Greenpeace says council decision means dam is dead
Greenpeace says council decision means dam is dead
Thursday, July 13: Hawke’s Bay Regional Council
appears to have hammered the last nail into the coffin of
the Ruataniwha Irrigation Dam.
Late yesterday it
announced that the only option left on the table to keep the
scheme alive will not be pursued.
Councillors confirmed that they will not be using
the Public Works Act to grab the land needed to make the dam
a reality.
“That was the only avenue remaining for
the Government and Regional Council to push through a big
irrigation project that so many people didn’t want,”
says Greenpeace Agriculture Campaigner, Gen Toop. “The dam
is effectively dead in the water.”
The Regional
Council have set aside 80 million dollars to fund the
scheme
This follows a ruling by the Supreme Court last
week that the area of conservation land cannot have its
protected status revoked to make way for the dam.
Local Iwi Ngati Kahungunu, Forest and Bird,
Greenpeace and hundreds of local community members have all
opposed the proposed dam over environmental
issues.
“The Ruataniwha Dam was the poster child of
the Government’s think-big irrigation agenda, which is
now very clearly flailing and needs to be put down.” says
Toop.
In the wake of Ruataniwha, Greenpeace is issuing
a warning to other think-big irrigation
schemes.
“The demise of the Ruataniwha irrigation
dam sends one clear message to other proposed irrigation
schemes around the country: Their days are numbered.”
The dam would have driven land conversions to
intensive dairying and further river pollution. As a result
it has faced monumental opposition across the board, both
locally and nationally.
Over 90,000 people have signed
a petition demanding that the Government stops funding big
irrigation schemes.
The dam has faced several local and national protests, including in
September last year when Greenpeace returned the proposed dam’s site
office from near where the dam was planned back to the
Council.
Key investors have also walked away from the
dam, it’s faced a lengthy consent process and a court
battle which it ultimately lost.
Last October, the
people of Hawke’s Bay made their opposition to the dam
clear when they voted out the pro-dam majority council and
elected in an anti-dam council.
“The Ruataniwha dam
would have meant more industrial dairying and more pollution
in our rivers so this is a victory for our rivers and for
the thousands of people that opposed the dam,” says Toop.
“The huge public opposition which has resulted in
the dam’s demise is a stark warning to the other large
irrigation schemes planned, like Central Plains Water and
Hunter Downs in Canterbury.”
Greenpeace is demanding
the Government's irrigation subsidies be spent on a
transition fund to more sustainable forms of
farming.
The environmental organisation is releasing a
short documentary today, starring NZ farmers, called The
Regenerators: A better way to farm.
ENDS