You can refine your selection by choosing from the topic and languages lists below.
Watch these YouTube videos from GeoNet experts answering questions about natural hazards.
Find information on how to recognise and report suspicious behaviour on the New Zealand Police website. Learn what to do in the unlikely event of getting caught up in a terrorist attack or similar incident.
It’s up to you to make sure your whānau know what to do and that you all have what you need to get through.
Planning for emergencies makes good business sense. It helps keep you and your workers safe and minimises downtime.
The Marae Emergency Preparedness Plan helps marae be prepared for an emergency. It encourages whānau, hapū and iwi to think about the possible impacts of natural disasters.
Help your friends, family and community get prepared for emergencies.
Subscribe to receive emails about upcoming nationwide tests of Emergency Mobile Alert. You'll receive an email once the date for the test is decided.
Visit the East Coast LAB website to find out about Tsunami Hīkoi Week.
Say thanks to kids by giving them our New Zealand ShakeOut 2024 certificate in English or Māori.
New Zealand ShakeOut is proudly co-sponsored by Natural Hazards Commission Toka Tū Ake.
Prepare your organisation with Resilient Organisations' Earthquake Preparedness checklist.
Find out more about New Zealand’s biosecurity system on the Ministry for Primary Industries website.
Find out more about New Zealand’s food safety system on the Ministry for Primary Industries website.
Learn more about hazardous substances on the Fire and Emergency New Zealand website.
Find information and guidance on working with hazardous substances on the WorkSafe website.
Find advice on understanding emotional reactions to emergencies and positive ways of coping on the Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora website.
Find tips for looking after yourself and others when times are tough from All Right?
All Right? is a collaboration between Canterbury DHB and the Mental Health Foundation of New Zealand. It was launched in 2013 to support the psychosocial recovery of Cantabrians following the earthquakes of 2010 and 2011.