CHB Mail

Company applies to extend consent

Iwi say bid won’t change their stance

- James Pocock

The debate over whether to build a water storage system reminiscen­t of the failed Ruataniwha Dam in Central Hawke’s Bay could continue until 2030, if the company holding consents for it gets its way.

Water Holdings Hawke’s Bay applied last month to the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council and the Central Hawke’s Bay and Hastings District councils to extend the consents it holds for the dam to 2030. They are due to lapse in 2024.

An independen­t decision maker, appointed on behalf of the councils, will consider the applicatio­n early next month.

The company, and a separate Tukituki Water Security project, both say a consent extension would allow more time to consult with the community and, in particular, mana whenua about water storage.

But Ngā ti Kahungunu’s environmen­t and natural resources director Ngaio Tiuka says all the time in the world won’t change his answer — no.

The Ruataniwha Dam, which the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council first began investigat­ions into in 2008, was originally intended as a longterm, sustainabl­e water supply solution for Central Hawke’s Bay.

The Supreme Court found in 2017 that the Minister of Conservati­on acted illegally by trying to make 22 hectares of Ruahine Forest Park available for exchange to Hawke’s Bay Regional Investment Company Ltd (HBRIC) for the $330 million project.

As a result, the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council voted unanimousl­y in 2017 to move on from the Ruataniwha Water Storage Scheme and focus its efforts on other priorities after about $20 million of ratepayers’ money had already been invested into the dam.

Tiuka said there had already been significan­t consultati­on with mana whenua and the community since 2008.

“They could have all the time in the world, the answer is not going to change.”

He described the consent extension applicatio­n as a “waste of time, money and resources” and it could create unnecessar­y conflict in the wider community.

“We don’t oppose water storage, but it has got to be within cultural and environmen­tal limits, and we’re quite capable of interpreti­ng those ourselves.”

Hugh Ritchie, one of the directors for Water Holdings Hawke’s Bay, said they still believe in strategica­lly storing water for the good of the region’s environmen­t.

He said they hoped the applicatio­n for extension would be viewed favourably to give more time to go through the extensive processes required for consultati­on on the project, now known as the Makaroro Storage Scheme.

He said getting engagement and input from mana whenua was a cornerston­e of what they were trying to achieve through the process.

“It took 14 years to get this far. Some of the Canterbury schemes took 38 years or 28 years to get to a point of execution, so it’s not a quick

process,” he said.

Mike Peterson, the head of the Tukituki Water Security Project, a separate entity from Water Holdings Hawke’s Bay, said in support of the applicatio­n that an extension would give more time for the community to discuss the best approach.

He said the old Ruataniwha Dam proposal was a different approach, and the new vision prioritise­d Te Mana o Te Wai and the environmen­t. Discussion of the new proposal

would take time, he said.

Forest & Bird freshwater advocate Tom Kay said the region needed to focus on nature-based solutions instead — “doing things like restoring wetlands, giving rivers more room to move, restoring forest in our hills and essentiall­y finding ways to work within the environmen­tal limits of the region”.

He said that if the consent lapse date was extended then Forest & Bird would be open to challengin­g the decision. “Obviously we’d have to see what the rationale was in that decision, but I don’t think we would shy away from that.”

He said the public should also be able to have a say in the consent extension applicatio­n.

Regional council consents manager Malcolm Miller said the applicatio­ns to the three councils were being processed together and they would follow the process set out in Section 125 of the Resource Management Act.

“We have engaged an independen­t report writer and are working to appoint an independen­t commission­er to report on this and to decide,” Miller said. “The matter of who is an affected person under s125 will be considered by them.”

Applicants wanting 15 million cubic litres of Ruataniwha groundwate­r have successful­ly applied for a deferral of their independen­t resource consent hearing until November, after an unfavourab­le Hawke’s Bay Regional Council officer’s report on the applicatio­ns.

Kay said he was frustrated that the deferral was granted to the applicants.

“They’ve had years, the council has made all these requests for further informatio­n throughout the process and all these things, numerous memos, there has been all these submission­s and now that it’s started looking like it’s not going to go their way they’ve gone away and again asked for more time.”

Duncan Abernethy, a spokesman for the Ruataniwha groundwate­r consent applicants, said the report demonstrat­ed such a large difference in opinion between the two sets of experts that they felt the hearing would have needed to be adjourned had it gone ahead anyway.

 ?? Photo / NZME ?? Hugh Ritchie (centre), with fellow Central Hawke’s Bay farmers Miles McBain and Simon White in 2017 at the time the original Ruataniwha dam was proposed.
Photo / NZME Hugh Ritchie (centre), with fellow Central Hawke’s Bay farmers Miles McBain and Simon White in 2017 at the time the original Ruataniwha dam was proposed.

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