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Passengers trapped in fatal Taranaki capsizing
Passengers trapped in fatal Taranaki capsizing

RNZ News

time6 days ago

  • RNZ News

Passengers trapped in fatal Taranaki capsizing

A witness to Sunday's tragic capsizing in Taranaki, which claimed two lives, has said the small pleasure boat was side-on to breakers at the Patea bar before being swamped. Paul Mandela said the boat's skipper was thrown into the water while his passengers were trapped in the vessel. A six-year-old child is believed to be among those who lost their lives. Taranaki Whanganui reporter Robin Martin has more. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

Search on for two missing after boat capsize off Taranaki
Search on for two missing after boat capsize off Taranaki

RNZ News

time7 days ago

  • RNZ News

Search on for two missing after boat capsize off Taranaki

[rnz_online] One person was located in the water and received treatment. File picture. Photo: Supplied Emergency services and Coastguard South Taranaki volunteers are responding to an incident involving a boat off Patea this morning. About 10.15am, police were notified that a boat had capsized about 200 metres offshore, with three people on board. One person has been located in the water and is receiving treatment. A search is under way to locate the two missing people.

Taranaki Regional Council rebuffs calls to oppose seabed mining
Taranaki Regional Council rebuffs calls to oppose seabed mining

RNZ News

time10-06-2025

  • Politics
  • RNZ News

Taranaki Regional Council rebuffs calls to oppose seabed mining

The seabed mining protest at the weekend. Photo: RNZ / Emma Andrews Taranaki Regional Council has rebuffed calls for it to get off the fence and take a stand against a proposal to mine the seabed off the Patea coast. Trans-Tasman Resources (TTR) has approval to vacuum up 50 million tonnes of sand annually from the South Taranaki seabed for 35 years to extract iron, vanadium and titanium, but the company still needs consent to discharge 45 million tonnes of unwanted sediment a year back into the shallow waters. TTR - which is currently going through the Fast Track consenting process - says it can do this environmentally safely and that its project will significantly boost the national and regional economies. The regional council has twice made neutral submissions on TTR's proposal and at Tuesday's powerful policy and planning committee it chose again to walk that tightrope, arguing that to take a stance could jeopardise its future opportunities to influence the project. A 2024 hīkoi in Patea to oppose seabed mining. Photo: Supplied/ Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Ruanui Trust Earlier it heard a deputation from Protect Our Moana Taranaki spokesperson Fiona Gordon - who helped co-ordinate a paddle-out protest attended by about 1200 people at west coast beaches over the weekend. She reminded councillors the TRC was the region's environmental watchdog. "Opposing seabed mining aligns with your statutory duty to protect ecosystems and coastal waters for the interest of future generations. The areas within your direct jurisdiction would be harmed and there is no safeguard, no accurate modelling that can really portray what will actually happen." Gordon wanted the TRC to unite with Whanganui and South Taranaki district councils who had come out in opposition of Trans-Tasman Resources' proposal. "Being neutral is not an option when you have a duty to uphold the care of our ecosystems and the well-being of our communities." Ngāti Ruanui iwi member and Māori Party co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer also addressed councillors. She said TTR's application for Fast Track consents was no different than had been knocked back right up to the Supreme Court and all eight Taranaki were united in their rejection of the proposal. "Is this council going to stand with us, are you part of us or are you going to stand on the side on you're little island away from the rest of us who've been fighting this, away from the rest of us who have to confront this ... where do you belong." On Tuesday, the policy and planning committee was considering a new report on the issue: Fast Track Approvals Act and Taranaki VTM Project (Trans-Tasman Resources). A map showing the area covered by the South Taranaki Bight Project. Photo: Trans-Tasman Resources Following the deputations, committee chair Bonita Bingham outlined her reservations about taking a stance against the project. "I'm concerned that you are urging us to take a stance as a council to opposed seabed mining because we are in the privileged and lucky position where this organisation is going to be possibly or even probably one of the very few that get to submit to the hearing panel. "Now if we in the room approve a motion to oppose seabed mining that would create a conflict of interest and we will be immediately struck off that hearing panel which gives us no voice." In the report, strategy lead Finbar Kiddle, clarified that if the TRC took a stand against seabed mining it could jeopardise its ability as a "relevant local body" to recommend a member to the expert panel considering TTR's application. "The council will very likely be considered a relevant local authority for the Taranaki VTM Project application. This means council will have the opportunity to nominate a panel member and make comment on the application. "The council needs to approach its assessment of the application in a similar manner to if it was assessing a resource consent application. This means avoiding any inference of predetermination, undertaking a robust review of the relevant documents, and focusing on the regulatory tests set in the legislation. "To do otherwise, risks prejudicing council's engagement and undermining its input into the process. Predetermination, either for or against the project, would ultimately harm the position put forward." Councillors voted to receive the report and no motion to oppose seabed mining was put forward.

