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Home / Whanganui Chronicle

Horizons Regional Council proposes controversial change to One Plan

Laurel Stowell
By Laurel Stowell
Reporter·Whanganui Chronicle·
26 Jul, 2019 02:30 AM3 mins to read

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The change to nitrogen leaching limits in Horizons' One Plan reflects the latest science, Horizons Regional Council strategy and policy manager Nic Peet says. Photo / NZ Herald

The change to nitrogen leaching limits in Horizons' One Plan reflects the latest science, Horizons Regional Council strategy and policy manager Nic Peet says. Photo / NZ Herald

A contentious plan change that will "provide a workable framework for intensive land use" has been proposed by Horizons Regional Council.

The council was notified on July 22, and is now up for submissions.

If it becomes part of the council's One Plan the framework will allow people doing intensive farming and converting to intensive farming to apply for resource consent, Horizons' strategy and regulation manager Nic Peet said. Some have been unable to do so for two years.

The plan change alters the numbers in the One Plan's Table 14.2, which give the maximum nitrogen leaching allowed on the various classes of land, in kilograms per hectare.

The revamped table would use the numbers in the most recent version of Overseer, a computer land use modelling tool. Each of them is higher than the previous number in the table.

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The maximums will apply to dairy, intensive sheep and beef, commercial vegetable growing and cropping in Horizons' target catchments - the closest to Whanganui being the coastal lakes area south of Whanganui and large parts of Rangitīkei.

The new leaching limits are higher because recent science has found more nitrogen was being leached than originally supposed.

"It's just a recalibration, not an increased allowance. The same amount of farm activity is going in but different numbers are coming out. The science informing the way the leaching rights are calculated has been amended," Horizons councillor Nicola Patrick said.

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People who can't meet the numbers on the new table can apply to be considered for consent if they can show not meeting the numbers isn't critical for their area and that there are other things they will do to offset their impact.

Patrick has been told those people will have to meet a high threshold.

She said the changes could be unfair to landowners who got consent because they leach less than the first numbers in the table.

Also, some of the consents that inspired environment groups Environmental Defence Society and Fish & Game to take Horizons to the Environment Court in 2017 may have been given terms they wouldn't get under this proposed plan change.

Discover more

Farmer's consent renewal frustrations

18 Nov 08:00 PM

Step towards intensive-farming change

25 Jun 09:00 PM
Environment

Intensive farming rules divide council, environment groups

27 Jun 05:00 PM

Local democracy denied, Horizons role 'frustrating' - Rollinson

14 Jul 05:00 PM

"Reviews may be necessary, to ensure fairness," Patrick said.

Fellow Whanganui Horizons councillor David Cotton voted against notifying the plan change. The environment groups have said they would prefer the matter to go straight to a Board of Inquiry or the Environment Court, and he fears it will be appealed and end up in court.

"I'm a strong believer that communities fix rivers and issues, not courts," he said.

The proposed change is now open for submissions by anyone interested. People submitting should say whether they support or oppose some or all aspects of the change. They need to include information to back up their views.

The deadline for submissions is October 21. Those making them will also have a chance to present their views and evidence to a panel of commissioners when the proposed plan change is heard.

For more information and a submission form, go to www.horizons.govt.nz.

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