Rowan: Launch of the Clean Technology Centre
Jenny Rowan
Speech -
Official Launch of the Clean Technology
Centre
Thursday November
18
11am –
12.30pm
Venue: 13 Miro Street
Otaki
Kia Ora Koutou – welcome and warm
greetings to you all
• The Honourable Wayne
Mapp
• The Honourable Phil Goff
• MPs Nathan Guy,
Darren Hughes, Charles Chauvel & David Shearer
• My
fellow Mayors: Celia Wade Brown & Nick Leggett
• Business Leaders
• Science Leaders
• Nigel
Kirkpatrick and his team from Grow Wellington
• Stuart
Pritchard
• Tanga Whenua
• Ladies & Gentlemen
It is very exciting and a great privilege to host you in our District today for the official launch of the CleanTechnology Centre.
This is an important day for Otaki, for our District, and for the Region.
I want to acknowledge all of you. Who have brought vision, wisdom and skills to the table, to make this possible.
The opportunity for us to work together collaboratively and in a sustainable way using smart science and technology is a dream that I’m sure we all share today.
Nigel has provided a very useful background to this project. The impetus for it, the major players, and the potential benefits for us all.
We are especially grateful to him, to Steven Finlay and the team at Grow Wellington for their support and commitment.
This morning, I want to talk about our Kapiti perspective on the project. And outline why I believe it is important for us.
The Kapiti Coast
District Council is recognised nationally for its work in
encouraging conservation, bio-diversity, sustainability, and
community involvement in environmental issues.
We have
worked very hard in this space for the past 6 to 8
years.
This very important project, is just one of a
number our Council has been pursuing.
In fact, the whole
of our Long Term Council Community Plan is focused on four
central principles of environmental, economic, social and
cultural sustainability.
This project sits alongside a
host of other sustainability initiatives the Council has
undertaken. Three I’d like to mention are:
• the
adoption of Plan Change 75 which makes it compulsory for new
houses to either have a 10,000, litre rainwater tank or a
4,500 litre water tank and a grey water system, and;
• our ground-breaking Sustainable Home & Garden Show which over the past five years has provided a high profile stage for a range of sustainable smart technology solutions that benefit business, homes and the environment;
• the innovation funds we have established for water, waste and energy.
In the big picture, the development, manufacture
and use of clean technology presents a very positive and
viable way forward for our District, our Region, and the
clean, green brand of our country.
There are numerous
good reasons for our enthusiasm for this project. They
include:
• the availability of a great commercial site
that can develop in a town that is very keen to be actively
involved;
• support from a Council that has strong
aspirations to be a leader in the sustainable development
space;
• a strong Maori business sector that boasts
more than 500 Maori businesses from Foxton to Paekakariki,
many of whom have shown themselves to be forward thinking in
adopting and demonstrating sustainable
technologies;
• an agricultural and rural hinterland
with farmers and horticulturalists keen to support and
demonstrate smart agricultural practices;
• a growing
hub of companies operating here who are strong players in
this field.
I acknowledge the vision of the Otaki
Community Board and the role it plans to take in encouraging
the trial and the up-take of new technology.
Some of you will know Otaki has put itself ‘out there’ aspiring to be the first New Zealand ‘off-grid’ town, and a net supplier to the national energy grid.
Having a town – prepared to offer itself as a trial ground for smart, sustainable, small-scale technology - is most definitely a key feature of this project.
I particularly want to
acknowledge the role two of our senior Council staff have
had in identifying sustainable domestic technology and clean
technology, as areas for potential growth and development.
Dr Gael Ferguson and Tamsin Evans have demonstrated both
vision and persistence in putting this project on the agenda
for all of us.
These two women have been central to the
project, both in the thinking that’s gone on behind the
scenes, and in the networks and alliances they’ve fostered
and encouraged.
• They enabled the Community Board to see a ‘big picture’ for the development of Otaki as a community prepared to be a ‘creative laboratory’ for the trial of energy efficient systems for housing, commerce, and industry.
• They introduced SpectioNZ Technologies – a
key player in the new venture – to Stuart Pritchard of
Pritchard Enterprises encouraging him to house the new
centre. Thank you - Stuart for coming on board in such a
positive and energetic way.
• And over the past six
years, they have also put the whole concept of sustainable
domestic technology in front of both the Council and Grow
Wellington in a determined and persuasive manner.
I want
to thank SpectioNZ for its enthusiastic participation in the
project. Internationally, there are a number of large-scale
waste-to-energy technology operations, but what makes
SpectioNZ relevant and exciting for Kapiti, is their ability
to apply the technology at a smaller scale, to suit our size
and conditions.
We are delighted to be the place where
this technology – with its global potential – is being
developed.
As a Council we are very keen to work
collaboratively with research and funding agencies, such as
the Ministry for Research, Science and Technology.
Moving ahead. One of Council’s key economic
development objectives is its continued partnership with
Grow Wellington - to develop this very important Centre of
Excellence for Clean Technology.
Our community’s two biggest economic development investments are with Nature Coast, our economic development agency, and Grow Wellington.
So obviously we are delighted to be engaged in this project, and very happy to see ratepayer dollars invested in a sector that has the potential to bring significant benefit to the District and the wider region.
To be here today -
at the launch of New Zealand’s first Clean Technology
Centre - is a milestone and an achievement for our District
and for the region.
• I thank you all for the many
and various contributions you have made.
• I thank you
for making this inspirational project possible, and I wish
us all every success in building this unique new enterprise
together.
Tena koutou katoa
ENDS