Latest News from Earthrace Conservation
Latest News from Earthrace Conservation
For Immediate
Release by Captain Pete Bethune CEO Earthrace
Conservation
Problems with fresh water in New Zealand are just beginning, and in my opinion will continue to get worse unless our central government steps in. Most Regional Councils have failed, deliberately or otherwise, to keep up with changing land and water use, and river quality is on a slippery slide downstream. The solutions are staring us in the face, and yet authorities continue to absolve themselves of responsibility.
For those of you unaware, recently thousands of people became sick, and several people actually died from poor water in the Hawkes Bay. Yet what happened there in terms of water quality, is also occurring to varying degrees, elsewhere around our country. The problems, summarized below, are only going to get worse until substantial measures are taken.
Here are the Major Problems
1) Too many nutrients, nitrates, phosphates in
the water
2) Excessively high Bacterial Counts
3)
Increased Weed and Algal growth
4) Reduced water flows
through the rivers and streams
Farming
Fertilizers
Farming, in my opinion, is the most
significant contributor to these problems. Fertilizers
designed to enrich soils and make them more productive, flow
down to the waterways where it has a detrimental
impact.
Changing Land Use
There has been a definite
trend towards more intensive farming. As examples, Drystock
farms have been moving to more intensive farming such as
Dairy. Financially there are strong drivers for this – A
Dairy farm is worth much more than a Drystock Farm.
Councils like this – increased land values = increased
rates. Intensive farming can also lead to increases in
export earnings and employment – both desirable results
from the government perspective. With this however has come
increased irrigation (removing water from rivers / streams)
and increased fertilizer use, and our waterways are paying
the price.
Feedlots
An area many Regional Councils have
failed to address is feedlots. These are areas where large
numbers of cattle are fed food supplements such as meal, and
they’ve become increasingly popular as Farmers look to
increase gate returns. Of all meal types, Palm Kernel, a
byproduct of the Asian Palm Oil Industry, is I believe the
worst for our waterways. These are incredibly rich in
nutrients and just small amounts of the product itself, or
the resulting fecal matter by cattle, do enormous damage.
Southland Regional Council recognized this and have
introduced a resource consent process for new feedlots, yet
most other authorities around the country have simply turned
a blind eye. Many Farmers are free to put feedlots right
next to a major waterway with impunity.
Bottling
Plants
Amazingly, Hawkes Bay, which has one of the worst
water quality issues in the country, has been allowing
bottling companies free water for bulk export to China. The
bottlers pay is a few hundred dollars for their resource
consent and that is it. While water exporters are not the
only draw on water supplies, it highlights the issue where
commercial companies can take massive volumes of water and
yet pay nothing for it.
Draining of Areas
While this
happens less today, draining of swamps and other areas has
been significant in New Zealand. Swamps provide flood
protection, they are great at eating up excess nitrates and
nutrients, and they provide rich habitat for many animals
including migrating birds. Many such areas were
systematically destroyed through straight-edged drains and
covered in housing estates, paddocks and others. While
harder to achieve today, it does still in fact happen, and
we need to stop it.
Solutions to the Water
Problem
Following are the solutions, difficult as these
are for Regional Councils, Farmers and the Public to accept.
Some will cost money. Some will cost land owners reduced
capital gains on their properties in future. Some will
require NGOs, Councils, Volunteers and Farmers to work
together. And some will just be a hassle. Nevertheless here
they are:
Stop allowing land use changes that result in
increased intensification of farming
All farms in New
Zealand should have the 20m Queen’s Chain around waterways
fenced off
Queen’s Chain to be planted in flax and
other plants to help take up nitrates and nutrients before
they reach the waterways.
Farmers to be prosecuted where
they are found to have cattle, sheep, deer, pigs or other
bovines in waterways.
Rigorous Resource Consent Process
for all Feedlots
Rigorous Resource Consent Process for
access to Irrigation Waters
Commercial Users of water to
pay for their consumption
Ensure we no longer drain
swampy and lowland areas.
In many ways our waterways are
dying by a thousand cuts. There is no one farmer, consumer
or land use specifically to blame. Rather it is many things
that all contribute. I’ve listed the ones above that are
major contributors, but there are in fact many more. We
Kiwis have taken our waterways for granted. We just assumed
we would always have clean water. Also the changes have
been gradual. We don’t notice a slight increase in algal
growth in our creeks. Sadly it’s taken a few deaths
before we actually sit up an take notice. Lets hope our
Central Government and Regional Councils now also recognize
this and do something about it.--
ends