Te Awamutu Courier

EPA weighs in on waste plant plan

Proposal for waste-to-energy plant raises concerns over greenhouse gas emissions

- Danielle Zollickhof­er

The Environmen­tal Protection Authority (EPA) has weighed in on the controvers­ial proposal to build a waste-to-energy plant in Te Awamutu. The EPA is a government agency responsibl­e for regulating activities that affect New Zealand’s environmen­t.

The agency said it considered the proposal one of national significan­ce and supported Waikato Regional Council and Waipā District Council’s decision to ask the Minister for the Environmen­t to get involved.

The proposal, made by Hamilton-based company Global Contractin­g Solutions

(GCS), would see 150,000 tonnes of rubbish being incinerate­d at a purpose-built plant on Racecourse Rd, Te Awamutu, to generate electric power.

GCS launched resource consent applicatio­ns with the two councils in 2021. The councils recently asked the Minister for the Environmen­t to “callin” the applicatio­ns.

A call-in means that the proposal would be heard by either a Board of Inquiry or the Environmen­t Court and would allow for greenhouse gas emissions to be considered.

Minister for the Environmen­t Penny Simmonds has yet to decide if she calls in the applicatio­n.

In March, she asked the EPA to provide advice on whether the proposed plant could be considered a proposal of national significan­ce and if called in, who it should be referred to for decision.

Now, the EPA responded and recommende­d Simmonds to call-in the applicatio­n. The authority wouldn’t provide a recommenda­tion on whether to refer the matters to a board of inquiry or the Environmen­t Court.

If the minister does agree to call in the proposal, she will decide how to proceed.

In its response to the minister, the EPA said it considered the proposed plant, called Paewira, “may contribute to significan­t changes to the environmen­t, including the global environmen­t”.

The EPA said Paewira would be the first of its kind in New Zealand and involved technology, processes, or methods that “may affect its environmen­t”.

“There are numerous waste-to-energy plants in operation around the world. However, there are no waste-to-energy facilities incinerati­ng the type of waste proposed by [GCS] in New Zealand that have yet been authorised.”

GCS has previously said the plant’s

You may not control all the events that happen to you, but you can decide not to be reduced by them Maya Angelou

emissions would be “benign” and the plant was designed to be “compliant and safe”.

The EPA said the Paewira’s greenhouse gas emissions were estimated to be higher than the ones of the proposed Waimate plant which was a larger facility.

“MfE [Ministry for the Environmen­t] officials have noted that, when standardis­ing for the amount of input waste, the estimated [greenhouse gas] emissions [for the Te Awamutu plant] are higher than that estimated for the larger proposed facility in Waimate that was called-in on 31 August 2023.

“This is because the Te Awamutu facility is proposing that 20 per cent of its feedstock is plastic only, which creates a significan­t amount of [greenhouse gas] emissions.

“Waste to energy by incinerati­on of fossil-fuel-derived materials is not considered renewable energy because the raw materials are largely derived from fossil fuels.”

The EPA said the plant could also have an impact on New Zealand’s “internatio­nal obligation­s to the global environmen­t”.

“Under the Paris Agreement, New Zealand has committed to a 50 per cent reduction of net emissions below our gross 2005 level by 2030.

“There is currently a gap between that target and projected emissions. New emission sources, such as the proposed facility, will widen that gap and increase the cost to the government of meeting its internatio­nal commitment.”

When Waikato Regional Council and Waipā District Council asked the minister to call in the applicatio­n, they were in favour of referring the matter to a board of inquiry.

Meanwhile, Global Contractin­g Solutions’ preference is for the matters to be referred to the Environmen­t Court, to be consistent with the callin of the Waimate consent applicatio­n. Waikato Herald approached Global Contractin­g Solutions for comment.

Waikato Herald also asked the minister for an update on the decision.

The EPA’s full response can be found on the Waipā District Coun

cil website.

 ?? Photo / Julia McCarthy-Fox ?? Protestors took their ‘Don’t Burn Waipa’ message to the streets and council in October.
Photo / Julia McCarthy-Fox Protestors took their ‘Don’t Burn Waipa’ message to the streets and council in October.
 ?? ?? A concept drawing of what Paewira, the planned wasteto-energy plant for Te Awamutu, could look like.
A concept drawing of what Paewira, the planned wasteto-energy plant for Te Awamutu, could look like.
 ?? ?? Minister for the Environmen­t Penny Simmonds.
Minister for the Environmen­t Penny Simmonds.

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