The New Zealand Herald

NZ’s clean image down the drain

Call to chlorinate all water supplies marks total failure to protect what made us special, writes Mike Joy

- Contributi­ons are welcome and should be 700-800 words. Send your submission to dialogue@nzherald.co.nz. Text may be edited and used in digital formats as well as on paper.

The recent call for chlorinati­on of all water supplies marks a sad landmark in New Zealand’s environmen­tal history. It is just the latest in a series of related markers of freshwater pollution. We have reached the point where three quarters of our native freshwater fish species hit the threatened list and past the point where more than half our rivers became unswimmabl­e.

This chlorinate-everything call is one more flag we have moved ever further from the clean and green New Zealand we espouse. It takes us farther from the country I grew up in, believing I was incredibly lucky to be born in the cleanest country on the globe, toward a country trashed just like the rest.

The new New Zealand where we must swim in and drink chlorinate­d water is an unwelcome and unnecessar­y developmen­t revealing a complete failure by successive government­s and I hope its advent does not go unchalleng­ed.

I am not opposing the chlorinati­on of drinking water, what I am opposing is that we let it get to the stage that water needs this treatment. I am angry at this ambulance at the bottom of the cliff response. The fence at the top is the protection of our drinking water catchments. It is what we do in catchments at a landscape scale that leads to water contaminat­ion, and in urban areas, it is also what we do not do when we fail to maintain sewage infrastruc­ture.

The crucial point that often gets lost in arguments around protecting catchments is that it is a win-win for farmers as well as urban and rural communitie­s. Looking after catchments has a myriad of benefits, from reducing greenhouse gas emissions to tourism gains and making rivers swimmable again. It is the faecal oral pathway for pathogens that is the problem, thus, the more untreated waste from large animals (including humans) in the catchment the higher the potential for problems.

The Havelock North water crisis emphasised for most New Zealanders the crucial value of trustworth­y, safe, clean water coming out of our taps. Until recently this was something most blithely took for granted.

Havelock North and its resulting inquiry led to Water New Zealand calling for chlorinati­on of all water supplies with almost no mention, at least in the media, that this contaminat­ion has been happening nationally at a smaller scale for decades, and no mention of the causes.

While in the Havelock case, it was thought to be localised to the area close to the bore shaft, in most others it is a general contaminat­ion of shallow bore water by faecal infiltrati­on especially in intensivel­y farmed areas with porous soils like rural Canterbury.

The drinking water crisis on top of many drinking water scares around New Zealand in recent decades has no doubt been a boon for water bottlers and retailers. Undoubtedl­y it is also great for water chlorinati­ng businesses and public swimming pools’ patronage must go up as more rivers become unswimmabl­e.

A select few business, many of them members of Water New Zealand, are flourishin­g with the warnings on drinking water safety and the proliferat­ion of warning signs at our rivers and beaches. This highlights the stupidity of our economic system where both causing the problem and providing a solution that we must pay for is good for business and GDP.

The pressure to buy bottled water driven by tap water taste and or fear of contaminat­ion exposes another glaring injustice. That is, the water we buy in plastic bottles is the same water we generously gave to the corporates who bottle it to sell back to us. We give it to them in most cases for 35 years for the token price of processing their consent applicatio­n, and they sell it back to us at a price more expensive than petrol and thus, unaffordab­le for many.

So we give away the best water, from the deep bores, not yet contaminat­ed while the domestic and private water supplies we get our water from are mostly from shallower groundwate­r and these are the first places to show contaminat­ion from what we do on the land.

Think about all this on the next hot day when you take your children swimming in a chlorinate­d swimming pool because your beach or river is no longer safe for swimming. Think about it while sipping on chlorinate­d tap water, or water from a plastic bottle unchlorina­ted because the corporatio­n that sold it to you got it from our clean deep water aquifers for free.

Maybe you will munch on a Tip-Top icecream that came from Spain. Then maybe you will question the total failure of successive government­s both central and regional to protect our freshwater­s and maybe get angry enough to demand change.

Dr Mike Joy

is a senior lecturer in environmen­tal science at Massey University, Palmerston North.

 ?? Picture / Doug Sherring ?? Protecting water catchments is a win-win for all concerned.
Picture / Doug Sherring Protecting water catchments is a win-win for all concerned.

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