The Press

Nitrates in river up 50 per cent

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Canterbury’s regional council (ECan) is being accused of creating a monster that it can no longer control when it comes to degraded water quality in the region.

That is according to the Federation of Freshwater Anglers, which has been testing the Selwyn River and has found polluting nitrates have increased by up to 50 percent in just 22 months.

Federation president and longtime angler Peter Trolove has been monitoring the Selwyn with the help of a nitrate tester bought with a grant from a pub charity.

The Selwyn River, which people can no longer swim in, was once a top trout fishing destinatio­n.

‘‘If you go back before World War II, it was considered one of the top half dozen trout fisheries in the dominion. And they had fish counts of over 200,000 trout going up the river, and it’s fallen to, well, I don’t know if they find any now,’’ Trolove said.

The blame lay fair and square with the regional council and its decision to allow intensive dairy farming around the Selwyn and across the plains, he said.

And he described the nitrate from the urine produced by these cows as a genie that was hard to put back in its bottle.

‘‘I know and the council know that we don’t have the means to restore these degraded rivers. We’ve got all the documents in the world. We’ve got farm environmen­t plans, but we’ve set up a monster that we can’t do anything about.’’

Trolove pointed to the maximum nitrate level set for the Selwyn catchment by the local water zone committee – the body that advised the council on water policy.

At 6.8 milligrams of nitrate per litre of water, he said farmers had been given the right to continue polluting at current levels for years to come.

ECan’s director of science Tim Davie said this level was struck in consultati­on with the community.

‘‘So it’s never a pure science decision. It’s a mixture of what is achievable because actually under the Resource Management Act, it has to be achievable, which means farmers have to be able to adapt. You ask is it a mistake? I don’t think it’s a mistake. I think what it has done is put us on the pathway towards change.’’

Davie had no doubt nitrate levels in the Selwyn had increased but said the pollution seen now was most likely the result of farming practices 30 years ago, as nitrates slowly made their way through the soils.

A plateauing of cow numbers in the region over the past 10 years would see things improve, eventually.

‘‘Certainly the modelling that has been done says that we will see a continuing increase for perhaps up to 10 years. And then we’ll start seeing the impact and we’ll start seeing a decrease. I mean, I just looked at some data yesterday actually, it was showing that in the last 10 years, there was a 35 per cent reduction in the nitrate losses from dairy farms.’’

The Government’s shake-up of clean water rules last year, the Freshwater National Policy Statement, would see farmers along the banks of the Selwyn held to stricter limits than those imposed by their local council.

It would see current levels slashed by almost two thirds to 2.4 milligrams of nitrate per litre of water.

However, the new target wouldn’t come into effect for another three years. –

 ?? JOHN KIRK-ANDERSON/STUFF ?? The Selwyn River, pictured in 2019, was once a top trout fishing destinatio­n. Inset: ECan’s director of science Tim Davie.
JOHN KIRK-ANDERSON/STUFF The Selwyn River, pictured in 2019, was once a top trout fishing destinatio­n. Inset: ECan’s director of science Tim Davie.

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