Plenary/Panel speakers

Speakers are listed in alphabetical order.

Dr Rosie Bosworth
Thursday, 26 September - 2.45pm

Rosie is a future foods consultant, speaker and entrepreneur with a key focus on alternative protein systems (artificial meat,  animal proteins and dairy) and new technologies that are changing the face of how food is produced for global sustainability and health. She advises businesses, industry and government on various strategic pathways forward in the future of food and agriculture, as well as provides international insight into the alternative protein market globally. 

Kindly sponsored by Bell Gully

Bob Bower
Thursday, 26 September - 1.00pm

Bob has over 25 years’ experience in the field of applied water resource research including hydrology, hydrogeology and the biophysical sciences.

Throughout his career, he has shown an exceptional ability to work with diverse stakeholders in the implementation of innovative solutions to water management issues.

Through his stakeholder consultation and leadership skills, he has developed ‘first of their kind’ catchment scale aquifer restoration projects in North America and Australasia. In the Pacific Northwest (USA), he led the first managed aquifer recharge (MAR) ground water replenishment programme aimed at restoring aquifer levels and riverine base flows for the recovery of critically endangered salmonids. In 2006, he was aco-recipient of the Watershed Management Council’s national Walter C. Loudermilk Award (USA) for helping to restore riverine base flows using MAR to one of American Rivers top 10 most endangered rivers.

Since moving his family to New Zealand and becoming a citizen, Bob has spearheaded the development of several nationally recognised MAR pilot testing programmes in both the North Island (Gisborne and Hawke’s Bay) and the South Island (Canterbury and Southland). These New Zealand projects are the first of their kind in developing groundwater replenishment schemes, which incorporate an integrated and systems thinking approach to utilising natural catchment features to capture and store water. Through sustainably managed groundwater supplies, this approach seeks to improve water quantity and in some cases water quality while working to restore, protect and preserve environmental, social and cultural values.


Rachel de Lambert
Friday, 27 September - 11.10am

Rachel has over 30 years’ consultancy experience in landscape design, heritage planning and management, urban design and landscape assessment. She is recognised for her collaborative approach in multidisciplinary teams, working on challenging projects to deliver in respect of client aspirations alongside achieving beneficial community and environmental outcomes.

Rachel’s involvement with urban design critique and review includes the Auckland City and former Manukau City Urban Design Panels, and the Panuku Development Auckland (formerly Sea+City and then Waterfront Auckland) Technical Advisory Group, of which she remains one of the founding members.  She is currently Co-convenor for the AUDP.

She is a landscape architect and director at Boffa Miskell Ltd, an employee owned, New Zealand-based multi-disciplinary consultancy in planning, landscape architecture, urban design, ecology, biosecurity and cultural advisory.



Antony Gough
Friday, 27 September - 11.10am

Antony is the Managing Director of The Terrace Christchurch Ltd, is known in Christchurch for creating “The Strip”, a parade of bars and restaurants along Oxford Terrace that became a popular social precinct and tourist destination along the Avon River until the earthquakes in 2011.

Antony graduated from the University of Canterbury in 1970 with a Bachelor of Science degree, with honours, with a special interest in nuclear physics. After graduating he worked initially as a trainee computer programmer and within five years headed up a staff of 25 who implemented one of the first real time computer networks connecting branches from Auckland to Invercargill. He then left this and ran a sheep farm in Chertsey for 13 years while also building up a property portfolio. 

In 2014 Antony was awarded an honouree doctorate in Commerce by the University Of Canterbury for his work in rebuilding Christchurch after the earthquakes.

In August 2013, Antony’s $140 million re-development project centred on his former Oxford Terrace precinct began. The Terrace project, a CBD’s major rebuild project, has transformed the iconic site bounded by Oxford Terrace, Cashel Mall and Hereford Street into a dynamic hub of retailers, hospitality providers, office space, and car-parking. Laneways, courtyards and roofed terraces connect the buildings and central courtyard with the different elements of the development, providing generous public spaces within the development.

The Terrace combines the best of global urban design with the unique features of Christchurch to deliver a village development that will be a landmark in the city for the next 100 years


Dr Catherine Knight
Friday, 27 September - 10.50am

Catherine is an author, policy consultant and environmental historian. She is a Senior Associate at the Institute for Governance and Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington and Honorary Research Associate at the School of People, Environment and Planning, Massey University. 

She has published four books, all relating to New Zealand’s environmental history:

  • Beyond Manapouri: 50 years of environmental politics in New Zealand (Canterbury University Press, 2018), a finalist in the New Zealand Heritage Book Awards
  • New Zealand’s Rivers: An environmental history (Canterbury University Press, 2016), long-listed for the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards, short-listed for the New Zealand Heritage Book Awards and selected as one of The Listener’s Best Books for 2016. 
  • Ravaged Beauty: An environmental history of the Manawatu (Dunmore Press), which was the winner of the J.M. Sherrard Award for Regional and Local History. 
  • Wildbore: A photographic legacy (Totara Press, 2018). 