New Penrith prodigy being likened to Spencer Leniu
New Penrith prodigy being likened to Spencer Leniu

The Advertiser

time04-06-2025

  • General
  • The Advertiser

New Penrith prodigy being likened to Spencer Leniu

It took one training session with Penrith's top squad for powerhouse prop Luron Patea to knock back a Japanese rugby deal and pursue a contract in the NRL. Patea has emerged as Penrith's next big thing in the past month, with the 20-year-old providing the Panthers much needed power and impact off the bench. The Panthers junior has already been compared to Spencer Leniu, after announcing himself as a genuine talent with a barnstorming performance in Magic Round. But while he has been a breakout star in the NRL for the past month, Patea's talent has been known on the global stage for some time. The son of a rugby union coach who also played overseas, Patea played both codes as a teen and represented Australian schoolboys in the 15-man game in 2022. He also had an offer to move to a top-tier Japanese rugby club in 2023, which would have brought with it his first professional contract. But the front-rower instead opted to stick with Penrith, taking a punt on trying to crack into a squad that had already won two straight premierships. "There was nothing really promised of training full time," Patea told AAP. "I had the opportunity to go to Japan and play rugby overseas. But I spoke to my manager and family and decided I wanted to try and stick with rugby league. "It was just go in and try and play my best footy and try and get that opportunity. And fortunately I did after that year. "Now when I get the chance to sit back after games, I think about doing my family proud. "But I'm also proud of myself for making the decision to stay and backing it." Patea said his main motivation had come from training one day with Penrith's squad in 2022, as part of their Pearls program. There, the top picks of talent from U19s and U17s experience a full day training with the NRL squad, and are handed the same kit and schedule as full-time players. "I spent that day with Moses (Leota) and Spencer," Patea said. "Talking to them, they were telling me about the club and how they came through. I wanted to experience that for myself. "It made me just want to stay." More of a rugby union watcher growing up, Leota and Leniu are now the men Patea look up to for their work ethic and aggression respectively. It's also the kind of player the Panthers need right now, after losing Leniu and his bench impact after 2023. "I hear a lot of people say I am like another, Spencer," Patea said. "That's a good thing for me. Spencer's obviously a really good player and what he did for the club when he was here, I want to do as well. "There are similarities in the way we run ... But I'm just trying to build confidence to play my game and not be compared to anyone else." It took one training session with Penrith's top squad for powerhouse prop Luron Patea to knock back a Japanese rugby deal and pursue a contract in the NRL. Patea has emerged as Penrith's next big thing in the past month, with the 20-year-old providing the Panthers much needed power and impact off the bench. The Panthers junior has already been compared to Spencer Leniu, after announcing himself as a genuine talent with a barnstorming performance in Magic Round. But while he has been a breakout star in the NRL for the past month, Patea's talent has been known on the global stage for some time. The son of a rugby union coach who also played overseas, Patea played both codes as a teen and represented Australian schoolboys in the 15-man game in 2022. He also had an offer to move to a top-tier Japanese rugby club in 2023, which would have brought with it his first professional contract. But the front-rower instead opted to stick with Penrith, taking a punt on trying to crack into a squad that had already won two straight premierships. "There was nothing really promised of training full time," Patea told AAP. "I had the opportunity to go to Japan and play rugby overseas. But I spoke to my manager and family and decided I wanted to try and stick with rugby league. "It was just go in and try and play my best footy and try and get that opportunity. And fortunately I did after that year. "Now when I get the chance to sit back after games, I think about doing my family proud. "But I'm also proud of myself for making the decision to stay and backing it." Patea said his main motivation had come from training one day with Penrith's squad in 2022, as part of their Pearls program. There, the top picks of talent from U19s and U17s experience a full day training with the NRL squad, and are handed the same kit and schedule as full-time players. "I spent that day with Moses (Leota) and Spencer," Patea said. "Talking to them, they were telling me about the club and how they came through. I wanted to experience that for myself. "It made me just want to stay." More of a rugby union watcher growing up, Leota and Leniu are now the men Patea look up to for their work ethic and aggression respectively. It's also the kind of player the Panthers need right now, after losing Leniu and his bench impact after 2023. "I hear a lot of people say I am like another, Spencer," Patea said. "That's a good thing for me. Spencer's obviously a really good player and what he did for the club when he was here, I want to do as well. "There are similarities in the way we run ... But I'm just trying to build confidence to play my game and not be compared to anyone else." It took one training session with Penrith's top squad for powerhouse prop Luron Patea to knock back a Japanese rugby deal and pursue a contract in the NRL. Patea has emerged as Penrith's next big thing in the past month, with the 20-year-old providing the Panthers much needed power and impact off the bench. The Panthers junior has already been compared to Spencer Leniu, after announcing himself as a genuine talent with a barnstorming performance in Magic Round. But while he has been a breakout star in the NRL for the past month, Patea's talent has been known on the global stage for some time. The son of a rugby union coach who also played overseas, Patea played both codes as a teen and represented Australian schoolboys in the 15-man game in 2022. He also had an offer to move to a top-tier Japanese rugby club in 2023, which would have brought with it his first professional contract. But the front-rower instead opted to stick with Penrith, taking a punt on trying to crack into a squad that had already won two straight premierships. "There was nothing really promised of training full time," Patea told AAP. "I had the opportunity to go to Japan and play rugby overseas. But I spoke to my manager and family and decided I wanted to try and stick with rugby league. "It was just go in and try and play my best footy and try and get that opportunity. And fortunately I did after that year. "Now when I get the chance to sit back after games, I think about doing my family proud. "But I'm also proud of myself for making the decision to stay and backing it." Patea said his main motivation had come from training one day with Penrith's squad in 2022, as part of their Pearls program. There, the top picks of talent from U19s and U17s experience a full day training with the NRL squad, and are handed the same kit and schedule as full-time players. "I spent that day with Moses (Leota) and Spencer," Patea said. "Talking to them, they were telling me about the club and how they came through. I wanted to experience that for myself. "It made me just want to stay." More of a rugby union watcher growing up, Leota and Leniu are now the men Patea look up to for their work ethic and aggression respectively. It's also the kind of player the Panthers need right now, after losing Leniu and his bench impact after 2023. "I hear a lot of people say I am like another, Spencer," Patea said. "That's a good thing for me. Spencer's obviously a really good player and what he did for the club when he was here, I want to do as well. "There are similarities in the way we run ... But I'm just trying to build confidence to play my game and not be compared to anyone else."

