Te Aupōuri is a relative newcomer to an aquaculture industry worth $1.6b a year to the New Zealand economy and, by 2035, it's expected to be worth over $3 billion each year.
Tag: Mussels. Showing results 1 - 10 of 17
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Te Whakatōhea is leading the way in mussel aquaculture
It's been two years since Te Whakatōhea Trust Board opened its mussel processing plant with dreams of creating jobs and economic stability for its tribal members. But then Covid-19 struck, with in
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Te Whānau ā Apanui granted $6m for land-based mussel spat hatchery
Today Economic Development Minister Stuart Nash launched Te Whānau ā Apanui Trust‘s plan for a $45 million land-based mussel spat hatchery, Te Huata and Mussel New Zealand, by announcing a governme
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Food safety warning to 'thoroughly cook mussels'
'Don’t eat raw or lightly cooked mussels', that's the warning from New Zealand Food Safety, after an increase in cases of a bacteria associated with food poisoning around the country this summer.
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No dividend for Sanford, higher dividend for Moana NZ
Two of New Zealand’s biggest seafood companies have sailed in different directions after another tough Covid-19 year.
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'Revive Our Gulf'- kūtai/mussels returning in numbers
Ngāti Whātua Ōrakei iwi, based in Tāmaki Makaurau, is part of an intergenerational plan to restore green-lipped mussel reefs in the Hauraki Gulf.
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Ōpōtiki wins US contract for $400m greenshell mussels export to the US
Not many people thought small-town Ōpōtiki could pull off New Zealand's first open ocean mussel farm and find global buyers for its product.
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Please cook mussels before eating- NZ Food Safety
Anyone who has eaten raw mussels and now feels unwell is encouraged to contact a doctor.
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Ngāti Manuhiri excited by efforts to restore health of moana
"We want to have the environment and our tāonga here for all the future generations," Mook Hohneck, of Ngāti Manuhiri, says.
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Police involvement in Te Oneroa-a-Tōhē dispute must be avoided, Fisheries Minister
Police involvement in the dispute over harvesting of mussel spat at Te Oneroa-a-Tōhē (Ninety Mile Beach) must be avoided, Minister of Fisheries Stuart Nash says.