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Measuring Progress - Environment

1.1 Project Tohu

Action

Revegetate Coronet Forest through the implementation of Project Tohu. The vision guiding Project Tohu is recloaking the giants of the Whakatipu Basin. This project will be a leading example of how large-scale ecological restoration can be successfully achieved in the district. More than 500,000 indigenous grasses, shrubs, and trees will be planted across the south-facing slopes of Coronet Peak. This site was the location of the former Coronet Forest which was harvested to remove a major source of wilding conifers. This project will restore and protect our local indigenous ecosystem, improve water quality within the catchment, and sequester carbon.

Key Initiatives
  • Collaborate with Kāi Tahu to ensure mātauraka Kāi Tahu guides regeneration efforts, enhancing biodiversity and cultural connections to the land.
  • Engage the community, volunteers, and local conservation groups in planting and maintenance efforts to foster stewardship and environmental education.
  • Implement ecological best practices to ensure successful establishment of native species, enhance habitat connectivity, and improve climate resilience.
  • Monitor progress and ecosystem recovery through scientific assessments and community involvement.
  • Seek funding and support partnerships to expand the project and accelerate native revegetation across the Whakatipu region.
Tohu4
1.1
Project Details
Investment
What is this?
Investment Value (Estimate)
  • <$20k
  • $20K - $100K
  • $100K - $500K
  • >$500K
  • To be confirmed/still under review
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Key Partners

Kāi Tahu, Te Tapu o Tāne, Citycare Property, e3 Scientific, local conservation and community organisations.

Kāi Tahu Value Alignment

Haere whakamua - Future focused

Rakatirataka - Leadership

Mauri - Life force

Continuing action Partnered delivery
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