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North Canterbury locals get say over huge solar farm
North Canterbury locals get say over huge solar farm

RNZ News

time10-07-2025

  • Business
  • RNZ News

North Canterbury locals get say over huge solar farm

North Canterbury residents are being encouraged to have their say on a proposed 180 hectare solar farm on a property near their village. Photo: Unsplash North Canterbury residents are being encouraged to have their say on a proposed 180 hectare solar farm on a property near their village. The Hurunui District Council has notified a resource consent application from Auckland-based Far North Solar Farm Ltd to build near Waipara, north of Amberley. At its peak, the farm's 250,000 panels would generate up to 144 megawatts, enough to power an estimated 30,000 homes. The Waipara Residents' Association wrote to the council last year calling for the consent to be notified, and chairperson Steven Ellis says he is pleased the community will have a say. He says there are a range of views in the community. ''Everyone has their own views one way or the other for different reasons. ''Some can't see a problem and there's others who think it is not a good situation to have a solar farm this close to a village. ''It is obviously going to be something quite substantial.'' Mr Ellis encouraged residents to have a look at the application on the council's website and form their own view on how it might effect them and ''whether it is a good thing for the community or not''. A group of concerned residents formed Save Waipara Valley last year and set up a website, Save Waipara Valley founder Lizzy Kelsey urged concerned residents to make a submission. "Such a large-scale industrial development has no place so close to homes, or in our flourishing tourism district," she said. Among the group's concerns are the potential impacts on the environment, how the solar panels would stand up to ''North Canterbury's notoriously strong winds'', the risks to passing motorists from glare from the panels and the impact on property values. Hurunui District Council staff have determined ''the adverse effects of the application'' to the landscape and the visual effects are more than minor. Construction of the solar farm is expected to take around two years. The proposed solar farm is a joint venture between Far North Solar Farm Ltd, a solar energy asset developer based in Auckland, and Aquila Clean Energy Asia Pacific, a clean energy platform headquartered in Singapore. Submissions close on Thursday, 24 July. LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

Moisture build up leads to thick and 'persistent' fog covering Brisbane
Moisture build up leads to thick and 'persistent' fog covering Brisbane

ABC News

time24-06-2025

  • Climate
  • ABC News

Moisture build up leads to thick and 'persistent' fog covering Brisbane

Brisbane woke to a "fairly thick" and "persistent" fog this morning, a result of build up of moisture according to the Bureau of Meterorology. Meteorologist Shane Kennedy said the fog was spread across coastal areas, but was thickest in the south-east. "Mainly through the southern and western suburbs of Brisbane, thankfully it didn't have much impact on the airport," he said. Mr Kennedy said it was "coming in waves" through the CBD earlier this morning. He said a build up in moisture, combined with recent showers in the region have helped to keep the cloud from moving. "That's allowed the fog to persist a little bit longer than it usually would…typically it would go away an hour or two after sunrise," he said. "There's a chance we could see some patchier fog [Wednesday] morning but that's probably unlikely." The fog had started to lift around the Archerfield and Amberley airports by 9am and did not impact any flights from the Brisbane airport.

From council tree to dinner table - chairbler calls for change
From council tree to dinner table - chairbler calls for change

RNZ News

time04-06-2025

  • General
  • RNZ News

From council tree to dinner table - chairbler calls for change

A chair maker in Amberley is calling on councils around the country to make better use of public trees when they're removed. Most councils cut trees down and arborists often take the wood to be mulched or used for firewood. Chairbler David Laird says that is a waste of wood that can be from trees more than 100-years-old and that have so much history in them. He says there are examples in Australia and the United States where there are protocols for publicly owned trees so they can be turned into useful furniture for a local council or school. David wants councils to copy those ideas. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

Waipara Adventure Centre operator charged after boy badly burned on school trip
Waipara Adventure Centre operator charged after boy badly burned on school trip

