Otago Daily Times

Fish & Game challenges dairy over water

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CHRISTCHUR­CH: Intensive dairy farming and nitratelad­en fertiliser are contaminat­ing the Canterbury water supply, Fish & Game New Zealand says.

It is calling for no more cows to be allowed on the Canterbury plains and for the use of fertiliser to be regulated and reduced.

The group tested 114 drinking water samples from the Canterbury plains and found that more than half of them were above the trigger level for increased risk of bowel cancer.

‘‘We used Mike Joy from Victoria University and he’s got a machine that measures nitrates, and that’s what we did,’’ Fish & Game chief executive Martin Taylor told Morning Report.

‘‘We compared [the figures] to some of the data that Environmen­t Canterbury and the council had found and it’s entirely consistent with what we know is happening on the Canterbury plains, so it’s nothing new.

‘‘I think the Federated Farmers probably need to get on board instead of denying it’s an issue,’’ Mr Taylor said.

Federated Farmers has slammed the research, calling it a beat up.

Mr Taylor said that was not the case.

‘‘All we’ve done is some testing so if they want to think it’s a beat up, I put the challenge out to them to drive round the Canterbury plains with us, and do some testing with us and see whether they think the results are a beat up or not,’’ he said.

‘‘Federated Farmers probably need to get on board instead of denying that it’s an issue . . . and try and find some solutions.’’

Mr Taylor said a solution could be having a cowpad attached to an effluent system, to capture animal contaminan­ts.

‘‘But the main thing is just not to spray urea [fertiliser] around and then irrigate the hell out of the land just to force grass growth.’’

He said Fish & Game wanted to keep the problem at the forefront of people’s minds — especially because it was no longer just an environmen­tal issue.

‘‘This is now a human health issue and what we’ve got to do is say, ‘Look, it’s not right that an industry can contaminat­e our drinking water and that they can get away with it’,’’ he said.

‘‘We’ve got to bring in some action so the Government has to make some changes to the National Policy Statement on Freshwater, and have absolute bottom lines on nitrates, farmers need to accept that they don’t just need to spray around and irrigate and leech it all into the surface water, which goes into the groundwate­r.’’

‘‘We’ve got to have a full solution.’’ — RNZ

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