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Rt Hon John Key Prime Minister 25 July 2016 Speaking notes New Zealand to be Predator Free by 2050 Good afternoon. It’s great to be here today, at the Zealandia wildlife sanctuary in the heart ...
New Zealand has launched a bold plan to rid the country of non-native predators by 2050 "Wake up in paradise" is New Zealand's proud boast. It has a rightful swagger: its turquoise glacial lakes ...
New Zealand announced a new goal Monday to be free of rats, possums and other predators by 2050. Prime Minister John Key said these nuisance animals, including stoats, kill 25 million native birds ...
The government is set to invest NZ$28m (US$19.5m; £15m) in a new company, Predator Free New Zealand Ltd, and wants the private sector to provide financial support.
Predator Free 2050 Ltd, the Crown-owned company established to drive and fund large-scale eradication and breakthrough science, is now being disestablished, as announced as part of Budget 2025.
New Zealand is known for its “green” image, but the country’s controversial plan to save its native wildlife is at odds with that perception. CNN values your feedback 1.
Seeking to safeguard the future of its kiwis, parrots, and hobbits, New Zealand has just made the “world first” decision to eradicate all wild predators by 2050. That means rats, possums ...
Today’s announcement by Prime Minister John Key to make New Zealand predator-free by 2050 is welcomed by conservation organisation, WWF New-Zealand. The Prime Minister made the announcement at ...
New Zealand makes predator-free by 2050 vow. NZ's war on stoats, rats and possums. Why New Zealand is releasing a rabbit-killing virus. The task ahead appears truly Herculean, but Jessi Morgan ...
New Zealand's government announced Monday the country's goal to be predator free by 2050. “Rats, possums and stoats kill 25 million of our native birds every year, and prey on other native ...
"Wake up in paradise" is New Zealand's proud boast. It has a rightful swagger: its turquoise glacial lakes are ringed by untouched mountain ranges, while historic Māori sites speak of a people at ...