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Displaying items 226 - 250 of 3666 in total
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The big benefit of tree planting in Hawke's Bay
Tree planting efforts around Hawke's Bay hill country farms are paying off, new data shows.
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How New Zealand is boosting the US space race with China
New Zealand is becoming increasingly involved, even as the defence force denies its tentative steps into space have anything to do with military operations. Audio
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Alcohol retailers fight Rotorua’s proposed freeze on new liquor off-licences
A health official says Rotorua's alcohol-related harm is now above the national average.
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Tariff turmoil fails to dampen dairy demand
Prices have risen in the latest global auction overnight to their highest level in nearly three years.
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Warning tariffs could push food prices higher
Just how much have food prices increased in the past year? RNZ takes a look.
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How one man created 6 million Wikipedia articles, and why he stopped
A Swedish linguist designed a bot that almost entirely created a Cebuano-language Wikipedia of 6 million articles, but the Isjbot was eventually retired.
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The bus station using classical music to drive trouble away
Dramatic orchestral symphonies, soaring operatic solos and piano sonatas have been blasting from speakers at Christchurch's bus interchange.
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Auckland mayoral candidate urges deputy mayor to join race
Kerrin Leoni accused Mayor Wayne Brown of "bully behaviour" against his deputy Desley Simpson.
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The climate question: where COP fits into the world's response
"We all know, those of us who are involved in the process, that the COP process is an imperfect one - but it's the process we have." Audio
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Shining a light on the Southern Ocean's deep, dark underworld
Four thousand metres below the surface lies a mysterious and alien world with a staggering diversity of strange creatures.
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Webb telescope captures planet's death plunge into star
The James Webb Space Telescope has captured a planet's death plunge into a star caused by the gradual erosion of the alien world's orbit.
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Trump spares smartphones, computers, other electronics from his 125 percent China tariffs
The US government has granted tariff exclusions for smartphones, computers and other electronics imported largely from China.
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Putting the new Defence Capability Plan in context
Explainer - $12 billion sounds like a lot to spend on the military. But is it, really? Audio
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Air Chathams may pull Whakatāne route
Air Chathams needs support from Whakatāne District Council and the community if is to continue providing flights to the Eastern Bay.
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Magnificent Seven stocks to add more than $1 trillion in value after Trump pauses some tariffs
US President Donald Trump's 90-day tariff pause is easing pressure on tech giants that had tumbled in recent sessions.
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Stocks plunge on tariff turmoil, VIX fear gauge spikes
In Asia, Hong Kong's Hang Seng's 13 percent one-day slump was the largest since 1997.
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How do Queenstown residents feel about increasing tourism?
Queenstown has been suffering from growing pains for years but with visitor and resident numbers continuing to swell it's turning into a full-blown belly ache. Audio
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Feature interview: the romantic comedy fact checkers
Paul Eastwick studies attraction and relationships and fact checks Hollywood's version of romance in his podcast, Love Factually. Audio
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New satellite data shows NZ's major cities are sinking
Over the coming decades and centuries, rising seas will pose increasingly serious problems for all coastal communities.
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Trump can end market downturn whenever he wants, commentators say
Though international markets continue to plummet, Trump could stop the slide whenever he wants, commentators say.
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Flu season comes early as record high cases sparks warning
A public health adviser says the winter flu season appears to be kicking off early, as cases spike across the Tasman.
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China hits back hard in global trade war
The world's second biggest economy has announced additional tariffs of 34 percent on US goods.
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Former ECan chair blasts councillors for 'acting like emus'
Environment Canterbury's former chair says his colleagues are ''acting like emus'' by allowing staff to continue planning work in the face of legislative change.
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The tenancies that have lasted 20 years
One Wellington woman knew her tenancy was unusual, but she didn't realise just how much.
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Forty percent of most urgent hospital repairs aren't being worked on
Some projects marked as 'completed' by Health NZ still need more fixes.