Tag Archives: diesel

New Zealand’s Refinery Destruction Was Not Policy – It Was Economic Sabotage

From Mykeljon Winckel @ elocal
via Robin Westenra @ seemorerocks substack

New Zealand today stands in the jaws of a recession deeper and more structural than anything we have seen in decades. Businesses are folding. Workers are fleeing. Families are giving up hope. And yet, somehow, among all the noise, one catastrophic act of economic vandalism continues to escape the national reckoning it deserves:


The deliberate destruction of New Zealand’s only oil refinery at Marsden Point.

Not downgraded. Not mothballed. Destroyed — with no replacement, no transition plan, and no economic modelling worthy of the name.

This was not incompetence. This was government-induced economic terrorism against the long-term interests of the New Zealand people.

And it began under Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

The Refinery That Anchored a Nation

Marsden Point wasn’t just an industrial site — it was the beating heart of New Zealand’s energy security. Built in 1964, expanded repeatedly, and modernised as recently as 2018 with a $365 million Te Mahi Hou project, the refinery produced:

  • NZ’s petrol
  • NZ’s diesel
  • NZ’s jet fuel
  • NZ’s bitumen
  • NZ’s chemical feedstocks
  • NZ’s industrial gases
  • NZ’s fertiliser inputs

It reduced emissions. It added resilience. It protected our sovereignty.

And then, with ideological zeal dressed up as climate virtue, Ardern’s government backed its closure. Not because it was failing — but because Wellington wanted “alignment with global decarbonisation trends,” a phrase now exposed as vacuous marketing gibberish.

The government knew — yes, knew — that New Zealand would become 100% dependent on imported refined fuels. They knew that we would lose:

  • 60 days of crude storage, replaced by just 8 days of refined fuel reserves
  • All domestic bitumen production
  • All domestic jet fuel resilience
  • All domestic ability to refine crude in an emergency

They knew a natural disaster could sever our lifeline. They knew a geopolitical conflict could choke our supply. They knew global refiners could charge whatever they wanted.

And they did it anyway.


“We now only have 8 days of fuel reserves compared to 60 days when Marsden Point was operational… New Zealand is totally reliant on imported fuels… We are without fuel security for the first time in 60 years.”


Ardern’s Legacy: Dependency and Decline

New Zealand is now one shipping delay away from grounded aircraft, immobilised logistics, and a nationwide economic choke-hold. This is not hypothetical — basic supply-chain maths confirms it.

And four years later, the current government under Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has done nothing to reverse or even question this national insanity.

Political cowardice has replaced political leadership. Corporate appeasement has replaced national resilience. And ordinary New Zealanders — the workers, the truckers, the small businesses — are paying the price.

The Economic Reality: Cheap Energy Builds Nations

Every wealthy nation has one thing in common:

Abundant, cheap, reliable domestic energy.

Not imported fragility. Not ideological wish-casting. Not the childish delusion that a country can “transition” by destroying what sustains it.

The closure of Marsden Point was not a transition. It was a surrender — a forced de-industrialisation. A deliberate kneecapping of national capability.

New Zealand now imports bitumen, jet fuel, and diesel from overseas refineries operating under far poorer environmental and labour standards — including, in some cases, the use of child labour in raw material supply chains.

This is what the so-called “clean energy transition” looks like: pollution exported, sovereignty surrendered, illusion maintained.


A nation without energy security is not a nation. It is a client state.


Karl Barkley: One Citizen Doing More Than the Entire Government

While Parliament sleeps, one man — Karl Barkley, engineer and farmer — is fighting to restore what politicians destroyed.

His letter speaks for millions:

“We now only have 8 days of fuel reserves compared to 60 days when Marsden Point was operational… New Zealand is totally reliant on imported fuels… We are without fuel security for the first time in 60 years.”

He has launched KIWI REFINING COMPANY LTD with a vision to bring the refinery back to life, under public ownership, for the public good.

