First Nation - Fiji Resources Foundation

First Nation - Fiji Resources Foundation Secure Progressive Spaces for our Fiji Natural Resources Owners

TB β†’to yesterday was the beginning of our strategic planning with the Mataqali Navuleka  of Burebasaga Village, Rewa. A ...
07/06/2026

TB β†’to yesterday was the beginning of our strategic planning with the Mataqali Navuleka of Burebasaga Village, Rewa.

A Saturday well spent .

This is why transparency is important so good to see the Vuda waste proposal rejected due to loopholes
04/06/2026

This is why transparency is important so good to see the Vuda waste proposal rejected due to loopholes

πƒπ„ππ€π‘π“πŒπ„ππ“ πŽπ… π„ππ•πˆπ‘πŽππŒπ„ππ“ 𝐑𝐄𝐉𝐄𝐂𝐓𝐒 π„πˆπ€ π‘π„ππŽπ‘π“ π…πŽπ‘ ππ‘πŽππŽπ’π„πƒ 𝐕𝐔𝐃𝐀 π„ππ„π‘π†π˜-π…π‘πŽπŒ-𝐖𝐀𝐒𝐓𝐄 πƒπ„π•π„π‹πŽππŒπ„ππ“ ππ‘πŽππŽπ’π€π‹

The Department of Environment has rejected the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Report for the proposed Energy-from-Waste Plant and Private Port Facility at Vuda Point, submitted by The Next Generation Holdings (Fiji) Pte Limited.

The decision has been issued to the proponent following the technical review process under the Environment Management Act 2005 (as amended by the Environment Management (Amendment) Act 2025) and the Environment Management (EIA Process) Regulations 2007.

The review found that key issues remained unresolved, including the scale of the project, waste supply, imported waste, hazardous ash management, water supply, public health risks, environmental impacts, road and port infrastructure, social and cultural impacts, tourism impacts, and the overall economic case for the project.

Permanent Secretary for Environment and Climate Change, Dr. Sivendra Michael, said the decision was made based on the EIA
Report and the information formally submitted for assessment.

β€œThis is not a decision against investment or against new waste solutions. It is a decision on whether the EIA Report met the legal and technical standards required for approval. It did not,” Dr. Michael said.

β€œFor a project of this scale, the Department must be satisfied that the risks to people, communities, the environment, culture, livelihoods and the economy are properly assessed and can be properly managed. Several critical matters remained unresolved and were proposed for future assessment rather than being addressed within the EIA itself. As a result, the Department was not satisfied that the potential impacts and risks of the project could be adequately assessed or managed.”

The Ministry acknowledges the significant public interest in the proposal and thanks the traditional landowners of Vuda, residents of Vuda and Saweni, government agencies, civil society organizations, technical experts, businesses and members of the public who participated in the review process.

The details of the decline decision will be discussed during a press conference at 3.00 pm today (04/06/26) at Level 4, Bali Towers, Toorak, Suva.

The Ministry remains committed to transparent, lawful and evidence-based environmental decision-making in the public interest.

https://mecc.gov.fj/department-of-environment-rejects-eia-report-for-proposed-vuda-energy-from-waste-development-proposal/

fijivillage Fiji One News The Fiji Times Fiji Sun Mai TV FBC News Sivendra Michael FijiLive

For those that dont understand the Voluntary Carbon Market the diagram below should be able to help. Diagrm by BY Omar A...
06/05/2026

For those that dont understand the Voluntary Carbon Market the diagram below should be able to help. Diagrm by BY Omar AL - Ajaji

To the highly esteemed Founder and Executive Director of First Nation Fiij Resources Foundation Happy Birthday Maam.May ...
13/04/2026

To the highly esteemed Founder and Executive Director of First Nation Fiij Resources Foundation Happy Birthday Maam.

May this day be as extraodinary as your vision-rooted in the land, reaching toward the sky and a blessing to every Mataqali you serve. Wishing you adunbdant joy, strength and God's grace on your birthday and always.

12/04/2026

Our Founder and Executive Director Ms. Mereoni Duaibe was recently invited as one of a Guest Speaker on the Topic CLIMATE CHANGE FALLOUT-DEVELOPMENT TRANSITIONS AND COMMUNITY RESILIENCE:- An International Talanoa on Development Justice at FNU

VC:SEEP and FV

11/04/2026

A Year 9 student from Adi Cakobau School has taken a major step towards her dream of becoming a top-level rugby referee after being selected to be part of the match officials team for this weekend’s Shop N Save Super Rugby clash in Lautoka.

