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Home / The Country

Cyclone recovery: Hawke’s Bay shares insights with flood-hit Tasman

RNZ
20 Jul, 2025 02:08 AM3 mins to read

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Mud and silt at Jim Papps home in Dovedale. Photo / RNZ / Samantha Gee

Mud and silt at Jim Papps home in Dovedale. Photo / RNZ / Samantha Gee

By Monique Steele of RNZ

The head of the $228 million silt removal programme after Cyclone Gabrielle in Hawke’s Bay is drawing “eerie” similarities with Nelson Tasman region, as the flood-hit areas look before to their own recovery.

Communities across the top of the South Island were facing millions of dollars’ worth of damage to roading infrastructure, farmland and properties, following the two recent floods that struck the area within a two-week period, from late June.

Riverside properties in Tasman were grappling with woody debris, silt and waste strewn across their properties.

Cyclone Gabrielle smashed Aotearoa in February 2023 with a force of heavy rain which caused flooding damaging infrastructure, properties and land on the North Island’s East Coast.

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Thick silt and upended tractors lie at the front of Pheasant Farm, Esk Valley, in the wake of Cyclone Gabrielle. Photo / RNZ / Jemima Huston
Thick silt and upended tractors lie at the front of Pheasant Farm, Esk Valley, in the wake of Cyclone Gabrielle. Photo / RNZ / Jemima Huston

Twelve people died during the natural disaster.

Large amounts of silt, forestry slash and waste were swept across the whenua, prompting councils across Hawke’s Bay to set up an immediate regional taskforce to deal with the material.

Shane Fell says the floodwater left more than 500 tonnes of silt on the property. Photo / RNZ
Shane Fell says the floodwater left more than 500 tonnes of silt on the property. Photo / RNZ

Taskforce lead Darren de Klerk said watching the news, there were similar scenes in Tasman as there were in Hawke’s Bay and Tairāwhiti following the cyclone.

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“It’s quite an eerie similarity, I think when you look at some of the woody debris and some of the silt and mixed product that we had to deal with,” he said.

“Obviously, productive land is another similarity in the fact that a lot of the highly productive horticulture and viticulture land has been infected.”

De Klerk said after an emergency, the early stages of recovery were usually shrouded in uncertainty.

“In the early days, anyone dealing with this will find it quite overwhelming,” he said.

“Firstly, it’s just understanding the level of involvement that either Civil Defence or the council has in this recovery.”

De Klerk said it broke Hawke’s Bay up into six zones, triaged properties by severity, and then mapped out sorting and disposal sites, in efforts to “chomp the elephant” one bit at a time.

Since its beginning, the team moved more than 2.5 million cubic metres of silt across more than 1100 properties, returning around 7000ha of land to productivity.

It cleared one million cubic metres of woody debris across the coastline and rivers, and sorted through 12,500 broken orchard and vineyard posts.

He said in Hawke’s Bay, councils had to “take a leap” to support their communities, before the first round of Government funding was announced several months after the event, in May 2023.

“Essentially, you don’t have a rule book,” he said.

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“From a community point of view, I can guarantee you the people behind the scenes are working as absolutely as hard as they possibly can to find solutions.”

Tasman properties face thick silt and debris, echoing Hawke’s Bay cyclone mess. Photo / RNZ / Samuel Rillstone
Tasman properties face thick silt and debris, echoing Hawke’s Bay cyclone mess. Photo / RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

He said it was working with Tasman officials to share insights and avoid “re-inventing the wheel”.

“One of the biggest probably learning is just how you manage your contractor army,” de Klerk said.

“Having a standby list of contractors available, so you’re not having to work through the procurement and contracting of suppliers in the heat of the recovery phase.

“My thoughts are with them and they’ll be trying their absolute best.”

De Klerk said the work must be methodical, and open communication with locals was vital.

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He was now working for the Hastings District Council on its ongoing water and roading infrastructure cyclone recovery.

- RNZ

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