A single citizen, doing the work Cabinet refuses to touch.

Because he understands what the political class either cannot — or will not — accept:

A nation without energy security is not a nation. It is a client state.

The Truth: We Are on the Brink of National Failure

New Zealand is:

  • Losing skilled workers at record rates
  • Watching businesses collapse weekly
  • Facing rising energy bills and grid instability
  • Running a government addicted to debt and slogans
  • Led by politicians who refuse to confront the damage already done

Cheap domestic energy is the foundation of economic recovery. We had it. We destroyed it. And we were told this was progress.

It was not progress. It was sabotage.

The Question for Every New Zealander

Who authorised this? Who benefits from a dependent, weakened New Zealand? Who gains when we cannot refine our own fuel, build our own roads, or power our own industries?

And why — four years later — has no government lifted a finger to fix it?

Final Word

This is not politics. This is survival.

Marsden Point must be rebuilt. Energy security must be restored. And the politicians who orchestrated or tolerated this national vandalism must be held accountable.

New Zealand cannot chart a prosperous future while running on imported fumes.

And we cannot stay silent while our leaders dismantle the economic foundations our children and grandchildren will rely on.

Enough is enough.

SOURCE

A whistleblower reveals dozens of Scotland’s  ‘environmental-friendly’ windmills rely on diesel generators

Hopefully folk are realizing now that the WEF, UN lot are all lies and hypocrisy.
Thanks to Shane for the link:

Scotland’s power sector is being criticized after it was revealed that dozens of giant turbines have been using diesel generators. The information came from a whistleblower who says the environmental-friendly windmills were only turning thanks to fossil fuels.
Source: Straight Arrow News

RELATED:

On the Climate Scam

Nobel Laureate Al Gore

Australian Sen Malcolm Roberts exposes the climate change scam

What Kiwis need to know about the shutting down of the Marsden Point Oil Refinery

From Liz Gunn @ Youtube:

EWR comment: note you can read the info & download the report at website link below. The interview however is more in depth.

We speak with David Trotter (lead researcher and author) & Levi Wulf (sub researcher and editor), who along with Karl Barkley (nautical tracking and sub research), have put together this excellent document which highlights the problems associated with shutting down the Marsden Point Oil Refinery in Whangarei. Operation Good Oil seeks to educate and inform Kiwis, through this document, of the true nature of this crisis, and seeks to find a practical solution for the good of all Kiwis. To contact Operation Good Oil and learn more about this crucial project: Document download – https://docdro.id/r1HIWjF

Phone – 0800 NZ 4 OIL

Website – http://www.operationgoodoil.co.nz

Telegram – https://t.me/Convoy2022OperationGaslight

FB – https://www.facebook.com/groups/50665…

From the Website: http://www.operationgoodoil.co.nz

“Our refinery was numbered in the top 10% of the world for its innovation and efficiency, with new technologies coming on line in the sector of oil refinement we are about to lose our ability to lab and beta test new techniques of recycling such as blue crude and plastic to oil recovery.

NEW ZEALAND HAS THE LONGEST SUPPLY LINES IN THE WORLD AND TO SCUTTLE SUCH A VITAL STRATEGIC ASSET AS OUR ONLY OIL REFINERY IS A MOVE THAT COULD BE CONSTRUED AS AN ACT OF AGGRESSION OR EVEN TREASONOUS AGAINST THE PEOPLE OF NEW ZEALAND.

We hope you join us in educating ourselves on what is truly happening in the energy sector in this nation and that you will read the updates and the resources that we will be releasing through our social media and website, we hope to help to spread the word about who and what are truly responsible for the shortages.”

RELATED:

Eskom, a South African Power Plant Runs out of Deisel

Forget Oil, The Real Crisis Is Diesel Inventories: The US Has Just 25 Days Left

How Marsden Point Closure Affects Your Life. Dig In! 

