DISCUSSION PAPER ON A WATER POLICY FRAMEWORK
DISCUSSION PAPER ON A WATER POLICY
FRAMEWORK
22 December
2014
Practice
1. The New
Zealand Māori Council says national water policy should
provide for the interests of the natural environment, the
general public and Māori.
2. The Māori interest is
based on prior use. An interest based on prior use is not
presently recognised in national policy.
3. In addition
all people should have free access to reasonable water
supplies for personal domestic needs as a basic human right,
and reasonable access to natural water bodies for
recreation.
4. Recognition of the environmental, general
public and Māori interests should be founded on an ethic of
responsibility in resource use, the concept of the common
good and the preservation of natural resources for future
generations.
5. Current polices do not balance the
necessary responsibilities.
6. The utility of water has
been appropriated from the traditional Māori custodians.
It has been treated as a limitless, free resource for
domestic use, waste disposal and commercial profit. This is
inconsistent with the common good and Māori interests and
has led to over-utilisation and pollution of water bodies,
and losses for Māori communities.
7. As described
below, the Council proposes an independent commission to
restore the balance. The commission is to manage water
allocation and fund its activities from a levy on commercial
uses.
Theory
8. The Māori interest
comprises:
• proprietary interests in water resources
derived from the customary use of water bodies; and
• cultural interests in the preservation of healthy
water bodies derived from the Māori spiritual comprehension
of natural water resources and the associated ethic of
responsible and constrained use.
9. The Māori interest
derives from immemorial usage. Such interest is acknowledged
and respected by the Treaty of Waitangi, the UN Declaration
of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the common law.
10. The general public interest embodies the interest of
all people in maintaining reasonable access to the land and
waters of their country in appropriate condition for their
physical and spiritual sustenance, for themselves and the
coming generations.
11. The general public interest
separate from the Māori interest, derives from the
alienation of land for European settlement as envisaged in
the Treaty of Waitangi with an implied sharing of access to
associated water bodies.
12. The Māori proprietary
and cultural interest in water has been recognised by the
Waitangi Tribunal following an inquiry in which several
hapū described their customary use of different water
resources. How these interests might be provided for today
is the subject of this paper and will be addressed in the
second stage of the Tribunal’s Inquiry.
13. Particular
settlements in respect of the Whanganui and Waikato rivers
have given imaginative effect to the cultural interest in
those cases. However, other settlements on the same basis
seem unlikely.
14. A number of water-use stakeholders
meeting as the Land and Water Forum, have agreed on some
necessary measures in water management. However, the Forum
does not address the Māori status as indigenous people with
pre-existing customary interests, and the respect lawfully
due to such interests.
Proposals
15. To give practical
effect to the interests today, the Māori Council supports
proposals where:
a. water wastage is minimised
b. a
price is paid for the commercial use of water to reflect
its value to the community as a whole
c. ongoing
pollution of water resources is progressively
reduced
d. currently polluted water bodies are
progressively cured and ecosystems re-established
e. the
water take is assessed as follows:
LEVEL
1: a sustainable natural flow or volume of
water is maintained on environmental grounds
LEVEL 2: domestic use water is
allocated according to
need
LEVEL 3:
commercial water use is capped at the volume
of water available after allowing for levels 1 and 2 and
commercial users are progressively required to pay a usage
fee for water consumed, redirected or otherwise
utilised
f. current consents for commercial usage are
wound down to meet the level 3 volumes
g. a percentage of
the level 3 allocation is reserved to Maori for water
related Maori purposes or renting out to other commercial
users
h. the revenue from commercial uses of water is
paid to an independent commission managed on a regional
basis and accountable to non-commercial users
i. the
commission will monitor the water take levels, set water
prices and allocate water use rights through a mechanism to
be determined by it
j. the commission will deal with all
water bodies including aquifers and geothermal
k. the
commission shall use funds to reclaim water consents;
undertake research; monitor water use; foster water storage
and reticulation projects; and implement pollution reduction
and environmental restoration programs
l. the commission
shall allocate a proportion of revenues to Māori in
recognition of the Māori proprietary interest and taking
account of previous non-recognition. The funds allocated to
Māori shall be applied for the particular needs of Māori
in relation to water supplies for marae, papakainga, and
general Māori housing, to engage Māori in the restoration
of customary waterways and to enable Māori to develop
commercial operations utilising
water.
Consultation
16. This paper
has evolved through discussion within the Executive of the
New Zealand Māori Council and with its advisers starting in
2013. The advisers are leading ongoing consultation with
District Māori Councils, hapū and iwi and external
experts. Papers have been presented at various hui and
symposia. The primary purpose of the paper and the
consultation around it is to inform the Council directly and
through its legal team of any improvements to the paper
sought by hapū and iwi and ultimately to gauge the strength
of support for the proposals in the paper. The paper, in its
final form, and the wider output from the consultation will
form the basis of submissions to the Waitangi Tribunal when
it commences Stage 2 hearings into the National Water Case,
brought by the Council in 2012.
17. All feedback is
welcome at info@mokoia.co.nz, including requests for direct
consultation.
ENDS