Record warm spring across country part of climate’s ‘new normal’

Source: Radio New Zealand

Earth Sciences New Zealand (formerly NIWA) is expecting above-average temperatures for most of the country heading into summer. RNZ

A record-breaking November pushed New Zealand to its warmest spring on record.

Data from Earth Sciences New Zealand (formerly NIWA) shows the average temperature across the country was 13.5°C, which was 1.3°C hotter than the long-term average and the warmest spring since records began in 1909.

ESNZ meteorologist Chester Lampkin said the hotter-than-average weather sat within an overall warming climate trend, and was likely to continue into summer.

Lampkin said September and October were already above average months this year.

“Then November ended up being a record-setter… If you recall, towards the end of the month we had some very hot temperatures.”

Across the country, 51 stations recorded their warmest average temperature, and seven places set new records during late November for the single hottest spring day.

That included temperatures of close to or above 32°C in Whakatu in Hawke’s Bay, Cheviot in North Canterbury and Dunedin.

The hottest temperature recorded anywhere in the country was 33°C in Hastings, on 27 November – the second hottest day on record there.

Lampkin said the record-setting warmth was driven by a north-westerly wind flow.

“We were getting a lot of warm air coming out of the Tasman and flowing over the country, both the North and the South Island.”

The water surrounding New Zealand, especially the North Island, was experiencing a marine heatwave, he said.

“When you have warm air flowing over warm water, you’re going to get even warmer air once it hits the land.”

ESNZ’s summer outlook was for above-average temperatures for most of the country, especially in the north of the North Island.

Part of that was due to La Niña conditions that had formed, but it was also down to an overall climate trend, Lampkin said.

“It’s going to be another warm, hot summer, and that certainly points to a new normal.”

It was possible more records could tumble.

“These warmer-than-average months, record-setting months, these more-than-average seasons are more likely to occur because of overall warming of the planet,” he said.

“You’ve got warmer ocean temperatures, warmer water, you’ve got a warmer background climate state – it doesn’t take much to push temperatures to record territory.”

The World Meteorological Organisation confirmed earlier this year that 2024 was the warmest year on record, based on six international datasets.

It was the first year that average temperatures were more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has identified a long-term average of 1.5°C as the level of warming at which dangerous climate ‘tipping points’, such as the loss of coral reefs and catastrophic ice sheet melting, could begin to occur.

It was important to remember there could still be cooler periods, Lampkin said.

“Even though you do have these hot months… it doesn’t mean you can’t have cold weather. It doesn’t mean there won’t be cold extremes – it just makes it harder for those occur.”

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Listen live: The Panel LIVE from Revelry Bar in Auckland

Source: Radio New Zealand

Wallace Chapman preparing for his show The Panel, broadcasting live from Revelry Bar in Auckland. Supplied

Wallace Chapman and The Panel break free of the studio and invade Auckland’s Ponsonby Road for a hit of pub politics and current affairs.

Tonight’s panellists include Heather Roy (ex-ACT MP), Holly Bennett (former adviser to Minister Paul Goldsmith and founder of kaupapa Māori government relations firm Awhi), Phil Goff (former Auckland mayor) and Simon Wilson (senior writer NZ Herald).

Auckland’s Deputy Mayor Desley Simpson, Free Speech Union CEO Jillaine Heather and Sarah Helm (executive director of the New Zealand Drug Foundation), as well as other special guests, will also be in attendance and engage from the audience.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

When a Margaret Mahy classic mixes with raucous sea shanties

Source: Radio New Zealand

A happy collision of events came together to inspire Nino Raphael to create The Man Whose Mother was a Pirate – The Musical.

He and his partner were in London, gorging on theatre when they took in the Matilda musical, he told Culture 101.

“I was blown away by the production due to Tim Minchin’s wonderful music. He writes great character-driven songs, that everyone can understand and relate to, children can understand what a Trunchbull feels like and what a brave Matilda sounds like and the sweet sound of a Miss Honey.”

The musical The Man Whose Mother was a Pirate is based on a Margaret Mahy children’s book.

Supplied

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

Firefighters contain large blaze at Tongariro National Park

Source: Radio New Zealand

A large fire at the Tongariro National Park is now fully contained.

Fire and Emergency (FENZ) said the containment line was completed on Tuesday afternoon.

One crew would stay to monitor the fire overnight, while a drone crew would conduct a flight to check for deep-seated hotspots, it said.

The fire started on Monday, one month after a blaze covering almost 3000 hectares ripped through the park.

RNZ / Dan Jones

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Missing swimmer located at Lake Wainamu

Source: New Zealand Police

Police can confirm the body of a missing swimmer at Lake Wainamu has been located.

The Police National Dive Squad had been deployed at the lake near Bethells Beach today as part of the search effort.

An initial response began on Monday night, coordinated by the Police Maritime Unit, after 6pm.

Police acknowledge the SAR team at the Bethells Beach Surf Lifesaving Club for their support on Monday night.

Our thoughts are with the man’s friends and family at this time.

The man’s death will be referred to the Coroner.

ENDS.

Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

Tairua Road blocked, Hikuai

Source: New Zealand Police

Tairua Road is blocked between McBeth and Staircase Roads, due to a crash near the bridge.

Police were called about 2.50pm to a report of a single vehicle crash.

Thankfully, no injuries have been reported.

Both lanes on the road are expected to remain blocked for some time while emergency services work to clear the scene.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area where possible and expect delays.

