The following lists events that happened during 2000 in New Zealand.

2000
in
New Zealand

Decades:
See also:

Population

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  • Estimated population as of 31 December: 3,873,100.[1]
  • Increase since 31 December 1999: 21,900 (0.57%).[1]
  • Males per 100 Females: 96.3.[1]

Incumbents

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Regal and viceregal

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Government

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The 46th New Zealand Parliament continued. Government was The Labour Party led by Helen Clark, in coalition with Alliance, led by Jim Anderton.

Opposition leaders

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See: Category:Parliament of New Zealand, New Zealand elections

Main centre leaders

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Events

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January

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  • 1 January: Broadcasts from the Chatham Islands and the New Zealand mainland are watched worldwide as New Zealand, by virtue of time zone, kicks off the worldwide millennium celebrations.

November

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  • 1 November: A magnitude 6.1 earthquake strikes north-west of Te Anau, Southland.[3]

Arts and literature

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  • James Norcliffe wins the Robert Burns Fellowship.
  • Montana New Zealand Book Awards:
    • Montana Medal: Grahame Sydney, The Art of Grahame Sydney
    • Deutz Medal: Owen Marshall, Harlequin Rex
    • Reader's Choice: Grahame Sydney, The Art of Grahame Sydney
    • First Book Awards
      • Fiction: Duncan Sarkies, Stray Thoughts And Nosebleeds
      • Poetry: Glenn Colquhoun, The Art of Walking Upright
      • Non-Fiction: Pether Thomson, Kava in the Blood

See 2000 in art, 2000 in literature, Category:2000 books

Music

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This year of awards included a new category, ' Best Film Soundtrack/Cast Recording/Compilation':[4] Winners are shown first with nominees underneath.[5]

  • Album of the Year: Stellar* – Mix
    • Shihad – The General Electric
    • Ardijah – Time
    • Salmonella Dub – Killervision
    • The Mutton Birds – Rain, Steam and Speed
  • Single of the Year: Stellar* – Violent
    • AKA Brown – Something I Need
    • Shihad – My Minds Sedate
    • The Mutton Birds – Pulled Along By Love
    • Breathe – Landslide
  • Top Male Vocalist: Jon Toogood – The General Electric (Shihad)
    • Dave Dobbyn
    • Don McGlashan (The Mutton Birds)
  • Top Female Vocalist: Boh Runga – Mix (Stellar*)
    • Betty-Anne Monga (Ardijah)
    • Zara Clark (Deep Obsession)
  • Top Group: Stellar* – Mix
    • Shihad – The General Electric
    • Deep Obsession – Infinity
  • Most Promising Male Vocalist: Aaron Tokona (Weta)
    • Sama Feo (AKA Brown)
    • Conan Wilcox (Salmonella Dub)
  • Most Promising Female Vocalist: Vanessa Kelly – Infinity (Deep Obsession)
  • Most Promising Group: Weta
    • Breathe
    • AKA Brown
  • International Achievement: Bic Runga
    • Te Vaka
    • Shihad
  • Best Video: Reuben Sutherland – My Mind's Sedate (Shihad)
    • Marc Swadel – Birthday (The Stereo Bus)
    • Jonathan King – Violent (Stellar*)
  • Best Producer: Tom Bailey & Stellar* – Mix
    • Anthony Ioasa – Dream (TrueBliss)
    • Malcolm Welsford – Landslide (Breathe)
  • Best Engineer: Luke Tomes – Mix (Stellar*)
    • Sam Gibson – Rain Steam & Speed (The Mutton Birds)
    • Paddy Free & Tiki Taane – Killervision (Salmonella Dub)
  • Best Jazz Album: Jason Jones – Subspace
    • Mark De Clive-Lowe – Six Degrees
    • Steve Sherriff – See What Happens
  • Best Classical Album: John Psathas – Rhythm Spike
    • NZ National Youth Choir – Winds That Whisper
    • Gareth Farr / NZSO – Te Papa
  • Best Country Album: The Warratahs – One of Two Things
    • The Minstrel – Blaaack
    • Rosy Parsons – Pride of Place
  • Best Film Soundtrack/Cast Recording/Compilation (new category): Dave DobbynOvernight Success: The Definitive Dave Dobbyn Collection
    • Various – World Famous in New Zealand
    • The Exponents – Hello, Love You, Goodbye
  • Best Folk Album: –
  • Best Gospel Album: The Lads – Lost at Sea
    • The Invasion Band – Everything
    • The Parachute Band – Adore
  • Best Mana Maori Album: Southside of Bombay – Live in Aotearoa
    • Maisey Rika – 20 Favourite Maori Songs
    • Hato Paora College – Hato Paora – 50 Years On
  • Best Mana Reo Album: Iwi – Iwi
    • Maisey Rika – 20 Favourite Maori Songs
    • Hato Paora College – Hato Paora – 50 Years On
    • He Taonga Reo – Tahi/Rua'
  • Best Children's Album: Jennifer Moss – Jennifer's House
    • Janet Channon & Wendy Jensen – You've Got to Clap
    • Janet Grierson and Kidz Choice Singers – Singing Is Fun
    • Tessarose Productions – Sing A Song About The Body
  • Best Songwriter: Boh Runga – Violent (Stellar*)
    • Salmonella Dub – For The Love of It (Salmonella Dub)
    • Christopher Bands and Zara Clark – Cold (Deep Obsession)
  • Best Cover: Shihad & Karl Kippenberger – The General Electric
    • Kimberley Renwick – Second Nature (Margaret Urlich)
    • Gideon Keith and Seven – Infinity (Deep Obsession)
  • New Zealand Radio Programmer Award: Grant Hislop – (ZM / Hauraki Auckland)
    • Martin Good (Hits 89FM)
    • Rodger Clamp (More FM Auckland)

