'Critical' Minerals, Mining and Sustainable Futures

Wed May 20 2026 at 12:30 pm to 05:00 pm UTC+12:00

KKLT301 - Victoria University of Wellington | Wellington

School of Geography, Environment & Earth Sciences
Publisher/HostSchool of Geography, Environment & Earth Sciences
'Critical' Minerals, Mining and Sustainable Futures
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A half-day symposium exploring the socio-environmental and economic implications of critical mineral mining in Aotearoa New Zealand.
About this Event

This symposium brings together scholarly and practitioner perspectives to examine what mining critical minerals in New Zealand entails and whether/under what conditions, it might be pursued sustainably. With growth in global demand for minerals essential to the energy transition and as New Zealand resumes critical mineral trade deal with the US, the symposium will examine the opportunities and challenges associated with the extraction of critical minerals in Aotearoa New Zealand and consider how extractive practices might be pursued within existing regulatory frameworks and environmental management systems, while also addressing questions of sustainability, community engagement, and Māori rights as Treaty partners in resource governance.

This symposium is part of a series of events marking the 30th anniversary of the Development Studies programme at VUW.


Agenda

🕑: 12:30 PM - 12:35 PM
Welcome, introductions (and karakia) by the Head - SGEES
🕑: 12:35 PM
New Zealand’s critical minerals: occurrence, origin, and exploration
Host: Matt Hill

Info: New Zealand hosts a diverse range of critical mineral occurrences, encompassing rare and technology-enabling elements, precious commodities, and bulk construction materials fundamental to modern infrastructure. This presentation outlines their spatial distribution as well as some key geological processes responsible for the concentration of critical minerals. It further examines modern exploration and scientific approaches, emphasising how geoscientists integrate and interpret these data to reduce uncertainty and identify prospective exploration areas. The presentation will demonstrate digital mapping platforms that enable visualisation of mineral occurrences and mineral system components, data that can even be used in artificial intelligence and machine learning workflows to support the identification of new mineral deposits.


🕑: 01:10 PM
Criticality and other myths: a sustainable mining sector for Aotearoa?
Host: Glenn Banks

Info: Aotearoa does not have realistic prospects for a significant critical minerals mining sector, in the medium-term at least. This is despite the rhetorical flourishes of Minister Jones and an agreement with the increasingly erratic USA. This presentation seeks to lay to rest myths around the short-term future of critical minerals and mining in Aotearoa (it will tend to be small-scale, niche and/ or in combination with other minerals), it will not transform regional economies (the contributions are inevitably overstated), and under the current regime nor will it contribute significantly to national growth. Several key shifts in approach are required before the sector can realistically be linked to sustainable futures for Aotearoa.


🕑: 01:45 PM
Mining in Aotearoa New Zealand and Tangata Whenua - Insights from Ngāti Ruanui
Host: Rachel Arnott (Rae)

Info: Drawing on insights from the Ngāti Ruanui experience, this korero examines how mining intersects with whenua, tikanga, and kaitiakitanga, highlighting concerns around environmental stewardship, sovereignty, and intergenerational wellbeing.


🕑: 02:20 PM
Beyond the mine – Implications of mineral refining for Aotearoa
Host: Morgan Lowther

Info: The effects of mineral extraction stretch far beyond the mine itself. Most minerals must be refined – chemically converted to a useful material – and this process often dominates the overall environmental and economic impact. If we are to extract more minerals in Aotearoa, we need to consider what happens to them. Many of the refining processes used around the world could never be performed in New Zealand, producing hazardous wastewater and vast CO2 emissions. Offshoring our mineral refining dodges this issue but sacrifices economic benefits and abdicates environmental responsibility. Can we develop sustainable, economically viable processes to onshore refining? When does it make sense to do so? This presentation will consider how New Zealand’s minerals are currently refined, and what the future could look like for sustainable refining here in Aotearoa.


🕑: 02:55 PM
Symposium funding partners' presentations (VUW-DEVE and AusIMM NZ)
🕑: 03:00 PM
AFTERNOON TEA
🕑: 03:30 PM
Everyone is angry around here, and everyone is kind of right
Host: Sefton Darby

Info: The mining debate in Aotearoa New Zealand is as polarised as ever – and, unusually, most sides have a point. This presentation will interrogate three things. First: why we should be critical of the ‘critical minerals’ frame, and who benefits from treating urgency as a substitute for scrutiny. Second: how global structural and financial factors make new mines genuinely hard to establish, difficult to regulate, and risky to communities. Third: what the evidence actually tells us about what builds or destroys community trust in mining companies – and why the current government’s pro-mining enthusiasm may be the industry’s most significant near-term risk.


🕑: 04:05 PM
Panel Session: How might mining in NZ be approached ethically and sustainably?
Host: Paper presenters with
🕑: 04:50 PM - 05:00 PM
Wrap-off and conclusion
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

KKLT301 - Victoria University of Wellington, Kelburn Parade, Wellington, New Zealand

Tickets

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