BULA VINAKA EVERYONE CONTINUING OUR MATAQALI NABUKEBUKE FOREST CARBON PROJECT TRAINING IN NAMOSI VILLAGE. GRATEFUL FOR T...
11/04/2026

BULA VINAKA EVERYONE

CONTINUING OUR MATAQALI NABUKEBUKE FOREST CARBON PROJECT TRAINING IN NAMOSI VILLAGE.

GRATEFUL FOR THE MEMBERS OF THE MATAQALI WHO TURNED UP. KEEP ON KEEPING ON

STAY TUNED FOR MORE UPDATES ON THIS JOURNEY WITH US

04/04/2026

On Christmas Eve 1969, deep beneath the freezing waters of the North Sea, drillers struck black gold.

The Ekofisk field β€” one of the largest offshore oil discoveries in history β€” had just been found. A small, quiet nation of fishermen and farmers was about to become unimaginably rich.

What Norway did next is either the greatest financial decision in modern history… or the most boring story ever told.

They did almost nothing.

No victory parades. No palaces. No sudden checks raining down on citizens. While the oil money began pouring in, Norwegian politicians did something almost no government in history has managed: they resisted temptation.

They had watched what happened to other oil-rich nations β€” Nigeria, Venezuela, Libya. They saw the β€œresource curse” in real time: easy money that brought corruption, inflation, inequality, and eventual collapse. Norway decided it would not become another cautionary tale.

In 1990, the Norwegian Parliament passed a simple but revolutionary law. Every single krone of oil profit would go into a new Government Petroleum Fund β€” now known as the Oil Fund. The rules were strict and almost painfully disciplined:

- All oil revenue goes into the fund.
- The government can spend only a tiny percentage of the returns each year.
- The rest stays invested. Forever.

The first deposit in 1996 was modest, almost symbolic.

Then came the hardest part: they kept the rules.

Year after year, election after election, crisis after crisis, politicians who promised to raid the fund lost. Those who protected it won. For over three decades, across governments of every political stripe, one principle held firm: this money belongs to Norwegians who haven’t been born yet.

The fund bought small stakes in thousands of companies worldwide β€” Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, NestlΓ©, and countless others. It invested in real estate in Manhattan, London, Paris, and Tokyo. It didn’t gamble on hot trends. It simply bought a quiet piece of the global economy and waited.

The waiting paid off beyond anyone’s imagination.

Today, Norway’s Oil Fund is worth nearly $2 trillion. For a country of just 5.6 million people, that’s roughly $340,000 for every man, woman, and child. No checks are mailed. The money belongs as much to future generations as to the present one.

Here’s what truly stops people cold: more than half of that wealth no longer comes from oil. It comes from investment returns. The fund now earns more from its global portfolio than Norway makes pumping oil out of the North Sea.

They turned a finite resource into something close to infinite.

And while the world wasn’t watching, Norway quietly became one of the largest investors on Earth β€” owning approximately 1.5% of every publicly traded company on the planet. Every time a major global business makes a profit, a tiny fraction quietly flows back to Norway’s children.

The oil will eventually run out. Geologists give it 30 to 50 years, maybe more. It doesn’t matter. By then, the fund’s returns alone are projected to cover healthcare, education, and pensions β€” perhaps forever.

Norway didn’t discover more oil than anyone else. They didn’t have superior geology or technology.

They had one thing most nations lack: the courage to say no.

No to easy money.
No to short-term thinking.
No to politicians who swore they’d only spend β€œjust this once.”
No to a generation that could have lived richer today β€” at the expense of every generation that follows.

Most countries can’t do it. Most people can’t do it. We’re wired for now, not for later.

Norway looked human nature β€” greedy, impatient, shortsighted β€” squarely in the eye and built a system specifically designed to defeat it.

In 1969, they found oil.
In 1990, they built the fund.
In 1996, they made the first deposit.

Today, they own a piece of the world.

And the politicians who made that decision in 1990? Most of them are gone now. They never saw the trillion-dollar result. They built it for strangers β€” for grandchildren who wouldn’t be born for decades.

That’s not economics.

That’s wisdom.

18/03/2026

Be advised that we will re-open office on the 23rd of March 2027.Vinaka. All queries pls direct to [email protected]

Capacity Building for Yavusa Dawadigo Trustees.
17/03/2026

Capacity Building for Yavusa Dawadigo Trustees.

Address

137 MAHAFFY Drive, DOMAIN
Suva

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00

Telephone

+6798002177

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when First Nation - Fiji Resources Foundation posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to First Nation - Fiji Resources Foundation:

Share