See: 2000 in music, New Zealand Top 50 Albums of 2000

Performing arts

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Radio and television

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See: 2000 in New Zealand television, 2000 in television, List of TVNZ television programming, Category:Television in New Zealand, TV3 (New Zealand), Category:New Zealand television shows, Public broadcasting in New Zealand

Film

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See: Category:2000 film awards, 2000 in film, List of New Zealand feature films, Cinema of New Zealand, Category:2000 films

Internet

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See: NZ Internet History

Sport

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Athletics

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  • Mark Hutchinson wins his third national title in the men's marathon, clocking 2:24:58 on 29 October in Auckland, while Melissa Moon claims her first in the women's championship (2:45:42).

Basketball

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Cricket

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Golf

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Horse racing

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Harness racing

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Thoroughbred racing

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Netball

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Olympic Games

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  • New Zealand sends a team of 151 competitors.
  • The medal tally is considered very disappointing and sparks a review of high-performance sports training programmes.
  Gold   Silver   Bronze Total
1 0 3 4

Paralympics

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  • New Zealand sends a team of 43 competitors.
  Gold   Silver   Bronze Total
6 8 4 18

Rugby league

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Rugby union

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Category:Rugby union in New Zealand, Super 12, National Provincial Championship, Category:All Blacks, Bledisloe Cup, Tri Nations Series, Ranfurly Shield

Shooting

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  • Ballinger Belt – John Whiteman (Upper Hutt)[9]

Soccer

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Births

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January–June

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July–December

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Deaths

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January–March

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April–June

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July–September

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October–December

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Historical population estimates tables". Statistics New Zealand. Archived from the original on 31 December 2017.
  2. ^ The Rt Hon Sir Michael Hardie Boys, GNZM, GCMG, QSO gg.govt.nz. Retrieved 10 April 2012
  3. ^ "A magnitude 6.1 earthquake occurred 65 km north-west of Te Anau, New Zealand on Wed Nov 1 2000 11:35 PM. The quake was 9 kilometres deep and the shaking was moderate close to the quake". GeoNet. Retrieved 28 April 2024.
  4. ^ "2000 New Zealand Music Awards". Web page. RIANZ. Archived from the original on 20 December 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  5. ^ "Awards 2000". Listing. NZ Music Awards. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  6. ^ Basketball New Zealand » 2000
  7. ^ "List of NZ Trotting cup winners". Archived from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  8. ^ Auckland Trotting cup at hrnz.co.nz Archived 17 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "New Zealand champion shot / Ballinger Belt winners". National Rifle Association of New Zealand. Archived from the original on 25 January 2015. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  10. ^ Chatham Cup records, nzsoccer.com Archived 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Rugby Sevens | Athlete Profile: Risealeaana POURI-LANE - Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games". results.gc2018.com. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
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  Media related to 2000 in New Zealand at Wikimedia Commons