
  • Quarter Results
  • RE100
  • Real Estate
  • Renewable Energy
  • Research Reports
  • RoofTop & Distributed Solar
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Shipping
  • Singapore
  • South Africa
  • South America
  • South Korea
  • Spain
  • Steel
  • Sustainability
  • Taiwan
  • Tender
  • UAE
  • UK
  • USA
  • Utility Scale RE

Related Strories

Editors Choice

Let’s Build a Climate Wall of Shame

By Anand Gupta 24 February 2024
Climate Change

Why Oil Stocks Aren’t That Hot

By Anand Gupta 24 February 2024
Featured

Unpacking The Truth Behind Climate Change Predictions And Carbon Taxes

By Anand Gupta 23 February 2024
Climate Change

Countries draw battle lines for talks on new climate finance goal

By Anand Gupta 21 February 2024
Show More

Get Insider Tips and Tricks in Our Newsletter!

  • Stay up to date with the latest trends and advancements in AI chat technology with our exclusive news and insights
  • Discover and download exclusive chatbot templates, scripts, and other resources.
  • Other resources that will help you save time and boost your productivity.
Daily News on Net Zero, DeCarbonisation, Carbon Neutrality, Sustainability, Climate Change, ESG

We want to live on a healthy, peaceful planet. A planet where forests flourish, oceans are full of life and where once-threatened animals safely roam. Where our quality of life is measured in relationships, not things we have or own.

Quicklinks

  • Contact Us
  • Blog Index
  • Complaint
  • Advertise

Company

  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Stuff
  • Manage Cookies
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Partners

Follow Socials

All copyrights reserved at CO2 to Net Zero Solutions India Pvt Ltd

Social Chat is free, download and try it now here!

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?