1 / 20

Outline

Hurunui – Waiau Zone Committee Meeting Proposed N-Allocation for South Coastal Canterbury Streams (SCCS) C olin Hurst -with tech support Ned Norton 22 September 2014 Waikari Community Hall. Outline. SCCS background Tension and protest Forming a “NARG” group Key features of the NARG process

mills
Download Presentation

Outline

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hurunui –Waiau Zone Committee MeetingProposed N-Allocation for South Coastal Canterbury Streams (SCCS)Colin Hurst -with tech support Ned Norton22 September 2014Waikari Community Hall

  2. Outline • SCCS background • Tension and protest • Forming a “NARG” group • Key features of the NARG process • Where did we get to? • Proposed SCCS N-Allocation framework • Concluding thoughts • Questions & discussion?

  3. SCCS background • We have red, orange and green catchments under LWRP • Consented new schemes (WD & HDI) would add 27,000 ha new irrigation

  4. Tension and protest • Feb 19th – Draft ZIP Addendum (N-allo based on Selwyn-Waihora framework) • Land owners confused? Uncertainty of what all this means ! • Protest at Zone committee meeting • Equity concerns

  5. Forming a “NARG” group • Ok you farmers sort it out! - formation of Nitrogen Allocation Reference Group (NARG) • 20 members – open to public NARG Purpose: “To work with ECan to assess and describe the consequences of different options for allocating N load in the South Canterbury Coastal Streams (SCCS) area”

  6. Key features of NARG process • NARG to operate within guidelines and total N allocation already agreed • Come up with allocation method • Working to a tight deadline! • Ten meetings, at times meeting weekly • Technical support

  7. Key features of NARG process • Negotiation between high and low emitting land users • Support of Federated Farmers & Dairy NZ • Informal meetings behind the scene • Invaluable support of regional council staff and the technical lead • Trust and Respect Considered a range of (7+) options… see next

  8. Range of N-Allocation Options Solution Space!!! (as also described by Land &Water Partnership on Tuesday 13 May) Change from current situation

  9. Range of N-Allocation Options At NARG’s request we shortlisted three options… 1 2 Grand-parenting GMP at Current land use GMP based on land use + flex cap + max Modified Equal Allocation Simple Averaging Land Use Capability (Natural Capital) 3 GMP based on soil, rainfall (single land use)

  10. Where did we get to? – key principles • Protecting property owners equity • Enabling low emitters to intensify up till flex cap • Protecting high emitters investment by making reductions over time • Recognise water quality outcomes must be met

  11. Proposed SCCS N-Alloframework • Everyone starts at their 2009-13 N “baseline” as per LWRP • Everyone to be at least at GMP for their baseline landuse – as per MGM project numbers. • High emitters reduce through time – “Max Caps” • Low emitters can intensify up to “Flexibility Cap” • Flexibility cap increases through time as mitigation occurs (flow augmentation) and gains are realised from the Max Caps

  12. Maximum Caps High emitters must reduce through time… (better than GMP for high emitters on light soils)

  13. Flexibility caps for low emitters Increase through time… • Start at 10 kg/ha/yr for Wainono (red zone) • Increase to 15kg once flow augmentation • Increase to 17kg once Max Caps achieved, provided WQ outcomes being met Note “steep hill” areas get 5kg/ha/yr (can’t transfer load from steep hills to “average out” high losses on flat)

  14. Implications of Max & Flex Caps? Red land uses must reduce to meet Max Caps (35, 25, 20) Orange land uses carry on at GMP but can’t increase DRAFT NUMBERS Green land uses may increase to Flex Cap of 15 (but still at GMP)

  15. Concluding thoughts • Phosphate/Sediment controlled by FEP and GMP • Soils are the key • Power of a consensus decision

  16. ENDQuestions & discussion?

  17. Possibly useful slides to have on hand…

  18. Soils: S-Map + local hill estimates Note narrow “ribbons” of XL, VL and L soils along river courses

  19. DRAFT N load estimates Northern streams Otaio = 169 t/yr Kohika = 96 t/yr Horseshoe = 51 t/yr Makikihi = 145 t/yr Waihao Wainono Existing use = 680 t/yr HDI & WD = 227 t/yr Flexibility ‘bucket’= 214 t/yr Total =1121 t/yr Morven &SinclairsMorven = 307 t/yr Sinclairs = 61 t/yr

More Related