Hauraki-Coromandel Post

Starry nights ahead

Project seeks to preserve the darkness of the sky

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Starry nights on the Ku¯ aotunu peninsula are a step closer to being protected with the Biosphere Dark Sky Project submitting a plan change to the Thames-coromandel District Council.

The project aimed to preserve the darkness of the sky north of Whitianga, by putting in place policies to prevent light pollution.

It has already received funding through regional tourism organisati­on Destinatio­n Hauraki Coromandel, and the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, and has submitted a draft plan change proposal to the Thames-coromandel District Council.

Ku¯aotunu Dark Sky Trust chairman Paul Cook said they were working through a few minor changes before the applicatio­n was heard.

“We are also building our applicatio­n to Darksky Internatio­nal (DSI) with the support of their nominated representa­tive, and this will be ready by the time the plan change process is complete, there will be a period required for consultati­on with affected parties, which we anticipate will be straight forward as there has been extensive communicat­ion with all affected parties through the process,” he said.

“We have carried out an effective communicat­ion campaign with a combinatio­n of email and paper flyers, social media group, website, and most importantl­y a series of public events, which have been very well supported.”

Cook said the group had been assisted in the plan change process by Debbie Donaldson from Ka¯ hu Consultant­s, who had also worked with Wairapa and Carterton councils on the establishm­ent of a Dark Sky area.

According to DSI, Dark Sky areas protect ecological­ly sensitive areas and universal heritage in the starry night sky.

Certified areas are required to use quality outdoor lighting, effective policies to reduce light pollution, ongoing stewardshi­p practices, and more.

Cook said Ku¯aotunu Dark Sky Trust was formally establishe­d in May 2023 and registered as a charitable trust in September 2023.

“The group arose from the Ku¯ aotunu Biosphere Working Group which had protection of the Dark Sky as one of its six ‘pillars’, but also built

on work done by astronomer Alastair Brickell and others promoting the concept over many years.”

The night skies north of Whitianga are particular­ly black, one of the reasons Brickell set up his observator­y there as Stargazers B&B and Astronomy Tours, and why the European Space Agency (ESA) approached him seeking to site one of their robotic telescopes within the proposed Dark Sky zone.

That telescope would form part of a worldwide collaborat­ion looking for space junk and potentiall­y hazardous asteroids.

Cook said multiple people were behind the project.

“I am on the board of the Ku¯ aotunu Biosphere Working Group, based mainly on my involvemen­t over many years with the O¯ pito Bay Ratepayers Associatio­n. Others are involved through their involvemen­t in astro tourism, their significan­t experience as amateur astronomer­s, and their involvemen­t in broader tourism activities across the Coromandel.”

Discussion­s with the certifying organisati­on DSI (previously known as Internatio­nal Dark Sky Associatio­n) were initiated three years ago, to understand the opportunit­y for the peninsula and the conditions to be met, he said.

The Biosphere Working Group then became involved, and a group formed to progress the idea.

There were a number of streams to the activities since then, mainly based on developing a proposed district plan change, which when adopted, would ensure outdoor and public lighting regulation­s meet the standards set by DSI, building support and awareness in the communitie­s directly and indirectly affected, and progressin­g a formal applicatio­n for recognitio­n as a Dark Sky community.

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? A Dark Sky community is in the works for Ku¯ aotunu.
Photo / NZME A Dark Sky community is in the works for Ku¯ aotunu.

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