Tukituki decision a win for water quality and farming
Tukituki decision a win for water quality and
farming
The draft decision by the Board of Inquiry
(BOI) on the Tukituki Catchment
proposal represents a
significant win for freshwater management and the
urgency
of a transition to environmentally sustainable agriculture
in New
Zealand, says Fish & Game NZ.
Fish & Game lead
the evidence presented against the most contentious
issue
in front of the BOI which was Hawke's Bay Regional
Council's proposed
"single nutrient management" approach
- this focussed only on the management
of phosphorous and
set instream nitrogen limits at toxic levels.
"This would
have paved the way for unconstrained land intensification,
and
subsequently all the adverse impacts on water quality
that flow with that,"
says Fish & Game chief executive
Bryce Johnson.
The ruling by the BOI is that such an
approach would neither safeguard the
life supporting
capacity of our freshwater resources, nor provide for
the
public's right to access water that is safe for
swimming, fishing and food
gathering.
For farming in
the catchment to be environmentally sustainable the BOI
ruled
that both nitrogen and phosphorous needs to be
managed to ensure ecosystem
health.
"We all want a
strong and vibrant economy, but public opinion clearly
shows
that New Zealanders will not tolerate unfettered
economic growth or
subsidised irrigation schemes that
have a detrimental impact on their
environment and their
waterways," says Mr Johnson.
"The BOI has delivered a
ruling that should sit well with Kiwis -
essentially it
acknowledges we can have agricultural growth, but
the
challenge now laid down is that any intensification
must not be at the
expense of the environment or the
natural resources owned and enjoyed by all
New
Zealanders."
Fish & Game is confident this ruling will set
a national precedent and have
direct implications for not
only all other proposed large scale irrigation
schemes,
such as the one being talked about for the Wairarapa, but
also the
Government's National Policy Statement for
Freshwater Management which, in
its currently proposed
form, will allow all rivers in New Zealand to reach
toxic
nitrogen levels and result in our waterways becoming the
most polluted
in the OECD.
Mr Johnson notes that this
is a draft ruling and that Fish & Game now needs
to work
through what is a very comprehensive report, in anticipation
of a
full response when the decision is finalised in late
May.
Ends