The Southland Times

$2b bill to fix wastewater plants

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

Householde­rs could be hit with a bill of more than $3500 every year to help pay for billions of dollars of upgrades needed to fix New Zealand’s wastewater systems.

Councils may have to find up to $2.1 billion to fund vital improvemen­ts to the ageing network so treatment plants meet environmen­tal standards, a report found.

Small and rural communitie­s would be hit hardest, with more than 80 per cent of the plants that need upgrading servicing communitie­s of fewer than 5000 people. Local government leaders say major costs to replace infrastruc­ture leave such communitie­s struggling, and urged ministers to ensure there is policy specifical­ly to help small authoritie­s.

Dave Cull, president of Local Government New Zealand (LGNZ), said: ‘‘We have long been calling for the Government to put in place targeted support for small communitie­s struggling to pay for water infrastruc­ture replacemen­ts, particular­ly as their ratings base shrinks due to ageing and urbanisati­on.’’

The report, by Boffa Miskell and GHD, is part of a major review into how wastewater, stormwater and drinking water are managed, and is being used by the Government to inform policy while it considers how best to reform the three waters sector.

Estimated costs to upgrade publicly-owned wastewater treatment plants that discharge to freshwater – which at 152 is less than half of the 321 plants around the country, serving just 13 per cent of the population – range between $1.4b and $2.1b, four times what is needed to fix drinking water infrastruc­ture.

Another $39 million to $59m will be needed annually for operating costs. Small towns and villages face the biggest bills, with residents in communitie­s of fewer than 500 people having to find about $3576 every year for 25 years to help fund repairs.

The average annual cost across New Zealand would be $1138. The Manawatu¯ -Whanganui region would be hardest hit, having to find up to $500m to upgrade the 24 treatment plants in the area that serve 133,000 people. In the South Island, West Coast residents face potential bills of up to $180m to improve 10 sites that serve 18,000 people, while Cantabrian­s may have to find $46m.

John Pfahlert, chief executive of water management group Water New Zealand, said the costs were ‘‘alarming’’, with many local authoritie­s already failing to meet existing discharge consents, let alone requiremen­ts over freshwater management.

‘‘It is clear that there is an urgent need to upgrade many wastewater treatment plants and a serious need to find an equitable way to share the costs across communitie­s,’’ he said.

‘‘Improving the quality of wastewater to an acceptable standard will be even more costly than fixing our drinking water system. That is why we would urge the Government to address the delivery of all three waters – drinking, storm and wastewater – when it embarks on its reforms.’’

Cull said the report served to underline the need for direct policy to provide financial support for small communitie­s but did not support the widespread restructur­ing of the water sector into ‘‘regional water monopolies’’, an idea being considered by the Government.

‘‘This report shows that there are specific issues in the wastewater space that need specific policy solutions, targeted to where the problem is, not onesize-fits-all mandatory aggregatio­n.’’

In a joint statement, the Department of Internal Affairs, Ministry for the Environmen­t, regional councils and the report’s authors said the research provided an ‘‘indicative and high level cost as a useful starting point’’.

‘‘The cost of the upgraded plants, and their ongoing operation and maintenanc­e, will be significan­t for small communitie­s, particular­ly those with declining population­s, and will present pertinent policy questions on how these communitie­s will be able to meet environmen­tal objectives,’’ they said.

 ??  ?? The bill to upgrade wastewater treatment plants across the country could top $2 billion. LAINE MOGER/STUFF
The bill to upgrade wastewater treatment plants across the country could top $2 billion. LAINE MOGER/STUFF
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