Watercare is supporting Mt Albert Grammar School to assist with some tree planting on their farm park next Sunday the 28 June. The school is inviting members of the local community to join in on the planting day. We will provide volunteers with coffee, a BBQ and have information available about the Central Interceptor project.
In May 2020 the Minister for the Environment announced the decisions for action on fresh water. The NZ Government received 17.500 submissions during consultation on fresh water management.
There is a requirement to work more closely with iwi; fences will be required beside rivers to keep stock more than three metres away from the water; and a cap has been set on use of nitrogen fertiliser. While STEPS supports these moves, we are very disappointed there is still no bottom line for dissolved nitrogen or phosphorous.
Scientists such as Mike Joy and Adam Canning are critical of the lack of progress made. They believe the recommendations of the Science and Technical Advisory Group were largely ignored, and that water quality will not be regained within a generation. https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12336244
When the Freshwater NPS 2020 comes into force later this year, new requirements will include:
Manage freshwater in a way that ‘gives effect’ to Te Mana o te Wai:
through involving tangata whenua
working with tangata whenua and communities to set out long-term visions in the regional policy statement and by
prioritising the health and wellbeing of water bodies, then the essential needs of people, followed by other uses.
Improve degraded water bodies, and maintain or improve all others using baselines defined in the NPS.
An expanded national objectives framework:
two additional values – threatened species and mahinga kai – join ecosystem health and human health for recreation, as compulsory values
councils must develop plan objectives that describe the environmental outcome sought for all values (including an objective for each of the 5 individual components of ecosystem health)
new attributes, aimed specifically at providing for ecosystem health, include Fish (IBI), sediment, Macroinvertebrates (MCI and QMCI), and dissolved oxygen; councils will have to develop action plans and/or set limits on resource use to achieve these attributes.
a tougher national bottom line for the attribute Nitrate Toxicity to protect 95% of species from toxic effects (up from 80%)
no national bottom lines for dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) or dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) (as consulted on) but there is a requirement to manage these attributes as they relate to periphyton and other ecosystem health attributes. `
Avoid any further loss or degradation of wetlands and streams, map existing wetlands and encourage their restoration.
Identify and work towards target outcomes for fish abundance, diversity and passage and address in-stream barriers to fish passage over time.
Set an aquatic life objective for fish and address in-stream barriers to fish passage over time.
Monitor and report annually on freshwater (including the data used); publish a synthesis report every five years containing a single ecosystem health score and respond to any deterioration
Much of what we do on land affects our seas. We can help improve the condition of the ocean and enhance its resilience to climate change and human activities.
The Department of Conservation and WWF-New Zealand are proud to announce the launch of Changing Tides: Tai Tōrua an exciting new webinar series about protecting the well-being of our ocean!
Hosted on Zoom, Changing Tides: Tai Tōrua will bring together experts from Aotearoa and around the world to discuss issues facing our moana, and the impacts of climate change on our marine environment.