Regenerative Environmental Pioneer

[Applause]

people come and go

but only the land shall remain

the irony of that whakatauki is that due

to soil erosion

we’re losing the land even faster than

the people

i was asked recently what would the

mountain say if the mountain could speak

i paused for a moment and i thought what

would she say

i think she’d tell us to piss off i

think she would say

i’ve lived through ice ages i’ve had

dinosaurs roam across the puku of my

whenua

i’ve seen fires and i’ve seen floods and

i’ve seen droughts

and yes i have seen tsunamis

but i have never ever in my entire

existence

seen anything as willfully destructive

as you lot

you people so henceforth be gone

you vile creatures back to the place

from whence you came

but first of all pick up your rubbish

your plastic and your pesticides your

rats and your cats

your insects and your weeds muster lids

and possums

and i will once again regenerate the

body of my whenua

using my plants and insects lizards and

birds

to recreate the vast forests the forests

that once protected my rivers

so that fresh water can again flow to

the oceans

the oceans they sustain all of us

the truth is the mountain can talk and

has been talking

but we’ve been so consumed by the

minutiae of our everyday lives

that we fail to take notice that

us until covert 19 stopped us in our

tracks

then all of a sudden all around the

world people paused

started to observe the natural

environment around them

it was as if out of clean air

or at least non-polluted here we could

see mountainsides

on the horizon there were stars visible

in the skies

and there were birds in our backyards

they could sing

like they’re just falling from the sky

like mana from heaven

waiting for a pause in the traffic and

the pollution

to suddenly reappear in our lives fact

is they were there the whole time

we had just failed to take notice

87 percent of our population live in

urban areas

yet they are almost completely

disconnected from the natural

environment

clover 19 has shown us and the world

that we can change our behavior when we

want to but that generally we choose not

to

doing nothing is no longer acceptable

the environment deserves the same

intensive care that we have shown in our

response to covert 19.

