"It is clear that it was. The Court of Appeal was right to conclude that the revocation decision was unlawful because it was driven by the director-general's view that there was net benefit to conservation ends to be obtained from the proposed exchange which could be implemented only if protected status was revoked. That did not justify revocation under s18(7)."
The Supreme Court majority was made up of Chief Justice Sian Elias, and Justices Susan Glazebrook and Terence Arnold. Justice William Young and Mark O'Regan dissented, saying they would have allowed the appeals because there was nothing in the language of s18(7) to limit revocation to the intrinsic values of the land if the revocation was for the purposes of the Act.
The Supreme Court judgment leaves a question mark over the $275 million water scheme, backed by the Hawke's Bay Regional Council's investment arm, which would create a 93 million cubic metre reservoir to store water in the upper Makaroro river to improve river flows for agricultural use in the Tukituki River catchment. It's estimated it would provide irrigation for 25,000 hectares of farmland in central Hawke's Bay.
The Supreme Court has confirmed our forest parks belong to the people of New Zealand and are protected by the Conservation Act.
A newly elected council had ordered a review of the scheme and the council's funding commitment, which saw the local authority affirm its support albeit with stricter conditions.
The scheme has divided opinion because it would allow farmers in the often parched central Hawke's Bay to ramp up production but also poses risks to the region's waterways that are already under pressure from agricultural and industrial runoff. A full uptake of water under the scheme is forecast to increase the region's annual gross domestic product by between $130 million and $380 million, and create between 1,130 and 3,580 jobs.
Forest & Bird chief executive Kevin Hague welcomed the ruling, saying the government "went all the way to the Supreme Court to allow the downgrade and exchange of part of Ruahine Forest Park, which would have led to the destruction of that land."
"The Supreme Court has confirmed that our forest parks belong to the people of New Zealand and are protected by the Conservation Act," Hague said in a statement.