PODCAST · business
Progress in Practice | A Go Well Consulting Podcast
by Go Well Consulting
Progress in Practice is a Go Well Consulting series profiling the real-world sustainability initiatives being brought to market by the businesses we work with.Hosted by Nick Morrison (Go Well's Founding Director), each episode goes behind the scenes with different New Zealand businesses to explore the ideas they're turning into action — the inspiration behind those ideas, the hard work of bringing them to life, and the honest lessons learned along the way.This isn't a show about perfect solutions or polished success stories. It's about the messy, meaningful work of building something better — the false starts, the breakthroughs, and the resilience it takes to lead change in industries that have never done it before.From circular economy manufacturing to supply chain innovation, the businesses we feature are proving that doing the right thing and running a successful business aren't mutually exclusive. They're showing what's possible when you stop waiting for som
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Small Airport, Big Solar Farm – New Plymouth's Renewable Energy Story
A small regional airport. A 15-hectare solar farm. 96% of the electricity going straight to the national grid. This is what commercial ambition meets community purpose looks like.What does it take for a regional airport to become a significant contributor to New Zealand's renewable energy grid? New Plymouth Airport CEO David Scott has a practical answer: vision, commercial discipline, and a willingness to take the harder road.Over the past two and a half years, the airport has developed Te Matakupenga — a 12 megawatt solar farm generating approximately 14,700 megawatt hours annually. The airport uses just 4% — the rest goes to the grid, with a portion sold at a discounted rate to the local council via Ecotricity.This is more than an energy project. It's a story about what's possible when an organisation decides to own the entire process.In this episode, host Nick Morrison talks with David Scott about:How the project evolved from a post-COVID income diversification strategy into something much more meaningfulThe structure of the airport's private power network and how tenants, hangars, and rental car operators all benefitThe Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) coming online in the next few weeks — and what it means for energy resilienceWhy the farm was built at a scale far beyond the airport's own needs, and the commercial logic behind selling to the gridThe partnership with Ecotricity and how the local council is now buying discounted renewable power generated at the airportEV charging infrastructure already powered by the solar farm — and how the airport has future-proofed for electric rental car fleetsThe role of Puketapu Hapū as mana whenua, and how they helped shape the vision and name of the projectThe emissions story — 1,500 tonnes of CO2 equivalent avoided annually, with a carbon payback period of just three and a half to four yearsWhy fixed panels were chosen over rotating ones, and how sheep grazing between the panels solves a land management challengeThe financial payback timeline of seven to ten years — and what future battery storage investments could mean for the bottom lineWhat it would look like for electric aircraft to one day charge from the farm — and why that's closer than you might thinkWhat makes this conversation particularly compelling is David's refreshing honesty. This project started as a commercial decision, and it remains one. But along the way, it became something the whole community can be proud of — a model for how regional infrastructure can lead the way on New Zealand's energy transition.New Plymouth Airport may not be a large organisation, but Te Matakupenga is a large statement about what's possible when you decide to take the harder road.Progress in Practice is a Go Well Consulting series profiling the real-world sustainability initiatives being brought to market by the businesses we work with — the good ideas, the hard work, and the honest lessons learned along the way.To watch this podcast episode and for others, check us out on YouTube here.Click here to find out more about the New Plymouth Airport solar project.To learn more about Go Well Consulting, visit our website here.
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Turning Old Clothes Into Biochar – A Circular Fashion Breakthrough
What happens to a garment when it truly reaches the end of its life?For most fashion brands, the answer is landfill. For Wellington-based label Kowtow, the answer is something far more ambitious: transform it into biochar, and put it back into the earth.In this episode of Progress in Practice, Go Well Consulting's Nick Morrison sits down with Emma Wallace, Managing Director of Kowtow, to explore one of the most genuinely innovative end-of-life solutions we've seen in the New Zealand and Australian fashion industry. Kowtow — a label built from the ground up on fair trade organic cotton and ethical manufacturing — has completed the first trial of their biochar initiative as part of what they now call the Regenerate Programme.By heating returned garments in a retort kiln through a process called pyrolysis, they are transforming 100% organic cotton clothing into a carbon-rich biochar that, when activated with seaweed tea and mixed into soil, sequesters carbon, supports water retention, and provides a home for beneficial soil microorganisms.This isn't a PR stunt or a future aspiration. The trial has been run, the biochar has been tested, the tomatoes in the Kowtow workroom grew measurably taller. This is real.Emma walks Nick through the full picture — from the founding philosophy that has guided Kowtow for two decades, to the grassroots partnerships with a Hokianga farmer and a local biochar distributor that made the trial possible. Together, they unpack why this initiative matters well beyond the fashion industry, and what it means for any business grappling with the genuine hard work of circular economy implementation.Key topics covered in this episode:What biochar is, how it's made through pyrolysis, and why it's a powerful soil amendmentHow Kowtow's Regenerate Programme collects, decommissions, and prepares end-of-life garments for biochar conversionThe science behind carbon sequestration — and why biochar outperforms composting for locking carbon into the soilKowtow's 20-year journey through circular economy principles: from organic cotton selection, to plastic-free garment redesign, to repair and resale, and now biocharThe grassroots partnerships — including a Hokianga farmer and The Good Carbon Farm — that made the trial possibleThe commercial realities of sustainable fashion and what product stewardship really costs a small businessThe potential for the initiative to scale and attract industry partnersWhy small cultural shifts — like switching from pens to pencils — matter in building an organisation that can solve hard problemsWhether you're a sustainability professional, a business leader exploring circular economy models, or simply someone who cares about where your clothes end up, this episode is a masterclass in what it looks like to keep pushing when you could have stopped.To watch this episode on Youtube check it out here.To learn more about Kowtow and the Regenerate Programme, visit their website.And to find out how Go Well Consulting can help your organisation navigate its own sustainability journey, visit the Go Well Consulting website here.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Progress in Practice is a Go Well Consulting series profiling the real-world sustainability initiatives being brought to market by the businesses we work with.Hosted by Nick Morrison (Go Well's Founding Director), each episode goes behind the scenes with different New Zealand businesses to explore the ideas they're turning into action — the inspiration behind those ideas, the hard work of bringing them to life, and the honest lessons learned along the way.This isn't a show about perfect solutions or polished success stories. It's about the messy, meaningful work of building something better — the false starts, the breakthroughs, and the resilience it takes to lead change in industries that have never done it before.From circular economy manufacturing to supply chain innovation, the businesses we feature are proving that doing the right thing and running a successful business aren't mutually exclusive. They're showing what's possible when you stop waiting for som
HOSTED BY
Go Well Consulting
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