Photo: By Follash – Own work, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3021385

Alternative ways to defeat those weeds (Wally Richards)

Chemical herbicides aren’t the only option available. There are a number of other products which are handy weedkillers but which don’t do as much damage as do the chemical herbicide products.

Oils added to water and sprayed over the foliage of plants in certain conditions will dehydrate or bleach the foliage, destroying everything growing above the ground.

Thus any cheap cooking oil mixed with water adding the same amount of dish washing liquid as oil then sprayed over weeds on a hot sunny day when the soil is on the dry side, the foliage of the sprayed plants will begin wilting very quickly – within minutes even.

If it is applied in cooler weather, or when the soil is moist, the killing action will take longer, and might not even work at all.

Ratio to use will depend on several factors; you could start off with say 100 mils of used cooking oil with 100mils of dish washing liquid into a litre of water.

That may dehydrate some weeds and other weeds may need a stronger solution. Of course you can spray it undiluted for maximum effect.

Plants are at their most vulnerable in sunlight on hot sunny days when moisture levels in the soil are low.

It is then that the roots of the plants will be gathering moisture as fast as possible to send upwards to replace the moisture lost through leaf transpiration.

When water is being lost from the leaves faster than it can be replaced, plants will be seen to wilt or droop.

This is most noticeable on hot sunny days, when leaves wilt during the day but come right as the sun goes down and the moisture level of the plant’s cells is replaced.

Foliage that remains starved of moisture for too long will dry out and is unlikely to recover.

You might notice that only parts of a leaf will be affected, perhaps only the tip or the edges. When oil is applied to the foliage in these conditions, all the leaves and stems are likely to wither and die, effectively killing the plant’s foliage.

If the plant is an annual, this will deprive the root system of energy, and it too will wither and die.

If the plant is a perennial, it will have the ability to send up new foliage from it roots, tuber or bulb, and it may well survive.

But if we keep spraying new foliage as it appears, doing the work in ideal hot sunny conditions, the roots or the bulb will eventually run out of energy and fail completely, causing the plant to finally die.

By adopting this method, we’re simply applying the basic principle that no plant can survive indefinitely without foliage as it loses its ability to gather energy from the sun.

If we simply keep cutting the foliage at ground level (as soon after it appears as possible), the plant will eventually die. The well-known Dutch Hoe, with its sharp edges, was designed for just this purpose.

Used against weed seedlings, the hoe would be placed just under the surface of the soil and then pushed forwards so that its sharp edges sliced off the weeds just under the surface, killing annual weeds and knocking back perennial weeds.

The fallen foliage is left on the soil to be re-absorbed back into the soil.

The latter may need a further treatment or two using the same method to finally finish them off.

If the hoe is used when the weeds are very young, it will successfully kill both annual and perennial weeds which have grown from seed. The older and more established the perennials, the more treatments will be required to get rid of them.

There are several common household products which can be used for non-selective weed killing, including any salad or cooking oils, vinegar and salt plus bleaches and acids.

(I spoke to a old farmer recently who told me they used to use sulfuric acid to remove the potato crop foliage prior to harvesting the tubers. Said it worked very quickly but could not remember the strength of the solution)

You need only to experiment a little with various dilution rates to see what works best for you.

Good old common table salt, purchased in bulk or in kilo bags, is probably the cheapest natural weedkiller available to everyone.

Use it at the rate of 240 grams (about 12 heaped tablespoons) to a litre of warm or hot water to dissolve it, and then spray it on the foliage of the weeds, again in sunny dry conditions.

Then stand back and watch the plants shrivel over time. Annuals will be seen going off quite fast, with perennials probably needing further salt treatments.

If you are finding that you are not getting the kill coverage you want, then increase the amount of salt to about 500 grams to a litre of water.

You will find that a little trial and error will indicate the level of salt needed to do the job well, without using too much. Applying extra amounts of salt over an extended period of time will eventually harm the soil.

If you are spraying only the foliage, and at the above rates, there will be, little residual damage done to the soil.

