One Plan ruling a win for all NZ
Media release from Fish & Game NZ
One Plan ruling a win for all NZ
Fish & Game NZ says
an Environment Court ruling on the Manawatu-Wanganui
region’s One Plan sets a precedent for resource management
that will be far reaching.
Declining water quality and
historically poor management of this most precious natural
resource in New Zealand has become one of the defining
environmental issues of our time.
Intensification of land
use is the greatest threat to water quality and has been the
least likely to be addressed by regional councils.
The ruling was yesterday handed down on areas of the Horizons Regional Council’s regional policy, the One Plan, under appeal from groups such as Fish & Game, the Department of Conservation, Federated Farmers, Fonterra, the energy sector and private parties.
“The Environment Court has provided an unequivocal judgement on a significant environmental matter,” says Wellington Fish & Game manager Phil Teal.
“For too long there has been a flagrant disregard for how land use impacts on water quality, with unsustainable land development and agricultural intensification exacting a huge toll on our most precious resource.
“This decision represents a seismic shift in natural resource and freshwater management in New Zealand. While recognising the importance of the primary industry, it also mandates the necessity of concrete action through a rules-based planning approach to protect and improve the environment and particularly our freshwater resource, which is so crucial to our national identity and ‘100% Pure, clean green’ brand.
“It’s a good decision for all New Zealand creating much better balance which has been long overdue – a win-win, putting New Zealand agriculture on an environmentally sustainable footing and setting in train a requirement to clean up its tarnished image.”
As the first regional plan to tackle nutrient management on a catchment basis, formation of the One Plan – and the subsequent appeal – has been closely watched around the country as an opportunity to develop a blueprint for the rest of New Zealand.
Among other key rulings, the decision means irrigated sheep and beef farming, as well as the horticulture sector, will be classed as intensive land use, and therefore will be brought into a nutrient and sediment management regime to reduce losses to waterways.
The Environment Court found the arguments put forward by Fonterra, Federated Farmers and Horticulture New Zealand on the One Plan were deficient, with the Court ruling that those parties did not represent “sustainable management”.
In summing up the Court stated: “We have
little sympathy for the line of argument that we should
defer taking decisive action in the field of improving water
quality… to fail to take available and appropriate steps
within the terms of the legislation just cited would be
inexcusable.”
Mr Teal says the ruling now provides
certainty for all parties – “It’s good for the
environment and good for industry and development because we
all know where we’re heading.”
Fish & Game chief
executive Bryce Johnson says: “The judgment is a major
step towards mandatory environmentally sustainable best
on-farm practice, which can only be good for our agriculture
sector in the international market.
“New Zealanders want their waterways restored to being swimmable, fishable and safe for food gathering – this decision delivers on that.”
Fish & Game appealed the One Plan to ensure there were adequate provisions for dealing with water quality issues and provided evidence to complement New Zealand’s best technical experts on these issues.
Key points:
• Developed by New Zealand’s leading experts
across sustainable land use, agriculture, freshwater
ecology, biodiversity, landscape, planning and law, the One
Plan sets a blueprint for integrated catchment
management to protect freshwater and its values in New
Zealand.
•
• Water quality and quantity
numerical limits have been set by leading
independent experts with robust scrutiny so
they weren’t influenced by advocacy of self-interest or
political influence groups.
•
• Endorsement
that agricultural land use is a significant
contributor to the degraded state of the region's freshwater
ecosystems and as such should be regulated to
measurable performance standards, best management practices
and leaching targets.
•
• Leaching targets should
not be based on ‘grand-parenting’ but set on the natural
capital of land and that these leaching targets should
reduce over time, ramping down leaching
allowances.
•
• The court ruled that in regards
to farming there cannot be a reliance on voluntary
approaches alone. Even if those programs exist such
as the clean streams accord, they need the
reinforcement of a regulatory regime to set
measureable standards and to enforce compliance with them.
Permitted activity is not appropriate.
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