New Penrith prodigy being likened to Spencer Leniu
New Penrith prodigy being likened to Spencer Leniu

Perth Now

time04-06-2025

  • Business
  • Perth Now

New Penrith prodigy being likened to Spencer Leniu

It took one training session with Penrith's top squad for powerhouse prop Luron Patea to knock back a Japanese rugby deal and pursue a contract in the NRL. Patea has emerged as Penrith's next big thing in the past month, with the 20-year-old providing the Panthers much needed power and impact off the bench. The Panthers junior has already been compared to Spencer Leniu, after announcing himself as a genuine talent with a barnstorming performance in Magic Round. But while he has been a breakout star in the NRL for the past month, Patea's talent has been known on the global stage for some time. The son of a rugby union coach who also played overseas, Patea played both codes as a teen and represented Australian schoolboys in the 15-man game in 2022. He also had an offer to move to a top-tier Japanese rugby club in 2023, which would have brought with it his first professional contract. But the front-rower instead opted to stick with Penrith, taking a punt on trying to crack into a squad that had already won two straight premierships. "There was nothing really promised of training full time," Patea told AAP. "I had the opportunity to go to Japan and play rugby overseas. But I spoke to my manager and family and decided I wanted to try and stick with rugby league. "It was just go in and try and play my best footy and try and get that opportunity. And fortunately I did after that year. "Now when I get the chance to sit back after games, I think about doing my family proud. "But I'm also proud of myself for making the decision to stay and backing it." Patea said his main motivation had come from training one day with Penrith's squad in 2022, as part of their Pearls program. There, the top picks of talent from U19s and U17s experience a full day training with the NRL squad, and are handed the same kit and schedule as full-time players. "I spent that day with Moses (Leota) and Spencer," Patea said. "Talking to them, they were telling me about the club and how they came through. I wanted to experience that for myself. "It made me just want to stay." More of a rugby union watcher growing up, Leota and Leniu are now the men Patea look up to for their work ethic and aggression respectively. It's also the kind of player the Panthers need right now, after losing Leniu and his bench impact after 2023. "I hear a lot of people say I am like another, Spencer," Patea said. "That's a good thing for me. Spencer's obviously a really good player and what he did for the club when he was here, I want to do as well. "There are similarities in the way we run ... But I'm just trying to build confidence to play my game and not be compared to anyone else."

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