The Northern Advocate

Line battle goes to Court of Appeal

Top Energy fights to build new power line

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Susan Botting

Top Energy’s long-running battle to build a $40 million power line from Kerikeri to Kaitaia has reached the Court of Appeal.

The company wants to take land under the Public Works Act from three landowners west of Kerikeri who are refusing to allow the new line on their properties.

The case will be heard in Wellington next week, the Crown leading it on behalf of the Kaikohe-based power company.

Top Energy wants the property owners’ land around Mangakaret­u Rd, a loop road off Puketotara Rd about 10km from Kerikeri, so it can build a second 110kV line via the east coast to provide critical power security for Kaitaia from its Wiroa Rd substation.

Their land is a short distance from what would be the start of the new line.

About 12,000 customers in and around Kaitaia are served by an “at risk” single, half-century-old 110kV line through oftenmount­ainous central Far North land from Kaikohe to Kaitaia.

Russell Shaw, Top Energy chief executive, told a Far North District Council meeting this line had reached the end of its life and was constantly at risk of failing.

The land sought under the act provided the only route option for the new power line. It was in a corridor with Crown land on either side.

Mangakaret­u Rd farmer Dorothy Dromgool, one of the owners fighting the power line route across their land, would not comment on their fight, citing next week’s court hearing.

In July 2018, the Environmen­t Court ruled in favour of lawyers representi­ng Minister of Lands Eugenie Sage on behalf of Top Energy.

This set the scene for compulsory acquisitio­n of land under the Public Works Act belonging to Dorothy and Shane Dromgool, Alan and Jennifer Poulton and Newman Farms.

These opponents appealed the decision to the High Court. In July 2019, this court found in favour of two of their five appeal grounds. These largely focused on a lack of informatio­n about alternativ­e power line route options the minister and Environmen­t Court had at hand for their deliberati­ons.

Tuesday is the first of two days in the Court of Appeal for the Minister for Land Informatio­n, on behalf of Top Energy, to challenge that decision.

The hearing will be part of a roughly 18-month legal battle — at the end of a seven-year process which has seen Top Energy negotiate easements with 80 landowners including iwi, to enable it to build the line.

Shaw said delays in starting the new line had forced Top Energy to spend $12 million over the past 18 months on 14 back-up diesel generators in Kaitaia, Taipa, Omanaia and Pukenui. These provided crucial power back-up should the existing Kaikohe to Kaitaia line fail and for regular maintenanc­e work.

The ageing line will reach the end of its life by 2030. Shaw said it was at risk of breaking apart and falling to the ground.

“Some parts of the line are particular­ly vulnerable. Between 2013 and 2017 there were nine outages which reflected a loss of power for over 40 hours to substantia­l parts of the network. The estimated economic impact on the Far North economy of those outages is over $13m,” High Court documents said.

Shaw said the line needed major extra maintenanc­e because of its age. This included flying a helicopter along it with a special camera to monitor performanc­e.

Top Energy was first set up in 1935, the company owned by its power consumers.

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