Otago Daily Times

Delays with water policy putting on the pressure

The Otago Regional Council’s minimum flow policy delays will come at a cost to the environmen­t, writes Niall Watson.

- Niall Watson is the former chief executive of the Otago Fish & Game Council.

THE Otago Regional Council’s (ORC) recent decision to abandon a Water Plan change setting minimum river flows for Central Otago rivers raises red flags.

At face value there is logic in deferring the plan change until other policy elements including primary allocation limits (the amount of water irrigators can take from a river) and identifica­tion of recently required ‘‘freshwater management units’’ (FMUs), can be addressed.

But the decision stalls water policy developmen­t after more than two years of preparator­y work and public consultati­on in advance of the important October 2021 deadline for the phaseout of mining privileges.

Most Central Otago catchments are overalloca­ted due to the granting of centuryold mining privileges to take water. That means much of the summer low flow in Central Otago’s rivers is taken for irrigation, leaving depleted rivers or dry river beds.

Any delay in minimum flow setting and related policy linkages leaves hundreds of mining privileges expiring in October 2021 without an adequate policy framework for processing replacemen­t Resource Management Act (RMA) consents. That is likely to result in muddled decisionma­king and poor environmen­tal outcomes.

Some replacemen­t consents have already been granted with mediocre environmen­tal conditions, little transparen­cy (because they are not publicly notified), and no wider community input.

Underlying policy problems were going to be addressed in the same plan change as minimum flows. They are on hold as well.

Existing ORC policy creates a perverse incentive to use as much water as possible in line with efficiency requiremen­ts to establish formal records of water use. Records of water use are needed to support applicatio­ns for replacemen­t consents.

Farm businesses in many overalloca­ted catchments have been investing in irrigation infrastruc­ture with some vigour in advance of minimum flows or even replacemen­t RMA consents.

Irrigators have used efficiency gains to expand the area under irrigation. This improves farm productivi­ty but makes businesses more vulnerable to restrictio­ns on abstractin­g water. This should be worrying for everyone in the region. The longer it takes for the ORC to resolve policy issues, the greater the expansion of irrigation and the bigger the economic cost of environmen­tal restoratio­n.

Irrigators’ strong support for the ORC’s recent delay to minimum flow setting may be related in part to a preference for the present patchy policy framework rather than starting a public process leading to more explicit policies.

A delay means there is likely to be continued investment in irrigation infrastruc­ture and expansion of irrigation despite the clear risk. The more people invest, the more painful it will be when the ORC moves to meet its environmen­tal obligation­s.

Remember in 1991 the Government decided mining privileges, which were issued as perpetual rights without regard to the environmen­t, had to go. They gave irrigators 30 years to transition to RMA consents which require water extraction to be within environmen­tal limits. The 30 years lead time is up in three short years.

The Otago Fish & Game Council’s expectatio­n for the future of Central Otago rivers is for continuous flows over summer, less weed, more productive and diverse freshwater habitats and healthier rivers overall.

Throwing out the minimum flow plan change may jeopardise that outcome.

 ??  ?? Contrast . . . These photograph­s at the lower Manuheriki­a River near the Alexandra campground flow recorder show the difference in summer flows .
Contrast . . . These photograph­s at the lower Manuheriki­a River near the Alexandra campground flow recorder show the difference in summer flows .
 ?? PHOTOS: SUPPLIED ??
PHOTOS: SUPPLIED

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