Friday, 27 June 2014 15:02

Final decision on Ruataniwha out

Written by 

THE BOARD of Inquiry (BOI) hearing the proposal to build a $275 million water storage dam in Hawkes Bay has just released its final decision.

But commentators say it will take several days to interpret the decisions and accompanying appendices contained in three sets of documents totalling 963 pages of detailed text.

The board released a draft decision in April this year and many interested organisations including Fonterra, DairyNZ, Federated Farmers, the Hawkes Bay Regional Council various environmental groups and others made submissions on this. There was considerable concern expressed by primary sector groups about the draft decisions and fears that it would affect existing farmers, let alone new entrants to the sector. At the heart of the issue is what is known as Plan Change 6 which relates to conditions to be imposed on farmers in the Tukituki catchment.

Most organisations who made submissions say it's too early to comment on the final decision and say it will take several days to work through the complex documents and changes that have been made or not made. Federated Farmers Hawkes Bay President Will Foley says it'll be several days before he's in a position to comment. Hawkes Bay Regional Council has issued a statement to that effect also.

On the EPA website the BOI says:
• It's corrected an error and amended the rule that would have required individual farmers to observe the DIN limit/target in receiving waters. If an individual farmer complies with the LUC leaching rates (and meets the other requirements of the rule other than the DIN limits) the use of production land is a permitted activity
• Resolved an anomaly in the rules relating to the use of production land by raising the upper threshold for exceeding of LUC leaching rates (from 10% to 30%) before a restricted discretionary activity becomes non-complying
• Clarified that compliance with the LUC leaching rates should be determined using a four year rolling average of either measured or estimated leaching rates derived from annual nutrient budgets.

The full decision is on the EPA website http://www.epa.govt.nz/Resource-management/Tukituki/Pages/default.aspx

More like this

Green Leaders

Hawke’s Bay celebrated its inaugural biodiversity field day in early February, with grower Xan Harding leading a posse of viticulturist utes on a tiki tour around the wider Bridge Pa area.

Featured

Rural leader grateful for latest honour

Waikato dairy farmer Neil Bateup, made a companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit (CNZM) in the New Year 2026 Honours list, says he’s grateful for the award.

Massey University Wiltshire trial draws growing farmer interest

Farmer interest continues to grow as a Massey University research project to determine the benefits or otherwise of the self-shedding Wiltshire sheep is underway. The project is five years in and has two more years to go. It was done mainly in the light of low wool prices and the cost of shearing. Peter Burke recently went along to the annual field day held Massey's Riverside farm in the Wairarapa.

National

Machinery & Products

» Latest Print Issues Online

The Hound

Yes, Minister!

OPINION: The release of the Natural Environment Bill and Planning Bill to replace the Resource Management Act is a red-letter day…

Two-legged pests

OPINION: Federated Farmers has launched a new campaign, swapping ‘The Twelve Days of Christmas’ for ‘The Twelve Pests of Christmas’ to…

» Connect with Rural News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter