CHB Mail

No wastewater for stream

Environmen­tal milestone for Central Hawke's Bay

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An environmen­tal milestone will be achieved this month for Central Hawke’s Bay when Otāne’s wastewater discharge is permanentl­y removed from the Papanui Stream and a new pipeline transporti­ng Otā ne’s wastewater to the Waipawa Wastewater Treatment plant is fully operationa­l.

In 2018, after receiving consents to continue dischargin­g treated wastewater into the Papanui Stream for the foreseeabl­e future, the Central Hawke’s Bay District Council paused the project to instead consider an intergener­ational, environmen­tally focused strategy for wastewater management.

The resultant new approach to managing and dischargin­g Otāne’s wastewater will see all wastewater discharges removed from the district’s waterways by 2035.

“The completion of this project marks the first stage of an important journey for the district to remove our wastewater discharges from our district’s waterways, starting with the Papanui,” says CHB Mayor Alex Walker.

Work has also been under way at the Waipawa Wastewater Treatment Plant, upgrading treatment processes to ensure the Otā ne wastewater does not have an impact on the quality of the current wastewater discharge into the Waipawa River.

Treatment improvemen­ts have been made through the new plant and equipment, transformi­ng the quality of the current discharge from the Waipawa Wastewater Treatment Plant, ahead of further work to see the wastewater discharged to land instead by 2035.

“The improvemen­t in the quality of the wastewater being discharged from this work we’ve completed is staggering,” says CHB district councillor Brent Muggeridge.

“Not only will we have completely removed our impact on the Papanui Stream, but we’ve also made significan­t improvemen­t on the quality of wastewater being discharged in Waipawa — we’ve backed winners with both of these projects.”

Physical constructi­on began in June 2020 and included a new pump station, and 9km of new pipeline connecting Otāne to Waipawa.

The Otāne Pipeline and Pump Station had a total project cost of $5.8m with $3.4m funded by connected wastewater residents of Central Hawke’s Bay and $2.4m funded through Central Government’s Three Waters Tranche One Stimulus funding.

 ?? ?? Central Hawke’s Bay Mayor Alex Walker, Central Hawke’s Bay District Council project manager Ben Swinburne and director of projects and programmes Darren de Klerk at the new Otā ne Pump Station.
Central Hawke’s Bay Mayor Alex Walker, Central Hawke’s Bay District Council project manager Ben Swinburne and director of projects and programmes Darren de Klerk at the new Otā ne Pump Station.
 ?? ?? Central Hawke’s Bay District Council project manager Ben Swinburne explains the infrastruc­ture at the new pump station in Otā ne.
Central Hawke’s Bay District Council project manager Ben Swinburne explains the infrastruc­ture at the new pump station in Otā ne.

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