The New Zealand Herald

There’s something in the water needs reforming

- Jon Grayson comment Jon Grayson is the chief executive of the New Zealand Infrastruc­ture Commission Te Waihanga

We expect our drinking water to be healthy and safe, and our wastewater to be treated and discharged back to the environmen­t as clean and pure as possible. We prefer not to think too hard about how this happens — we just want it all to work well.

Unfortunat­ely, recent events show that this isn’t always the reality. The spate of sewage spills into Wellington Harbour, Lake Taupo¯ and many other places and contaminat­ion of drinking water in Havelock North in 2016, which resulted in the death of three people and numerous serious illnesses are just the tip of a not-so-pure iceberg. New Zealand’s water infrastruc­ture is well overdue for investment as pipes reach the end of their useful lives. Environmen­tal expectatio­ns are increasing and the consequenc­es of climate change, including more frequent and more intense droughts such as the one currently being endured by Aucklander­s, require urgent attention. On top of that, over a third of wastewater treatment plants will require reconsenti­ng within the next ten years, and almost a quarter are operating on expired consents. All of this adds up to big costs for councils and ratepayers. Conservati­ve estimates are in billions of dollars. In the case of small rural councils, this could add thousands of dollars to annual rates bills.

These are all issues the Government’s Three Waters review is bringing to the fore.

The review is considerin­g how to improve New Zealand’s three waters service delivery and funding arrangemen­ts. It has been examining whether local councils, which largely own and deliver three waters assets and services, are best placed to manage this.

In January 2020, the Government confirmed its commitment to partnering with local government to consider options for transition­ing councils to new service delivery arrangemen­ts, allowing for safer, more affordable and reliable three waters services across the country.

Infracom supports the Government’s reform agenda.

We would like to see the water sector aggregated into four, or possibly even three, entities. That is the level of aggregatio­n that is necessary to capture scale benefits. We also believe that strong regulatory oversight is essential, including an economic regulator to ensure that the benefits of scale are translated into lower long run costs and better services for consumers.

If you do the maths, it makes sense. It enables economies of scale, which will not just take significan­t financial pressure off local authoritie­s, it enables better outcomes for consumers.

A detailed study in the Waikato region found that a collaborat­ion between Hamilton City, Waikato District and Waipa District would save those councils an average of $16.7 million per annum.

It would also bring a range of important non-financial benefits, such as ensuring the country’s best water engineers are available for communitie­s that might not otherwise be able to afford them.

It would free up councils to do the job they do best — focusing on the wellbeing of their local communitie­s.

There is a strong argument, put forward by organisati­ons as diverse as Local Government New Zealand, the New Zealand Society of Local Government Managers, the New Zealand Initiative and Infrastruc­ture New Zealand, that New

Zealand would benefit if local communitie­s were able to determine and implement their own, unique approaches to local wellbeing. Re-focusing local government on community wellbeing, and away from the provision of infrastruc­ture would also unshackle elected members from technical debates they do not have the technical or experienti­al background to participat­e in, and are usually not particular­ly interested in.

Ongoing reform is essential if New Zealand’s water infrastruc­ture is to cope with the current investment deficit and future challenges, including a growing population, climate change and increasing consumer expectatio­ns.

To maintain momentum, we are also proposing a National Reform Agenda which will identify, and monitor, key steps the industry must take to achieve global best practice. These would be big changes for councils and change is often viewed as a threat. However, in a post-Covid-19 environmen­t, with increased demand for expenditur­e and increased rates likely to be off the agenda for some time, it becomes an ever more practical solution.

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