Otago Daily Times

Opposing forces try to win day over minimum flows in Lindis

- MARK PRICE mark.price@odt.co.nz

THE debate between water experts over the way forward for the Lindis River catchment resumed in an Environmen­t Court appeal in Cromwell yesterday without any sign of who is gaining the upper hand.

On one side are the expert witnesses called by lawyers for the Lindis Catchment Group (LCG) and Otago Regional Council and on the other the experts called by lawyers for Otago Fish & Game Council.

The debate, to be resolved by Judge Jon Jackson and his two commission­ers, is over what amount of water can be taken from the river for irrigation while maintainin­g an acceptable amount of water for wildlife, including trout.

The current level of irrigation leaves the lower part of the river dry for up to 15km at times over summer.

Expert witnesses are being crossexami­ned on thousands of pages of written evidence, maps, diagrams and graphs, and various future scenarios are being compared.

One scenario is the ORC’s plan change 5A decision being appealed by the LCG.

It requires a primary maximum allocation for irrigation of 1200 litres per second, with a minimum flow of 900 litres per second at the Ardgour Rd flow monitoring site, and is supported by Fish & Game but no longer by the ORC.

The LCG’s proposal is for a primary allocation of irrigation water of 1639 litres per second, with a minimum flow of 550 litres per second, with water taken from bores (referred to as the ‘‘gallery’’ scenario) rather than from existing water races. This scenario is backed by the ORC but not considered satisfacto­ry by Fish & Game.

And there is the ‘‘future races scenario’’, which includes a primary allocation of 2255 litres per second with a 900 litres per second minimum flow.

National Institute of Water and Atmospheri­c Research (NIWA) hydrologis­t Roderick Henderson was called by the LCG and said that a flow of 550 litres per second at Ardgour Rd ’’should allow’’ 100 litres per second of flow at the confluence of the Lindis River and the Clutha River.

Also, he said, the galleries scenario would mean the river was at its minimum flow 15% of the time compared with 41% if water races were still used.

LCG consultant ecologist Matthew Hickey said the gallery proposal would reduce the maximum amount of water that could be taken from the catchment each year from 43 million m3 to 19 million m3.

‘‘LCG anticipate­s that this has benefits by reducing the duration of time spent at minimum flow, maintainin­g flows that provide for fish passage more often, as well as providing surety of supply levels that allow investment in efficient [spray] irrigation infrastruc­ture.’’

For Fish & Game, senior Lincoln Agritech Ltd, hydrogeolo­gist Jens Rekker said the galleries scenario would result in a flow rate of 60 litres per second at the Clutha confluence and ‘‘drying out of the lower losing reach would become a possibilit­y if groundwate­r pumping depletion is higher than currently estimated’’.

He considered modelling revealed the plan change 5A decision ’’consistent­ly provides for higher flow rates and generally better habitat and fish passages’’ than the galleries proposal.

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