fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 20 March 2018 08:55

Irrigation adds-up — Jones

Written by  David Anderson
Crown funding of new irrigation schemes may not be entirely off the agenda. Crown funding of new irrigation schemes may not be entirely off the agenda.

Despite strong anti-irrigation rhetoric from certain parts of the new coalition Government, it appears Crown funding of new irrigation schemes is not entirely off the agenda.

Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones says irrigation is essential to the growth of the regions.

“It is especially so in the case of climate change and asking rural NZ to do the heavy lifting in regard to changing our carbon emission.”

When the $1 billion a year Provincial Growth Fund (PGF) was launched in Gisborne last month, Jones said the Government would no longer support ‘uber mega’ irrigation schemes.

However, in an interview with the Rural Exchange (REX) radio show, Jones indicated that irrigation schemes were still an important part of his plans for the fund.

 “We identified that irrigation is essential to the growth of a lot of our regions,” Jones says.

He added that while dropping large irrigation schemes was no longer on the Government’s agenda, “there remains some wiggle room within the fund to pursue better water management and water storage”.

Jones concedes that the confidence and supply agreement the Greens have with Labour means a cessation of government backing for such large irrigation schemes.

“The thing we are no longer able to acquiesce to is these things called ‘uber’ schemes,” he told the REX show. “However, in the PGF there remains some wriggle room in the criteria to pursue better water management and storage.”

Jones gave as an example the $543,000 allocated in the PGF for the next stage of the Makauri Managed Aquifer Recharge trial in Gisborne. The project is aimed at injecting water from the Waipaoa River into the aquifer for use on 3000ha of irrigated horticultural farm land.

Jones claims this will give rural New Zealand confidence that he’s
got their backs.

“My party, myself, my leader and the broader Government do accept that you can’t have ongoing productivity out of rural New Zealand in the absence of water,” he said. “That’s just as simple as learning arithmetic as a six-year-old.”

Meanwhile, in what could be seen as a slight at some of his coalition partners’ anti-irrigation rhetoric, Jones caustically dismissed these criticisms.

“For areas such as the Hawkes Bay and Northland without better water storage and management – I am beggared if I can see what we can do with that land.”

More like this

Effluent is 'rocket fuel' for grass

Precision Slurry says they are effluent application specialists who pride themselves on leading the way in cleaning out any system - fully utilising the nutrients often seen as a problem on farms.

Featured

Brendan Attrill scoops national award for sustainable farming

Brendan Attrill of Caiseal Trust in Taranaki has been announced as the 2025 National Ambassador for Sustainable Farming and Growing and recipient of the Gordon Stephenson Trophy at the National Sustainability Showcase at in Wellington this evening.

Wilmar hands over US$725m ‘court security’ in Indo graft case

Reuters reports that giant food company Wilmar Group has announced it had handed over 11.8 trillion rupiah (US$725 million) to Indonesia's Attorney General's Office as a "security deposit" in relation to a case in court about alleged misconduct in obtaining palm oil export permits.

National

Machinery & Products

Calf feeding boost

Advantage Plastics says it is revolutionising calf meal storage and handling, making farm life easier, safer, and more efficient this…

JD's precision essentials

Farmers across New Zealand are renowned for their productivity and efficiency, always wanting to do more with less, while getting…