January 2018 was the hottest month in New Zealand since records began in 1909, with an average temperature across the country of 20.3°C. (Normally, says NIWA, it's 17.1°.) Clyde recorded the highest temperature of the month: 37.6°. As droughts and floods hit in equal measure, farmers find new ways and means of agriculture. But many are struggling to change as fast as the climate.
 
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February 9, 2018
 
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The heat is on

January 2018 was the hottest month in New Zealand since records began in 1909, with an average temperature across the country of 20.3°C. (Normally, says NIWA, it's 17.1°.) Clyde recorded the highest temperature of the month: 37.6°.

As droughts and floods hit in equal measure, farmers find new ways and means of agriculture. But many are struggling to change as fast as the climate.

 
 
 
 
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Now, you be the judge

There is one prize still to be awarded in Photographer of the Year—the Panasonic People's Choice award. Cast your vote either at the exhibition at Auckland Museum, where all 65 finalists are now on display, or view the finalists on our website and vote online.

Photo: Michelle Durrant

 
 
 
 
 
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#SundayDoco: The arid Namib

An amazing array of plants and animals survives in the Namib, the world’s oldest desert. They’ve had 50 million years to evolve cunning ways to cope with the heat.

 
 
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Wildfire!

In November 2011, a fire on Northland’s Karikari Peninsula was blown out of control by high winds onto drought-stricken land. The recipe for a catastrophic inferno is always the same.

 
 
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A climate of apathy

Some 9000 New Zealand homes stand less than 50 centimetres above the spring high tide. As seas rise, billions of dollars worth of property and infrastructure is at risk.

 
 
 
 
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2º from oblivion

Two degrees. It’s not much. But many of New Zealand’s native species occupy precarious ecological perches under siege from the various armies of habitat destruction, invasive species and human exploitation. Now, over the next century, the climate will change 20 times more rapidly than in any other period in history.

 
 
 
 
 
#NZGeoRadio
 
 
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'LIKE HITTING A BUSHFIRE AT SEA'

A Wellington ocean swimmer told Radio New Zealand that swimming straight into a huge jellyfish in the harbour was like running into a bushfire at sea.

 
 
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'MASSIVE SNOW MELT' IS A PROBLEM

Otago University researchers are warning the impact of the hot dry summer on our glaciers will affect hydropower generation, irrigation and agriculture in the future.

 
 
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BUSINESSES SHOULD PAY, SAYS POLL

A new survey shows strong support for commercial businesses, including dairy, to pay for the damage they cause the environment.