ENDS

Issued by Police Media Centre

Northbound lane blocked, SH1, Ohinewai

Source: New Zealand Police

State Highway 1, on the Waikato Expressway, has a northbound lane blocked, between the Gordonton Road on-ramp and the Tahuna Road off-ramp, due to a crash.

Police were called about 3.15pm with a report of the two-vehicle crash.

Thankfully, no injuries have been reported.

One lane is expected to remain blocked for some time while emergency services work at the scene.

Motorists are advised to avoid the area where possible and expect delays.

ENDS

Issued by the Police Media Centre

More arrests after man stabbed in Auckland’s Mt Wellington

Source: Radio New Zealand

Police previously said the injured man was in an “altercation” with people in a car before he was stabbed. RNZ / Felix Walton

Police have made two more arrests after a man was stabbed in Auckland’s Mount Wellington.

A homicide investigation was launched on Friday afternoon after a man, whose identity is suppressed, was stabbed several times during a fight in a car on Harris Road.

Police previously said the injured man was in an “altercation” with people in a car before he was stabbed.

The victim turned up at a medical centre on Lunn Ave with critical wounds. He later died in Auckland Hospital.

A 21-year-old man has been charged with murder.

Detective Inspector Scott Beard says four arrests have now been made in the investigation.

In the latest, a 53-year-old man was arrested near Te Awamutu and charged with being an accessory after the fact to murder.

A 32-year-old man arrested in Auckland faces the same charge.

The men are expected to appear today in the Hamilton and Auckland District Courts respectively.

The investigation is ongoing.

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2:1 Support For Ban On Puberty Blockers

Source: Family First

MEDIA RELEASE – 9 December 2025

A new poll has found more than 2:1 support for the ban on puberty blockers announced recently by the Government, with only 23% opposing the ban.

In the poll commissioned by Family First NZ and undertaken independently by Curia Market Research in the first week of December, respondents were asked “The Government has announced that there will be a ban on new prescriptions of puberty blockers for young people with gender dysphoria or incongruence. Do you agree or disagree with this decision?”.

A majority of 50% support the ban, with only 23% opposed. A further 27% were unsure.

Males were more likely to support the ban than females, and significantly, for those in the younger age group (18-39), only one in five of that age bracket oppose the ban. Māori and Pacifika were also more likely  to oppose the ban, Asian less likely.

National, ACT, NZ First and Te Pati Māori supporters had net favourability to the ban, with Labour voters evenly split, and Green voters unsurprisingly opposed.

“With less than one in four opposing the decision by the Government, the Minister of Health Simeon Brown can be confident that the majority of the public are on side with this decision which was clearly based on science and health – not politics as claimed by supporters of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones,” said Bob McCoskrie, CEO of Family First.

The decision is clearly based on the Ministry of Health’s Evidence Brief which “…found a lack of good quality evidence for the effectiveness or safety of puberty blocking treatment in young people with gender dysphoria. We do not have good evidence to say that the medicines used improve the longer-term outcomes for young people with gender-related health needs – nor that the potential longer-term risks are low.” 

This Brief sits alongside a growing literature of concern around puberty blockers, including the United Kingdom’s CASS Review, and in line with many other countries who have either restricted or banned the experimental use of puberty blockers on children suffering gender dysphoria – United Kingdom, Finland, Norway, Sweden, and many states within the USA.

“The general public can see that healing the mind – not cutting the body – is the solution to gender dysphoria.”

Tower Insurance penalised $7m for a decade of overcharging

Source: Radio New Zealand

Tower Insurance has been fined $7 million for more than a decade of overcharging customers. RNZ / Dan Cook

  • Insurance company Tower penalised $7m for misleading customers over discounts
  • Multi-policy discounts not applied for about 61,000 customers, overcharging of $11m
  • Tower agreed with regulator in 2017 to fix systems, but overcharging continued until 2025
  • Deficient systems blamed for not applying discounts
  • Tower paid close to $12m to affected customers

Insurance company Tower has become the latest financial services company to suffer a multi-million dollar penalty for misleading tens of thousands of customers and financially costing them.

The High Court has penalised the company $7 million for more than a decade of overcharging customers because it did not properly apply multi-policy discounts.

The civil case was brought by the Financial Markets Authority (FMA) as it continued mopping up historic breaches by insurance, finance, and insurance companies of misleading fair trading laws.

FMA head of enforcement Margot Gatland said Tower’s systems were deficient, despite an agreement with the Commerce Commission as far back as 2017 to fix them.

“Tower used the advertised MPDs (multi-policy discounts) to attract and retain customers, without having systems that could reliably deliver on the promised discount.”

Agreed to fix problems, but overcharging continued

Tower self-reported the breaches in 2021, but despite its previous undertakings the overcharging went on until early this year.

About 61,000 policy holders with more than 90,000 policies were overcharged, with Tower repaying more than $11.7m to affected consumers.

The judgment said Tower was justifiably critical that the previous settlement with the Commerce Commission was intended to ensure that Tower sufficiently invested in and maintained adequate systems and processes to ensure any MPD was applied correctly.

Gatland said the FMA would continue to promote “fair, efficient, and transparent financial markets”.

“Confident participation in New Zealand’s financial markets can only exist if an intrinsic level of market integrity exists. This is why we continue to respond to fair dealing breaches like this.”

Over the past five years the FMA has taken action against 10 banks and insurance companies for misleading and overcharging customers, resulting in penalties totalling tens of millions, repayments of more than $200m to about 1.5 m customers.

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