Dr Judy Lawrence
Friday, 27 September - 10.30am

Judy  is Senior Research Fellow, New Zealand Climate Change Research Institute, Victoria University of Wellington. Judy’s research focuses on climate change adaptation, decision making under uncertainty, and related institutional issues that support adaptation action. Judy leads development of Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (DAPP) planning and its application in New Zealand. She co-chaired the New Zealand Climate Change Adaptation Technical Working Group advising the Minister of Climate Change Issues on adapting to climate change 2016-2018. Judy co-authored the Ministry for the Environment national Coastal Hazards and Climate Change Guidance 2017 and is currently Co- Lead Author for the Australasia Chapter of the IPCC Sixth Assessment. 


Arapata Reuben
Friday, 27 September - 11.10am

Arapata is the current Chair Te Ngāi Tūāhuriri Rūnanga, Tuahiwi Marae Trustee and represents Ngāi Tūāhuriri on the Ashburton, Christchurch West – Melton and Waimakariri water zone committees and has chaired the Christchurch – West Melton committee for the past four years. In 2005 he started work with Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu as the Team Leader for Whakapapa Ngāi Tahu and has been managing the team for the past eight years.

Having grown up and still residing in Tuahiwi, Arapata has a strong understanding of the Ngāi Tūāhuriri history, values and whakapapa. Traits that have guided him in his many various roles, including the formative years of Matapopore Trust. A trust established under the mandate of Ngāi Tūāhuriri to work alongside CERA during the rebuilding of Christchurch. His work with the Endangered Species Recover Group for Kiwi was acknowledged by both the Department of Conservation and Kiwis for Kiwi last year when he received the Mana Tiaki award for leadership in Kaitiakitanga. 


Bret Walker
Thursday, 26 September - 11.00am

Bret is a barrister practising from Sydney, Australia.  He was admitted to the New South Wales Bar in 1979. He was appointed Senior Counsel in 1993, Queens’ Counsel in 1994 and was president of the NSW Bar Association from November 2001 to November 2003. He was president of the Law Council of Australia from 1997 to 1998. His practice includes many appeals, frequently in the High Court of Australia.

Bret was editor of the NSW Law Reports 2006 – 2018 and was a member of the NSW Health Clinical Ethics Advisory Panel 2003 - 2012. He has been a Director on the Board of the Sydney Writers' Festival 2000 - 2012. He was a foundation fellow of the Australian Academy of Law since 2007, and a member of the Uniform Legal Services Council since 2014.

He was governor of the Law Foundation of NSW from 1996 to 2007, and has been a Commissioner or Special Commissioner of Inquiry on a number of occasions including: 

  • a Special Commission of Inquiry into Sydney Ferries Corporation in 2007
  • an Inquiry into Campbelltown and Camden Hospitals 2003 2004

Most recently Bret was the Commissioner for the South Australian Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission.  The purpose of the Royal Commission was to investigate the operations and effectiveness of the Murray-Darling Basin system.

The report from the Royal Commission was released on 29 January 2019 and canvasses (broadly) the history of human interactions (including Aboriginal interactions) with the waterways in the Basin, the legislative framework for the use and protection of those waterways and the plans generated under the Water Act, how those plans have operated in practice and whether the outcomes accord with what the legislation intended, aspirationally or otherwise.

The report highlights the importance of listening to and respecting the insights of indigenous communities who identify with the waterways in the Basin, and of the need to recognise the probable impacts of climate change on the future uses of those waterways.

These topics will resonate with New Zealand practitioners of Resource Management Law and the report provides insights that may be applicable to the issues of governance, compliance and enforcement which we all grapple with, including the important issue of transparency.


Professor Jenny Webster-Brown
Thursday, 26 September - 1.00pm

Jenny holds adjunct positions with the University of Canterbury and Lincoln University, having recently retired as the inaugural Director of the Waterways Centre for Freshwater Management. 

The Waterways Centre is a teaching and research centre created in 2009 by the two universities to help improve freshwater resource management in New Zealand, by communicating scientific information on freshwater systems to tertiary students, to water industries and regulatory bodies, and to the public.  

Jenny is a graduate of Otago University and the University of Western Australia, and has worked as a water quality scientist, researcher and consultant for over 30 yrs, initially with DSIR in Wellington and with ESR in Auckland.  

She also lectured in water quality and environmental science at the University of Auckland, before moving to Canterbury.


Robert van Duivenboden
Thursday, 26 September - 11.00am

Rob is an Environment Manager with the S.O.E. Pāmu Farms, NZ’s largest farmer.  Pāmu has significant Forestry, Livestock, and Dairy operations nationwide, and is the world’s biggest deer farmer.  With over 20 years professional experience in water quality issues and RMA processes, his present role includes seeking solutions for water quality which encompass profitability, People, Animals and Environment.  Following a term with the UK Environment Agency, and a decade in NZ consultancy, Rob has a keen interest in planning solutions for cumulative adverse effects and the interplay between Point Source and Non-Point Sources, in catchments nationwide.  Climate crisis responses, greenhouse gas mitigations and offshore customer demands for authentic provenance keep him awake at night.  Nitrogen loss mitigations at source, via both system change and new technologies, are a special interest.  Breaking commodity production by supporting Pāmu Foods’ value-added products and diversification, is an exciting part of the role (direct to customer venison, deer milk, sheep milk, organic dairy products). 


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