Otago Daily Times

River changes from closure

- MARK PRICE

THE closure of the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter is likely to bring change to some southern rivers.

The Waitaki, Clutha and Waiau Rivers are all controlled to optimise electricit­y production from hydro power stations, which have fed the smelter over the past 50 years.

Those with an interest in the rivers’ ecology have just started contemplat­ing what reduced hydro generation might mean.

The 80km lower Waiau River was the only outlet of Lake Manapouri before Meridian Energy’s Manapouri power station — the main supplier of electricit­y to the smelter — created a second outlet to the sea at Doubtful Sound.

Jan Riddell has chaired the Waiau River Working Party for

Environmen­t Southland since 1990. She said she did not want to diminish the economic hurt the smelter closure would have on Southland but could see the possibilit­y of the river making some gains.

‘‘Undoubtedl­y, given the transmissi­on limitation­s in terms of sending power north, there will be more water [flowing] down the lower Waiau River.’’

That, she believed, would be a good thing.

‘‘There’s a great deal of passion and feeling for the state of that river in Western Southland in terms of the inadequacy of the flow regime.’’

While there was a voluntary ‘‘flushing flow regime’’ designed to clear the river of algae during summer, it had mixed success and was ‘‘just not adequate’’.

She was ‘‘not too sure’’ how the change brought by the closure of

Tiwai might ‘‘pan out’’.

As for the Clutha River, Contact Energy expects more water to be spilled through the Clyde and Roxburgh dams as a result of Tiwai closing, although a company spokeswoma­n said on Friday there were ‘‘still too many moving parts’’ to be able to say what effect that might have.

Otago Fish & Game Council environmen­tal officer Peter Wilson said he did not expect a noticeable difference for Clutha River users but the exception might be Lake Hawea, which rose and fell with electricit­y demand.

‘‘It might be they just choose not to store [water] in a lake like Hawea.’’

One shortterm effect — until Transpower completes its upgrade of transmissi­on lines to the North Island — might be a delay to the multibilli­ondollar idea of turning Lake Onslow into a storage lake, with water pumped from Roxburgh.

The idea was revived by the Government last year as part of a push to have 100% renewable electricit­y in New Zealand by 2035.

‘‘The critical decisions around storage might be put off for a decade or so because you’ve now got Manapouri integrated with the rest of the electricit­y market.’’

He believed there was unlikely to be much change to the Waitaki River because electricit­y from hydro stations there was more easily shipped north.

But there might be an environmen­tal benefit for Doubtful Sound, ‘‘which wasn’t exactly designed to have New Zealand’s largest river artificial­ly flowing into it’’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand