Art & Entertainment | Book Reviews | Education | Entertainment Video | Health | Lifestyle | Sport | Sport Video | Search

 


UNESCO figure behind NZ’s world heritage hopes

Media release – March 8, 2010

Margaret Austin – the key UNESCO figure behind NZ’s world heritage starlight reserve hopes


If a group in Brasilia vote for world heritage starlight reserves in July, former Cabinet minister Margaret Austin will have played a key part in fighting to get world night sky reserves established.

Austin has been leading a campaign to ensure Tekapo – Aoraki/Mt Cook is one of the first reserves to receive approval if the UNESCO world heritage committee decides to accept some selected night skies as reserves. Prime minister John Key has given $10,000 to the campaign which climaxes in Brasilia in July.

Austin was first approached four years ago to become involved. Tekapo night sky enthusiast Graeme Murray and Canterbury University Professor Phillip Butler approached asked for her help because of her involvement in UNESCO. They knew that world heritage issues were a UNESCO responsibility.

``I have kept the project in front of the officials at the World Heritage centre, have met with other astronomers including Prof Alec Boksenberg, the chair of the National Commission for UNESCO UK and Professor of Astrophysics at Cambridge and Martin Lord Rees, president of the Royal Society London, Astronomer Royal and Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.

``I received a very good reception to my presentation at the launch of the International Year of Astronomy and I have had significant in-put along the way to ensuring adoption of the project by the World Heritage Committee in Brasilia in July.’’

Austin and the starlight reserve working group will seek Martin Lord Rees’s support for the project when he visits Christchurch on March 22 as the Rutherford lecturer for the Royal Society.

Austin said it has been critical to have the support of the Prime Minister as Minister of Tourism and the Minister of Conservation as minister in charge of the Department of Conservation which is the lead agency for world heritage in the lead up to Brasilia.

The principal hurdle has been to include astronomical heritage as important to a number of monuments and sites and as important to landscapes and cultural landscapes. Once that is achieved approval should follow.

Austin said the Mackenzie Working Party needed to know that the people of New Zealand are behind creating a starlight reserve in the Mackenzie. A groundswell of public support has great effect on the international community and will provide stimulus to the efforts to gain the approval of the WHC.

``Everything is political and they thrive on goodwill and tangible support. It is a case of ‘come on NZ – get behind us’. For NZ, world heritage status provides publicity money cannot buy.

``Te Wahipounamu world heritage site on the West Coast of the South Island is a great example of increasing international and domestic tourism from world heritage status. Astro-tourism is already attracting huge numbers particularly from countries where pollution and light are preventing people from seeing the stars.
The Mt John Observatory of the University of Canterbury is the centre for astronomical research in New Zealand with worldwide networks established with astronomers. The night sky in the Mackenzie has received domestic and international attention as pristine, accessible and part of a great experience. ‘’

Austin said the media attention nationally and internationally since this project got underway had been unprecedented and would undoubtedly have had an impact on tourism generally.

Ends

 
 
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 

Charity Travel: Three Kiwis Skateboard Through The Andes And Atacama Desert

Three young Kiwis have become the first people to ever skateboard through the driest desert in the world... More>>

"Mood Of The Nation": Nation Moody

Although 2011’s mood was above the historical average, it was substantially down on the preceding two years, and would have been down further if it were not for an improvement around the time of the Rugby World Cup. More>>

Werewolf: Nature’s Boy - On Terence Malik

It’s easy to think of Malick films coming in pairs. In the 1970s: Badlands and Days of Heaven. Before those, he grew up in Oklahoma and Texas as the eldest of three brothers, studied philosophy at Harvard and Oxford but quit before finishing his doctorate. Then he studied film-making and got Badlands out just before he was 30. More>>

Werewolf: Classics - Tom’s Midnight Garden (1958)

For anyone trying to write about it, Tom’s Midnight Garden poses a significant problem. The twist ending will be well known to anyone who has read the book, but first time readers would justifiably want to kill anyone who spoils the surprise, which provides one of the most satisfying and moving resolutions in children’s fiction. More>>

ALSO:

Get Your Programme Here: Wellington Fringe Festival Begins

"We’ve got three weeks celebrating weird and wonderful expressions of art – around 60 dance, music, comedy, visual arts and theatre performances in 30 sites around the city featuring hundreds of participants…" More>>

At The Weekend:

Best Prize Ever: All Blacks Score Big At Westpac Halberg Awards

Rugby was the big winner at the 2011 Westpac Halberg Awards, with the World Cup winning All Blacks scoring three of the major Award categories, before capping it off by claiming the supreme Halberg Award. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Images: Wellington Sevens Costumes 2012 Part III - Even more Photos Of Sevens Costumes

Scoop is running low on ideas for seven-costume-related blurbs, but has to say that the undead have a high average awesomeness this year. More>>
Day Two 94 arrested during Sevens weekend, and 68 evicted from stadium ... oh and New Zealand won.

ALSO:

AIDS Foundation: New Study Shows 1 In 5 With HIV Don’t Know It

On the eve of the Get it On! Big Gay Out, a ground-breaking study has revealed that 1 in 5 gay and bisexual men with HIV in Auckland don’t know they have it. The study is the first time that a measure of undiagnosed HIV has been recorded in New Zealand. More>>

ALSO:

LATEST HEADLINES

 
 
 
Culture
Search Scoop  
 
 
powered by newsagent
NZ independent news