Ashburton Community Water Trust consents granted
< Ashburton
Community Water Trust hydro resource consents granted The
Ashburton Community Water Trust (ACWT) and Ashburton
District Council have been granted resource consents to use
Rakaia River water to generate electricity. The Rakaia
Terrace hydro scheme proposes to take up to 40 cubic metres
of water per second (cumecs) from Highbank and discharge it
at Barrhill. The ACWT jointly applied for 40 cumecs of
Rakaia River water with Central Plains Water Trust (CPWT).
The CPWT irrigation scheme will reopen in October this year
after commissioners recently met to consider how that scheme
might proceed without its water storage component. (
http://www.ecan.govt.nz/Resource+Consents/Central+Plains+Water/Hearings.htm
) If it obtains consents, CPWT would use its allocation
during the irrigation season, whereas ACWT would use the
water outside the irrigation season. The commissioners
have previously noted that the ACWT scheme is a much simpler
application with less environmental effects that the
proposed CPWT proposal. The ACWT scheme returns the water to
the river, CPWT would use up to 40 cumecs for irrigation.
The proposed takes are at different locations on opposite
sides of the river. The application was heard by
Environment Canterbury and Ashburton District Council
-appointed commissioners Philip Milne (chair), Andrew
Fenemor and Ray O’Callaghan. The commissioners had issued
interim consents in December 2008, subject to a full ecology
survey from Highbank to Barrhill to determine potential
effects on the environment, in particular birdlife and
lizards.
They have now concluded that any adverse effects
on the environment would be adequately avoided, remedied or
mitigated and that the scheme is sustainable. They
considered it unlikely that the diversion of water would
lead to any sediment build-up upstream of Barrhill as a
result of the maximum 23 cumec flow reduction. The Rakaia
Water Conservation Order ensures that water can only be
taken at relatively high flows, commissioners said. The
consents have been issued until January 28, 2035, a date
that coincides with the expiry of the Barrhill Chertsey
Irrigation and the Electricity Ashburton Limited
consents. A summary and a full copy of the decision are
online at
http://www.ecan.govt.nz/Resource+Consents/Hearing+Decisions/ Ends
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