The 2019 Prime Minister’s Science Prizes have been announced in a digital livestream event today.
The Prizes recognise the impact of science on New Zealanders’ lives, celebrate the achievements of current scientists
and encourage scientists of the future.
The event was postponed in March due to the Covid-19 pandemic and moved to a digital event.
The 2019 Prime Minister’s Science Prize, the premier award for science that is transformational in its impact, has been awarded to the Melting Ice and Rising
Seas team, a group of more than 20 geologists, glaciologists, climate and social scientists from Te Herenga
Waka—Victoria University of Wellington, GNS Science and NIWA, led by the university’s Antarctic Research Centre Te Puna
Pātiotio.
The scientists are behind the break-through discovery that Antarctica’s ice sheets melted rapidly in the past, and could
have a significant impact on global sea level rise over the next 80 years.
The team’s discovery began with work 15 years ago by New Zealand scientists who drilled and analysed ice and sediment
cores in Antarctica’s Ross Sea sector.
They found that Antarctic melt due to climate change could contribute to global sea level rise of 1.4 metres by the year
2100, rather than the one metre predicted back in 2013 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the
United Nations body charged with keeping the world up-to-date on the effects of climate change.
When the effect of land subsidence is taken into account, the rise could be as much as two metres for some places in New
Zealand.
They also found that Antarctica’s ice sheet has a stability threshold of 2 C of global warming, and that there is still
a pathway to mitigate the impact of sea level rise around the world.
Nominator Professor Dame Jane Francis, Director of the British Antarctic Survey, says the team has put New Zealand at
the forefront of global environmental research.
“Their research has made truly outstanding contributions. It is directly relevant to IPCC policy recommendations, and
the global attempt to limit CO2 emissions and stabilise global warming below 2°C.”
Team leader Professor Tim Naish from Victoria University of Wellington says the effects of climate change are incredibly
urgent. With the new evidence, scientists are moving their focus to communicating with decision makers on how to avoid
the worst impacts of climate change, he says.The Prime Minister’s 2019 MacDiarmid Emerging Scientist Prize Winner
Won by world-leading University of Auckland physicist Dr Miro Erkintalo, who has made pioneering contributions towards
the development of new laser technologies. Dr Erkintalo researches and develops new kinds of laser devices that could
enable many new and improved applications, including faster and cheaper internet. He has introduced a theoretical model
for the description of a new technology that can convert a single laser beam into hundreds or thousands of beams of
different colours, known as a microresonator frequency comb. Nominator Professor Roberto Morandotti, of Montreal’s
Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique, says “micro-combs” are projected to have a big role in many future
technologies and “therefore quite likely to have wide societal impact as well.”The Prime Minister’s 2019 Science Communication Prize
A Tūhoe astronomer who’s raised awareness about the significance of Matariki is the Prime Minister’s Science
Communications Prize winner for 2019. Professor Rangi Matamua didn’t realise the significance of the manuscript crafted
by his ancestor when first given it, but came to fall in love with Māori astronomy and educate thousands of New
Zealanders about Matariki. Through his research, he has discovered a narrative of the Matariki constellation comprising
of nine stars. Professor Matamua has drawn a large following on social media with podcasts and videos in English and te
reo Māori. His web series reached 1 million views in four months and more than 20,000 people follow his Living by the
Stars Facebook posts. In 2019 Professor Matamua presented his work to more than 10,000 people in a roadshow at 21 events
in Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia.The Prime Minister’s 2019 Science Teacher Prize
Christchurch teacher Dr Michelle Dalrymple is the first maths teacher to win the Prime Minister’s Science Teacher Prize.
Dr Dalrymple, Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Head at Cashmere High School, says every student deserves a champion
and is devoted to sharing her research and knowledge with other teachers around the country. She uses engaging and novel
ways to connect her students and other teachers into mathematics and statistics, and says a fundamental part of her
teaching is incorporating whanaungatanga, or teaching through relationships. Her nominator says her teaching stands out
because it is strongly based on cutting-edge mathematics and statistics education research, while providing creative and
fun strategies that are inspiring for her students.The Prime Minister’s 2019 Future Scientist Prize
A robot that’s designed for elderly and people with disabilities to take wheelie bins to and from the kerb, has won
17-year-old Christchurch school student Thomas James the Prime Minister’s 2019 Future Scientist Prize. A year 13 student
at Burnside High School, Thomas designed “Wheelie Drive” after noticing his elderly neighbour and grandparents struggled
to use their wheelie bins. For a student who doesn’t study technology or design, Thomas showed great tenacity in
researching and problem solving. He used lego models for his first prototype before learning about micro-processors,
programming, autonomous navigation and sourcing the many intricate components he needed to build a full-size
self-navigating robot. His nominator says he is a very talented engineer who’s developed and produced a system that
adult technologists would struggle to design and make.