the status quo is totally unacceptable

as president roosevelt said our

generation

is on a rendezvous with destiny

it is up to us in this moment in time

both individually and collectively to

make long-term sustainable change

for the environment and the economy

and it is the environment before the

economy we can no longer afford to pay

lip service to the environment

avatar or new zealand an isolated island

in the southwest pacific ocean

with a vibrant outward-looking

indigenous culture

if we cannot lead the way then who else

will

now you’re probably wondering who the

heck is this panifero pakiha

to have the temerity to talk to us about

the environment

well i’m a farmer and i live and i

breathe in the outside

environment day in day out rain

hail sunshine flood drought

i rely upon her to produce the healthy

natural food

that you take for granted if i cannot

produce food

you don’t eat we need to care for her

like our mother and our grandmothers

nurture her like our daughters

and our granddaughters

now i’m going to back it up here and

give you an idea of how

and why i’ve turned out to be the way i

am

people arrived here in the early 1840s

1842 duchess of fargo to be precise

that escaped the highland clearances and

ironically

the cholera epidemic they arrived with

very little apart from the family

like all early settlers were entirely

dependent

upon the kindness the good will

and the protection of iwi maori

they learned to speak the language and

the customs

and formed long and enduring

relationships

so much so that by the 1850s the

teenagers

the boys were deemed old enough to be

able to travel on horseback over a

thousand kilometres right across the

island in order to buy cattle for the

auckland market

now this could have only been achieved

with the goodwill

generosity kindness and protection of

iwi maori

and in fact we have a saying in our

family not a mere

it was only because of the kindness

the good will and protection of very

maori that the mural whanau are still

here today

and we’re still farming the same land

next to the same whanau that we met

those many many generations ago under

the korowai of waikato

the changes that these old people were

seeing on the land and its

people had a profound effect upon them

even more so

after land wars of the 1860s and the

subsequent

confiscations

i was extremely privileged growing up

around many many elders

both maori and pakiha and it was from

them that i gained knowledge of what

life had been like

for the many generations before our time

they had grown up in an age of using a

horse and plowed to seeing people

landing on the moon

it was almost as if as we improved in

our technological well-being

our relationship to the land and the

environment

deteriorated at an almost equivalent

rate became survival

in the economy first

the stream at the back of our farm

pre-1860 was like state highway one for

for taiwanese maori tens of thousands of

tons of produce

from the flour mills their flax mills

the orchards in the market gardens would

pass through there on the way

to supply auckland and the sydney

markets even as far as the californian

gold rushes

the elders used to talk to me about the

abundance

of our forests our rivers

our lakes and oceans in fact they used

to catch

so much white bait they would use the

surplus as fertilizer for their garden

which i know in today’s reality is a

complete sacrilege but that’s

what the times were my reality did not

reflect this

now we jump to the present day

now our total new zealand is becoming

world famous

in terms of irreversible soil erosion

scientists from japan britain france

and america are studying the east cape

of new zealand to thai rafiti

it is estimated that in one catchment

alone 35 million

tons of silt is being eroded down our

rivers and out to sea

every year it’s already raised the river

by up to 20 meters that’s kakite fenuwa

not even kakita no there is no ano there

is no again

once it is gone it is gone

so what to do i could see

what had happened in my area and i

wasn’t willing to wait

for another generation to fix the

problems of the past

the accumulative effect of what was

happening back here in the east cape

was like a massive oil slip coming down

our rivers into our oceans

but the difference being is that when

there’s an oil slick our nation goes

into overdrive to fix it

when the soil erosion in the back blocks

no one apart from the locals

who rely upon the land the river and the

sea

no one gives a damn here’s an analogy

you might be able to relate to

say you’ve been out on the lawn having a

few wines you go home but you’ve

forgotten to take in the blanket

you come back a couple of days later

you’re fully recovered

you pick up the blanket and holy heck

what is this

everything is dead all of the plants

and all of the organisms that rely upon

that have been starved of life

the same thing is happening to our

rivers and our oceans

too much sediment no light no plant life

no fish near series no power

crayfish nothing just barren rocks

so what to do like i said i could see

what had happened in my

area and i was not willing or prepared

to wait for another generation to fix

that problem

i decided to start in my own backyard

a once vibrant stream

that had been the lifeblood tetanui

maori was now

a stagnant fettered swamp choked

by willows and invasive plants

i decided to do my own regeneration in

my own backyard

now gandhi said four phases to starting

a pioneering movement

first they ignore you it’s fine with

that i’m a farmer i just want to get

stuck in and get the job done with no

undue attention

secondly they laugh at you

by the time they realize that i’m

laughing at them laughing at me we get

to the third phase

and that’s where they want to fight you

everything in the animal kingdom knows

not to provoke or antagonize a brightly

coloured object

a red-headed farmer in the middle of the

swamp with the chainsaws by

no means an exception

then after that they want to join join

you and that’s

where you get the ripple effect

by now it was obvious in a major

transformation had taken place

the plants and the weeds that were

blocking the river had gone

the river was flowing again

the natural flora and fauna was

reviving people could see

that it was no longer pointless

worthless or impossible it resonated

with them

and their way of life and their

connection to the river

and they wanted to be part of that

community they could see the benefit

for the children’s children’s children

by me cleaning up my backyard it had a

positive effect on their backyard

intergenerational sustainable

environmental

change so in summary in 2011

i got funding from the waikato river

authority

as part of the tainui treaty settlement

process in order to

improve the health and the well-being of

the waikato river

so with the chainsaw and digger

i started clearing kilometres of the

stream removed thousands of willows that

were blocking it

planted tens of thousands of trees

created dozens of white bait spawning

ponds started a pest control

program on all of the islands of the

waikato river delta

and finally building this boardwalk you

might think what’s up with the boardwalk

why would you

build the boardwalk wow if you want

intergenerational sustainable

environmental change

we have to start with our young people

they need to experience it to see that

river flowing

watch the fish coming in hear the birds

listen to the rattle of the harakiki and

the ropo in the swamp

then they connect to it it has meaning

and it resonates with them and they gain

ownership

that’s how you get into generational

sustainable environmental change

but where to where to from here

87 percent of our population live in

urban areas

international studies have shown a

direct correlation between our mental

and a physical wellbeing and our

connection to nature

now our child all new zealand is also

world famous not just in pest

eradication

but also in returning the flora and

fauna of endangered species

hitherto on offshore islands but now on

the mainland we want to bring it right

back into your backyard

and as chairs of the endangered species

foundation of aotearoa new zealand

i pledge to build upon the success of

our rural and our urban communities

not just in eradicating pests but

actually repopulating these landscapes

with the rarest of the rare

if we can empower our communities our

ewes

our kura our schools to play their role

in the restoration

of the more than four and a half

thousand endangered species in our tower

or new zealand

currently for example

there’s estimated to be less than 100

mature kaka big

trees left in the world yet most of us

can remember them growing in our

grandparents backyards

by empowering our communities and our

ewe and our schools

to come up with their own projects using

a combination of traditional knowledge

and modern technology we can provide

hope

we can provide a solution sorry in the

absence of hope

our communities nurturing nature

if i can do it in my backyard okay it is

slightly larger than most people’s

backyards

you can do it in your backyard no matter

how big or how small

it will make a difference at a time when

the mountain is calling us

it is time for us to heed her

with your basket and my basket combined

the people

and the environment can be sustained

thank you

[掌声]