RNZ News

time04-06-2025

  • General
  • RNZ News

Waipara Adventure Centre operator charged after boy badly burned on school trip

Waipara Adventure Centre. Photo: Google Maps The trust behind a North Canterbury adventure camp where a nine-year-old Hokitika boy was badly burned is facing a criminal charge. A Christchurch District Court appearance by Sure and Stedfast Development Trust, which ran the Waipara Adventure Centre near Amberley, was adjourned until October on Wednesday morning. The Hokitika Primary School student was flown to Christchurch Hospital, before being transferred to Middlemore Hospital's burns unit, where he was placed in a medically-induced coma in 2023. He required dozens of surgeries, only returning to school part-time six months after his injury. The trust was facing a charge of exposing an individual to a risk of harm or illness, which was believed to involve a small camp stove malfunctioning. The charge, laid by WorkSafe under the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015, carried a maximum fine not exceeding $1.5 million dollars. A Go Fund Me was set up to support the boy and his family raised over $26,000. WorkSafe inspectorate head Rob Pope said he recognised the bravery of the boy, who had endured multiple surgeries and continued to live with the effects of his burns. "Businesses and organisations must manage their risks, and when they do not we will hold them to account," he said. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

I fell from a first-floor window and smashed my skull
I fell from a first-floor window and smashed my skull

