Small kiwi in the bush
Huawei, the leading global provider of information and communications technology, infrastructure and smart devices has
joined Kiwis for kiwi’s group of key sponsors to help fund more kiwi conservation efforts around the country. The
announcement comes just in time for the beginning of the 2020 kiwi hatching season.
Huawei has been improving the connectivity of New Zealand communities since 2005. Now, Huawei deputy managing director
Andrew Bowater says the company is excited to get involved in helping to preserve New Zealand’s most iconic native bird.
“New Zealand is renowned all over the world for its clean, green reputation and unique wildlife,” he says. “But not
everyone knows that New Zealand’s most recognisable icon, the kiwi, could disappear from the wild in just a few
generations. It’s hard to imagine future generations growing up without our national symbol. The work that Kiwis for
kiwi does is crucial for New Zealand and we’re proud to get behind them.”
Kiwis for kiwi executive director Michelle Impey says welcoming a leading-edge technology company to their family of
sponsors is a big deal for the charity.
“Kiwis for kiwi have some big goals, and technology will be key to helping us achieve them,” she says. “Huawei is well
known for its commitments in using technology to help conservationists develop new ways of protecting natural habitats. Partnering with such a
technology heavy-weight like Huawei proves that kiwi conservation is an issue that’s not just important to local
conservation organisations, it’s also becoming increasingly important to big business.”About Kiwis for kiwi
Only a few hundred years ago, millions of kiwi roamed Aotearoa. Today, New Zealand is home to around 70,000 kiwi, and
despite efforts that number drops by 2% every year.
Kiwis for kiwi is on a mission to turn that decline around. The charitable trust partners with kiwi conservation
projects all over New Zealand, with a long-term vision to increase the population by 2% every year and take our national
icon from endangered to everywhere. They work with Department of Conservation to deliver on the goals of the national
Kiwi Recovery Plan.