人们来来去去,

但只有土地仍将保留

具有讽刺意味的是,

由于土壤侵蚀,

我们失去土地的速度

比人们

还快我最近被问到

如果山会说话,山会说什么

停了一会儿,

我想她会说什么我想她会告诉我们生气

我见过洪水,

我见过干旱

,是的,我见过海啸,

但我一生中从未

见过像你们这样故意破坏性的东西,

所以从今以后离开,

你们这些卑鄙的生物回到从哪里来的地方

你来了,

但首先捡起你的垃圾

你的塑料和杀虫剂 你的

老鼠和猫

你的昆虫和你的杂草 聚集盖子

和负

鼠 我将再次

使用我的植物和昆虫 蜥蜴和

鸟类

来再生我的身体 创造广阔的

森林 曾经保护我的河流的森林

使淡水可以再次流入

海洋 它们支撑着我们所有人的海洋

事实是山会说话而且

一直在说话

但我们已经被细枝末节所消耗

我们没有注意到

我们的日常生活直到隐秘的 19 停止了我们的

前进

然后突然间

全世界的人们都停下来

开始观察

他们周围的自然环境

,就好像没有干净的空气,

或者至少没有 -这里被污染了,我们可以

看到

地平线上的山坡,

天空中可以看到星星

,我们后院有鸟儿,

它们可以唱歌,

就像从天上掉下来

一样,就像天堂里的法力

在等待交通和污染的停顿

突然重新出现在我们的生活中 事实

是他们一直都在那里

我们只是没有注意到

87% 的人口生活在

城市地区,

但他们几乎完全

与世隔绝 f 从

自然环境中,

三叶草 19 向我们和世界展示

了我们可以随时改变我们的行为

,但通常我们选择

不做任何事已不再

可接受 环境应该得到

我们在回应中表现出的同样的重症监护

  1. 现状是完全不能接受的,

因为罗斯福总统说,我们这

一代人

正与命运交会,

此时此刻,我们

个人和集体要为环境和经济

做出长期可持续的改变

,这取决于我们。 是经济之前的环境,

我们再也不能

对环境

说三道四了 头像或新西兰

西南太平洋的一个孤立岛屿,

拥有充满活力的外向

本土文化

如果我们不能带路,那么

现在还有谁 ‘可能想知道

这个 panifero pakiha 到底是谁,居然敢

和我们

谈论环境问题,

我是农民,我是 我和我

每天都在外面的环境中呼吸 下雨

冰雹 阳光 洪水 干旱

我依靠她来生产你认为理所当然的健康

天然食物

如果我不能

生产

你不吃的食物 我们需要

像我们一样照顾她 母亲和我们的祖母

像我们的女儿和孙女一样养育她

现在我将在这里支持它,并

让您了解我是如何

以及为什么变成

现在这样的

人们在 1840 年代初到达这里的

1842 确切地说,法戈公爵夫人

逃脱了高地的清理和

具有讽刺意味

的霍乱流行,他们

除了家人之外几乎没有什么东西到达,

就像所有早期的定居者一样,他们完全

依赖于毛利人的善意、善意

和保护

他们学会了说这种语言

和风俗习惯

并形成了如此长久而持久的

关系

,以至于到了 1850 年代,

这些男孩被认为已经足够大,

可以骑马旅行超过

一千公里

为了在奥克兰市场买牛,现在就在岛上买牛,

这只有在毛利人

的善意

慷慨善良和保护下才能实现

,事实上,我们家有一种说法,

而不仅仅是因为

非常

感谢毛利人的善意和保护,壁画 whanau 今天仍然

在这里

,我们仍然在

同一个 whanau 旁边耕种,我们在怀卡托的

korowai 下遇到了许多世代

,这些老人的变化

在这片土地上看到,它的

人民对他们产生了深远的影响,

因此

在 1860 年代的陆战和

随后的

没收之后,

我非常荣幸地

在许多

毛利人和帕基哈长老身边长大,正是从

他们那里我获得了知识

在我们这个时代之前的许多代人的

生活是

怎样的 几乎就好像我们的技术水平提高了,

我们与土地和

环境的

关系以几乎相同的速度恶化,

首先成为经济中的生存者,

1860 年前,我们农场后面的溪流就像国道

一样 台湾毛利人 数万吨

来自面粉厂的产品 他们的亚麻厂

市场花园里的果园会

经过

那里 供应奥克兰和悉尼

市场 甚至远至加州

淘金热

我关于

我们丰富的森林我们的河流

我们的湖泊和海洋事实上他们

曾经捕捉到

如此多的白色诱饵,他们会将

剩余的用作他们花园的肥料

,我知道在今天的现实中这是

完全的亵渎,但这

就是我的时代 现实并没有

反映这一点