Telegraph

time10-05-2025

  • General
  • Telegraph

I fell from a first-floor window and smashed my skull

Stepping into fabric designer Vanessa Arbuthnott's Cotswolds house feels like a sun-drenched saunter through a very English meadow. Colours flit from soft sky blue to warm buttercup yellow… fresh air, fresh earth, fresh life. It's a tonic for the eyes and the soul, and a true testament to Arbuthnott's eye for delicate shapes and harmonious tones. She has mastered them all. But on New Year's Day in 2017, her world came crashing down when a simple accident in the barn next to the house could have killed her. Such is her positive outlook on life and her passion for work that it is a subject she rarely talks about. We sit down on a late-spring day, looking through french windows onto a central courtyard, where long lazy grasses and dainty wildflowers are beginning to wake. Through the centre runs a lavender-lined path, new shoots eagerly bursting into life. 'The inspiration for my work is right there,' she says with a contented smile. Arbuthnott's parents were both amateur artists, but her own early career took a totally different path, starting with a five-year degree in nursing at London's South Bank Polytechnic. She was working at St Thomas's Hospital when she met her husband, Nicholas, an architect who had always dreamt of creating a big family home in the country. Shortly after marrying, they moved to Amberley in the Cotswolds, where their eldest son, George, soon arrived. By the time they finally found the home they were looking for, it had to accommodate four children under the age of six. 'From the start, Nicholas knew it would be difficult to get planning permission to build a new house in open countryside,' she says. 'So, in 1993, we bought a derelict cow byre. Traditionally, this was a U-shaped, single-storey structure used as a fold to keep cows during winter. This one had originally been part of an estate owned by a banker and was made of Cotswold stone, with a proper tiled roof and a courtyard in the middle. It also came with a barn and four acres.' Arbuthnott continues, 'For the first six months, Nicholas dealt with the foundations, roof and drainage. Although there was no central heating or electricity, it was wind and water-tight, so we moved in. We had run out of money, but we had hurricane lamps and candles. It was also late spring, so the worst of the cold weather was over.' With a growing family, Arbuthnott realised it would be difficult to return to nursing, but she still needed an income, so she embarked on a weekly art class in Stroud, Gloucestershire, where she learnt about printmaking, and started to design her own fabrics. She then began to use the fabrics to furnish rooms in the house, which led to word-of-mouth commissions. In the space of a few years, her kitchen-table hobby had turned into a flourishing business with a store in Cirencester. Just 15 years after her first collection, Arbuthnott had established herself as one of the country's leading fabric designers – something she had never dreamt of. There was also the added excitement of her first grandchild, courtesy of George and his wife, Clio. Then, on the first day of 2017, everything ground to a gruesome halt. 'We had a wonderful time welcoming in the new year, and the following day I was walking across the courtyard, when I heard a bird flapping its wings in the barn,' Arbuthnott recalls. 'Nicholas had converted it into a two-storey artist's studio, so I went upstairs, and as I got closer to the bird, it flew out of the french windows. Somehow, I lost my footing and fell through them head first, hitting the concrete path below.' Arbuthnott lay there for several agonising minutes before slowly and painfully crawling to where Nicholas or her daughter Flora might see her. It was Flora who came rushing out, shocked by the blood pouring from her mother's face and hands. While Nicholas called 999, Flora wrapped her in blankets. Despite the freezing temperature, they were afraid to move her inside in case she had broken her back or neck. An hour later, an ambulance arrived. Arbuthnott downplays what happened that day, but such a fall could have left her paralysed, or dead. 'To be honest, I was OK as soon as I was in the ambulance,' she recalls matter-of-factly. 'I think the shock and worry was harder for the family, who came rushing to the hospital. Multiple scans showed that I'd smashed my skull and jaw, smashed my hands and had a spleen bleed. My eyes were so swollen I couldn't open them and I had a haemorrhage above one of my eyebrows. Nicholas was scared I might have a larger bleed on the brain.' For a few moments, this quiet corner of the Cotswolds suddenly felt like the opening of an Agatha Christie novel. 'One of the doctors asked me if I meant to jump out,' she says, raising her eyebrows, 'or if I thought I'd been pushed. I guess they have to rule these things out. 'Another doctor had to deal with my jaw, which was no longer connected to my skull. Maxillofacial surgeons had to wire it up by making slits under each eye and sliding metal plates down on each side. I'd also damaged quite a lot of nerve endings on my face, permanently losing my sense of smell. My wrists, too, had to be wired up with metal plates. I felt quite robotic.' After several weeks in hospital, and with both arms in plaster for two months, Arbuthnott returned home, unable to do anything; she couldn't even eat without someone there to feed her. When the plaster finally came off her arms, she had another three months of physio, relearning to do the most basic of things. Understandably, the family reflected on the accident, and how it had happened. The french windows on the upper floor had always been a welcome feature to the barn, because they brought in so much light; but as no one had considered that something so awful could happen, there was no safety bar or balcony. As soon as Nicholas got home, he screwed them shut. 'We weren't going to leave it to chance again,' says Arbuthnott. 'Luckily, there was no inquiry; no one got arrested.' At that point, she also realised she would not be able to work for some time, but with a deadline looming for the next catalogue, the whole family sat down to see how they could help. Fortunately, her two daughters, Flora and Rose, are both artists. 'Nicholas can draw pretty much anything. Flora did product design at Glasgow School of Art and was already teaching screen-printing with me, while Rose had studied fine art and was a professional artist. They had also worked on previous catalogues, so I knew they'd come up with beautiful sketches. We then translated those into workable patterns and chose colour palettes together. I called it The Artists' Collection and it came out on time that autumn.' Arbuthnott's optimism was back in charge. 'Whichever door or window I looked out of, there was always something to catch my eye. Something to lift my spirits, to make me feel better… a flower about to bud, trees blowing in the wind, a falling leaf.' Reflecting on the fall, she says now: 'I had to go back to the studio, when the doors had been screwed closed, and work through everything to try to understand how it could have possibly happened. But I now believe in the true meaning of an accident: where you can't predict events. I don't have flashbacks, and I'm not traumatised by it, but for a while afterwards I did lose my confidence in any judgement, particularly in my ability to cross a road. I think it was much worse for the family when they saw me in such a state.' Not only did the natural world aid her recovery; it continues to inspire her work, from 2020's Botanical Collection and 2022's Forest Collection to last year's Wild Garden Collection. This year, she celebrates 25 years in the business. On that, she says: 'I didn't set out to be ambitious, you know. I just found something I loved doing and followed my heart.'

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