Pressure on as Freshwater Rescue Plan gains support
Pressure on as Freshwater Rescue Plan gains support
The campaign for better water
quality is continuing to gather support, with organisations
representing half a million members and supporters now
backing the recently launched Freshwater Rescue
Plan.
Support has been boosted with eight new
organisations giving their backing to the Plan.
The new
supporters are ActionStation, Environment and Conservation
Organisations of Aotearoa New Zealand (ECO), New Zealand
Federation of Freshwater Anglers, New Zealand Recreation
Association, Pure Advantage, Waitaha Executive Grandmothers
Council, Whitewater New Zealand, and WWF - NZ.
Their support means the Plan’s backers now include 16 well-known organisations with collective support from at least half a million people. Supporters include leaders in the science, public health, tourism, recreation, community, and environmental sectors.
The original supporters of the
Freshwater Rescue Plan are Choose Clean Water, Federated
Mountain Clubs of New Zealand Inc., Fish & Game New Zealand,
Forest & Bird, Greenpeace New Zealand, OraTaiao - New
Zealand Climate & Health Council, the Public Health
Association, and the Tourism Export Council of New
Zealand.
The Freshwater Rescue Plan was launched in
Wellington last month in reaction to the Government’s
disappointing ‘Clean Water Package’, which has been
widely criticized for being complicated, confusing, lacking
urgency and weakening protection for freshwater
ecosystems.
The Freshwater Rescue Plan provides seven
achievable steps for the Government to protect the health of
New Zealand’s people, wildlife, and waterways. Supporters
say it is a sensible and realistic strategy to rescue New
Zealand’s rivers, lakes and streams from their present,
dangerously unhealthy state.
Fresh water is now one of
the most important issues facing New Zealanders this
election year and pressure is building on political parties
to support the Rescue Plan to reverse the decline in
freshwater quality.
The Rescue Plan’s supporters want
all political parties to face up to their environmental
responsibility and adopt the entire plan into their
policies.
The supporters are disappointed with the
government’s response, saying it has rejected the plan and
ignored requests for meetings.
The organisations backing
the Freshwater Rescue Plan are repeating their offer to meet
with the government and work with it to achieve the plan’s
goals which will benefit all New Zealanders’ environment,
health and economy.
The plan’s supporters say the
health of people and wildlife is suffering from widespread
freshwater pollution and are calling on the government to
show it is taking the degraded state of our rivers and lakes
seriously.
The Freshwater Rescue Plan’s steps include
setting strict and enforceable water quality standards based
on human health and ecosystems health limits, withdrawing
public subsidies of irrigation schemes, supporting
sustainable agricultural practices, and decreasing cow
numbers.
The plan also calls for better water quality
reporting, a polluter pays system, and a long-term goal of
prioritising a low-carbon economy for New Zealand.
If all
seven steps of the Freshwater Rescue Plan are enacted, fresh
water in Aotearoa can return to the once pristine state that
New Zealand is known for.
For more information – www.freshwaterrescueplan.org
Seven
steps of the Freshwater Rescue Plan:
1. Prioritise the
health of people and their waterways by setting strict and
enforceable water quality standards, based on human and
ecosystem health limits.
2. Withdraw all public subsidies
of irrigation schemes, as they increase pressure on
waterways.
3. Invest in an Agricultural Transition Fund,
to support the country's shift away from
environmentally-damaging farming methods by redirecting $480
million of public money earmarked for
irrigation.
4. Implement strategies to decrease cow
numbers immediately.
5. Reduce freshwater contamination
by instigating polluter pays systems
nationally.
6. Address the performance of regional
council’s on improving water quality through quarterly
reports from the Ministry for the Environment on
enforcement, breaches and monitoring.
7. Adopt OECD
recommendation to establish a whole-of-government,
multi-stakeholder process to develop a long-term vision for
the transition of New Zealand to a low-carbon, greener
economy.