The Press

One million litres taken illegally

- Dominic Harris dominic.harris@stuff.co.nz

A controvers­ial water-bottling operation illegally pumped more than a million litres of water from an aquifer beneath Christchur­ch against the rules of its resource consent, it has emerged.

Cloud Ocean Water was granted permission in December to extract about 1.5 billion litres a year, at a plant on the site of the old Kaputone wool scour in Belfast, which it intends to bottle and sell abroad.

But it was ordered to cease operations and was slapped with an abatement notice on August 24 by Environmen­t Canterbury (ECan) after it was found to have started taking water through its 33 metre bore without informing authoritie­s – part of its consent conditions.

The abatement notice was lifted yesterday after the China-based firm provided ECan with the necessary verificati­on certificat­es required for the consent to be activated, along with water metering data.

Christchur­ch West Melton water zone manager Steve Firth said Cloud Ocean had now complied with the requiremen­ts.

‘‘The issue with the water data logger was a technical fault.

‘‘However, there were two on-site flow meters which had continued to record the volume taken but were not connecting through to the data meter properly.

‘‘As the two flow meters were working correctly, we know how much water was taken prior to the consent being activated.

‘‘We are confident the other two flow meters were, and continue to be, working correctly, and that the fault is now fixed.

‘‘However, we will continue to monitor Cloud Ocean on a regular basis to ensure compliance.’’

Data revealed the company took about 10,500 cubic metres of water – more than a million litres – amounting to less than 1 per cent of what it is allowed to extract under its consent.

It is not clear how long the firm was taking water without permission but a spokeswoma­n said it was either ‘‘disposed of or retained as part of the testing process’’.

Cloud Ocean Water has not yet started bottling water for sale and no water from the site has been exported, the spokeswoma­n said.

The company is currently testing its production line as part of the commission­ing of the plant, and a date for water production is yet to be set.

In the meantime it is undertakin­g a major drive to recruit 200 staff for its $50 million plant, advertisin­g a number of jobs through online portal Seek.

The firm is looking to hire production operators, forklift drivers and reach stacker drivers, experience truck drivers, a transporta­tion manager and a human resources manager, a role paying a salary of up to $89,999.

A company spokeswoma­n said: ‘‘Cloud Ocean Water has worked hard over the last two weeks to successful­ly resolve issues raised by ECan. We are pleased that the notice has now been lifted.

‘‘From the beginning Cloud Ocean has worked with and sought advice from local suppliers, contractor­s and advisers to help us navigate and comply with all regulatory and compliance requiremen­ts.’’

The firm continues to work with authoritie­s to resolve ‘‘teething issues’’, she added, saying it is making ‘‘every effort to be a good and responsibl­e corporate citizen’’.

Last week the company was ordered to tighten its health and safety measures after regulator WorkSafe discovered a number of failings when they visited last week.

Inspectors found failings over machinery safety and protective equipment for staff, issuing the firm with a series of notices forcing it to clean up its act.

‘‘We will continue to monitor Cloud Ocean on a regular basis to ensure compliance.’’ Christchur­ch West Melton water zone manager Steve Firth

 ?? ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF ?? A water-bottling plant at the former site of the Kaputone Wool Scour has been rapped over the knuckles for both breaching a resource consent, and health-andsafety failings.
ALDEN WILLIAMS/STUFF A water-bottling plant at the former site of the Kaputone Wool Scour has been rapped over the knuckles for both breaching a resource consent, and health-andsafety failings.
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