Waitaki catchment commissioner appointed
< Waitaki
catchment commissioner appointed to decide on notification
status of consent applications Environment Canterbury has
appointed Professor Peter Skelton as a commissioner to
decide on the notification status of more than 200 water
resource consent applications in the Waitaki
catchment. There are 200-plus applications being processed
by Environment Canterbury which were held up by Meridian’s
Project Aqua application, since withdrawn, the subsequent
calling-in of consents by central Government and the
preparation of a statutory plan for the catchment. The
Waitaki Catchment Water Allocation Regional Plan was made
fully operative this year, enabling the resource management
process to resume in the Waitaki. The consents relate to
water take applications upstream and downstream of the
Waitaki Dam. They include the recently lodged applications
by Meridian Energy Ltd for its North Bank Tunnel Concept,
above the Waitaki Dam, and the proposed Hunter Downs
Irrigation Scheme, below the dam. In early 2007, Professor
Skelton will rule on whether the resource consent
applications require public notification or whether they can
be processed without notification. Notified consents are
likely to be heard by a panel which would include Professor
Skelton and likely to take place in the fourth quarter of
2007. The non-notified consents would be decided by
Professor Skelton alone in the first quarter of 2007. ECan
Waitaki councillor Dr June Slee welcomed the appointment of
Professor Skelton as a commissioner and said as an expert on
the Resource Management Act he was eminently qualified for
the role. “Professor Skelton has extensive previous
experience as an Environment Court judge, which is
reassuring for the Waitaki community.” The Waitaki
catchment is the source of most of New Zealand’s
hydro-energy generation and the Waitaki is one of Canterbury
region’s most significant braided rivers in terms of flora
and fauna habitat and fisheries. The Waitaki Plan envisages
that the catchment has the potential to provide irrigation
water to a wide range of rural land
uses. Ends