Puhi peaks station, Kaikoura

Forest Type - Indigenous

Emission Reductions
16,600 tCO2e total stored
100 tCO2e annual removals

Start Date - 1994

Project Type - Reforestation
90 hectares

Standard - Permanent Forest Sink Initiative (PFSI)


Puhi Peaks Station is the highest-altitude land in private ownership in New Zealand. It covers 1,618 hectares located in the spectacular Seaward Kaikoura Range. Over half of the property is protected in perpetuity, including 90 hectares of native forest registered with the PFSI and the largest Open Space Covenant (QEII) in New Zealand since 2005.

The property has a wide variety of vegetation and flora and therefore displays distinctive biodiversity features through complex forestry ecosystems. The main ones include kanuka and manuka forests and shrubland, remnants of beech forest and totara lacebark tree land.

 

These forests are full of native birds, including endemics species like bellbirds and bush robins, tomtit, fantails, keas and NZ falcons. The property is also famous for its abundance of sea birds and shelters one of the only two remaining breeding colonies of Hutton’s shearwater.

In addition to carbon farming and perpetual carbon sequestration, the property specialises in a diverse range of activities. While a portion of the lowland is used for pastoral farming, the owners focus on a high quality ecotourism business and commercial hunting operations. These activities are developed alongside a thorough biodiversity control plan.

The owners emphasise the importance of a holistic approach to land management, by using their keen interest and knowledge in natural history to implement an exceptional commitment to the conservation of the local natural heritage.