Te Awamutu Courier

Council ask to call in proposal

Means waste-to-energy plant will be heard by board of inquiry

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Waipā District Council has joined Waikato Regional Council (WRC) in asking the Environmen­t Minister to call in a proposal to build a waste-to-energy plant in Te Awamutu.

The proposal from Global Contractin­g Solutions would see 150,000 tonnes of rubbish being incinerate­d at a purpose-built plant on Racecourse Rd, Te Awamutu.

The rubbish, much of it trucked in from outside the district, would be used to generate electric power.

More than 800 submission­s were received by each council on the proposal, the vast majority against.

In December 2023, the WRC asked Environmen­t Minister Penny Simmonds to call in the proposal so that greenhouse gas emissions could be considered.

A call-in means that instead of the proposal being heard by a hearing panel of independen­t commission­ers, it is called in by the minister to be heard by a board of inquiry or the Environmen­t Court.

On Wednesday, Waipā’s Strategic Planning and Policy Committee agreed Waipā District Council should also request the minister to call the proposal in.

The councils’ group manager district growth and regulatory services, Wayne Allan, said given the huge community interest in the proposal, it was important the decision-making process was clear, consistent and as easy as possible for the community to navigate.

“We don’t want to have one hearing process running while WRC

advocates for something else. Having just one process that both entities support will be far less confusing,” Allan said.

“That’s really important given nearly 600 submitters have advised us they want to have their say and speak to their submission when the time comes.”

In his letter to the minister on behalf of council, Allan specifical­ly advocated for a board of inquiry, to be held in Te Awamutu. Elected members strongly supported this.

“If the minister agrees to accept the requests from both councils and make a direction to call in this applicatio­n, Waipā would like to strongly advocate for the board of inquiry process.

“A board of inquiry process is less confrontin­g than the Environmen­t Court for our lay-community submitters and is less likely to require lawyers — and their additional cost — for our submitters.

“Most importantl­y, it could be held locally — Te Awamutu being our

preference, given 575 submitters advise they wish to be heard. This is a position strongly supported by Waipā’s elected members.”

If the call-in is declined, the process will revert back to a joint hearing panel of independen­t commission­ers appointed to hear the applicatio­n.

For more informatio­n including a series of questions and answers, visit tinyurl. com/ taenergypl­ant informatio­n.

 ?? ?? A concept drawing of what the waste-to-energy plant in Te Awamutu could look like.
A concept drawing of what the waste-to-energy plant in Te Awamutu could look like.

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