To make absolutely sure, give the area a good watering after the weeds have died. Adding Raingard to the salty water at a rate of 1ml per litre of water should also help the salt adhere to the surface of the foliage.

 Salt can also be applied dry on cobbles to kill weeds in joints or cracks.

Another home product which is useful is white vinegar. It is made from ascetic acid which, in its undiluted state, can be quite dangerous to play with if you don’t know what you are doing.

Only small amounts of ascetic acid, probably about 100ml to 1 litre of water, are needed to make a strong white vinegar.

If I remember correctly, it becomes a good weedkiller if diluted to the rate of about 15-20% acid. Salt is certainly much safer to use, and can be purchased cheaply in bulk.

Many years ago, and probably still today in some places, many people did their own oil changes on their vehicles, primarily to save on the cost of having a garage do it.

The old oil from the sump would then be poured over areas where gardeners didn’t want plants to grow – it was often applied to grassy areas of parks to mark out the lines for football fields and the like.

The strip over which the oil was poured would be bare of grasses for a long period of time. Diesel, at about $2.50 plus a litre, (price varies) is a very good weed killer,

used either as a spray to knock out weeds with a short-term residue growing in waste areas, or as a drench for longer term control.

Likewise, salt applied directly to the soil in reasonable quantities will also give a long-term control, depending on the amount applied to an area.

Simply apply the salt and leave it to get all those unwanted plants out of our cobbles or pathways – it’s a cheap and easy solution.

Sulphate of ammonia (which is another type of salt with nitrogen), was once another very popular weedkiller for spot control. It was also relatively inexpensive if purchased in 25kg bags from stock and station agents.

All that’s required is about a tablespoon of sulphate of ammonia powder placed onto the crown or centre of a weed. Left alone, the dry salts will burn out the crown of the weed, killing it outright.

As it is nitrogen, the control residue level lasts only for a short time. Some gardeners use this product on flat weeds in lawns – and indeed it can be a reasonably successful lawn weedkiller if mixed in with sand to get an even spread over the lawn.

This is called Lawn Sand, and here’s how to make your own.

Take 5kg of sharp sand (plasters sand preferably – don’t use river or beach sand as it can contain weeds of its own), together with 700 grams of sulphate of ammonia, and 300 grams of sulphate of iron.

The iron aids in making the area more acidic, and helps to burn mosses. Mix this all well together, and apply at a rate of 30 grams per square metre.

Do it ideally in dry weather conditions when rain is unlikely – if it does rain soon after application, the Lawn Sand will be less effective. Grasses which come into contact with the Lawn Sand will turn brown, but should bounce back after a week or two.

Another compound called Ammonium sulphamate mixed at 200 grams per litre of water and sprayed over weeds is also a very effective way of getting rid of them as they quickly compost down.

Watered over the foliage of oxalis into the soil it will compost the bulbs and help you get rid of this pest weed.

Sold as a Compost Accelerator or Super Stump Rotter and as Ammonium sulphamate in 2kg jars.

Phone 0800 466464
Garden Pages and News at www.gardenews.co.nz
Shar Pei pages at  www.sharpei.co.nz
Mail Order products at www.0800466464.co.nz


New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990. Part II of the Act covers a broad range of Civil and Political Rights. As part of the right to life and the security of the person, the Act guarantees everyone:

1The right not to be deprived of life except in accordance with fundamental justice (Section 8)

2The right not to be subjected to torture or to cruel, degrading, or disproportionately severe treatment or punishment (Section 9)

3The right not to be subjected to medical or scientific experimentation without consent (Section 10)

4The right to refuse to undergo any medical treatment (Section 11)

 Furthermore, the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 guarantees everyone: Freedom of Thought, Conscience, and Religion.
This includes the right to freedom of thought, conscience, religion, and belief,
INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO ADOPT AND HOLD OPINIONS WITHOUT INTERFERENCE (Section 1)