现在我们跳到

现在 现在我们的整个新西兰

在不可逆转的土壤侵蚀

科学家方面正变得世界闻名 om 日本 英国 法国

和美国正在研究

新西兰东海角到泰国 rafiti

据估计,仅在一个流域

就有 3500

万吨的淤泥被侵蚀到我们的

河流和大海中

,它已经使河流

上升了高达 20 米那是 kakite fenuwa

甚至没有 kakita 没有没有 ano

一旦它消失了它就消失了

所以我可以看到

我所在地区发生了什么

我不愿意

等待另一代人来修复

过去的问题

东开普省发生的事情的累积效应

就像巨大的石油滑坡从

我们的河流流入我们的海洋,

但不同的是,当

出现浮油时,我们的国家

会超速行驶以修复它

当后面的水土流失

除了

依赖土地、河流和海洋的当地人之外没有人阻挡时,

没有人在乎这里有一个类比,

你可以

说你已经在草坪上 喝了

几瓶酒,你回家了,但你

忘记带毯子

了,几天后你回来了,

你完全

康复了 赖以

生存的生物体 已经缺乏

生命 我们的河流和海洋也正在发生同样的事情

太多的沉积物 没有光 没有植物生命

没有靠近系列的鱼 没有动力

小龙虾 没有什么只是贫瘠的岩石

所以我说我可以做什么 看看

我所在地区发生了什么

,我不愿意或

准备等待下一代解决

这个问题

柳树和入侵植物

我决定在我自己的后院进行自己的再生

现在甘地说首先要开始

一个开创性运动的四个阶段

他们忽略了你这

很好我是一个农民我只是想得到

s 收拾好工作,不加注意地完成工作

其次,当他们意识到我在

嘲笑他们嘲笑我时,他们会嘲笑你 我们

进入第三阶段

,这就是他们想要

与动物王国中的一切战斗的地方 知道

不要激怒或对抗一个颜色

鲜艳的物体

沼泽中间的红发农民用电锯

绝不例外

然后他们想加入

你,这

就是你现在得到涟漪效应

的地方 明显地发生

了重大转变 阻碍河流的植物和杂草已经

消失 河流再次流动

天然动植物正在

复苏 人们可以

看到它不再是毫无意义的

毫无价值或不可能

与他们

和他们产生共鸣 生活方式以及他们

与河流的联系

,他们想成为那个

社区的一部分,他们可以看到我清理我的后背

对孩子们的孩子们

的好处

它对他们后院的

代际可持续

环境

变化产生了积极的影响,所以总的来说,在 2011 年,

我从怀卡托河管理局获得了资金,

作为泰努伊条约解决

进程的一部分,以

改善怀卡托河的健康和福祉,

所以 我用电锯和

挖掘机清理了几公里的

溪流 清除了阻挡溪流的数千棵柳树

种植了数万棵树

创建了数十个白饵产卵

在怀卡托河三角洲的所有岛屿上开始了害虫控制计划

,最后 建造这条木板路 你

可能会想木板路是怎么回事

你为什么要

建造木板路 哇如果你想要

代际可持续的

环境变化

我们必须从我们的年轻人开始

他们需要体验它 看到

河流流动

看着鱼进来 听到 鸟儿

听着沼泽里的 harakiki 和 ropo 的嘎嘎声,

然后它们连接起来 o 它有意义

并引起他们的共鸣,他们获得

所有权

,这就是你如何进入世代

可持续环境变化,

但从哪里到哪里从这里到哪里

87% 的人口生活在

城市地区

国际研究表明

,我们的心理

和 身体健康和我们

与自然的联系

现在我们的孩子 整个新西兰

不仅在消灭害虫方面

而且在归还

濒临灭绝物种的动植物方面也举世闻名

走进你的后院

,作为新西兰奥特罗亚濒危物种基金会的主席,

我承诺在

我们农村和城市社区的成功基础上再接再厉,

不仅在消灭害虫方面,而且

如果我们能够赋予我们的能力,实际上用最稀有的稀有物种重新填充这些景观。 社区 我们的

母羊

我们的库拉 我们的学校

恢复超过四个 例如,目前

在我们的塔楼或新西兰有 5000 种濒临灭绝的物种,

据估计,世界上只剩下不到 100 棵

成熟的卡卡

大树,但我们大多数人

都记得它们在我们的

祖父母后院生长

,赋予我们的社区和

母羊权力, 我们的学校

结合传统知识

和现代技术提出自己的项目我们可以提供

希望

我们可以提供解决方案对不起,如果

没有希望

我们的社区培育自然

如果我能在我的后院做的话好吧它

稍微大一点 与大多数人的

后院相比,

你可以在你的后院里做这件事,无论

它有多大或多小

,都会在

大山

呼唤我们的时候有所作为

环境可以持续

谢谢