13 Apr 2023

$10.8m fund announced for research to help recovery from Cyclone Gabrielle and Auckland floods

12:11 pm on 13 April 2023
Flooding in Wairoa after the river burst its banks due to heavy rain from Cyclone Gabrielle.

Flooding in Wairoa after the river burst its banks due to heavy rain from Cyclone Gabrielle. Photo: Wairoa District Council's Emergency Controller

The government has announced a $10.8 million fund for urgent scientific research to help the recovery in areas hit by Cyclone Gabrielle and the Auckland floods.

Research, Science and Innovation Minister Dr Ayesha Verrall said the funding would support research into stopbank damage, air and water quality and mapping landscape changes.

More than $5.7 million has already been allocated.

Ayesha Verrall

Research, Science and Innovation Minister Dr Ayesha Verrall. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

"We must capture knowledge and learn from this experience if we are to build resilience in the face of future emergencies and extreme weather events," Verrall said in a statement.

A portion of funding has been ring-fenced to enable Māori communities to access science services to support decision making, in line with Te Ara Paerangi - Future Pathways objectives to embed Te Tiriti in the research, science and innovation system and invest in Māori aspirations.

"While we are allocating funding to the most urgent and potentially impactful projects, I am pleased to see many science organisations, institutions and researchers reprioritising their existing funding to support research and science activities relevant to the response," Verrall said.

"I know that the sector will continue to be flexible to changing needs and demands as our communities recover.

"Once again the science community has come together during an emergency, just like it did to support the Covid-19 response. It's encouraging to see the science community working together and being so responsive to the needs of New Zealand. This is how a well functioning research, science and innovation system can work."

These aerial shots taken before and after Cyclone Gabrielle show a section of Gisborne's Waipaoa River between Ormond and Te Karaka. The Waipaoa River burst its banks in several places, forcing people to evacuate and make for higher ground

Gisborne's Waipaoa River burst its banks in several places during Cyclone Gabrielle, forcing people to evacuate and make for higher ground. Government funding will support research into stopbank damage and landscape changes. Photo: LINZ

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