monoxide,
combustible gases, PM10 particulates, and nitrogen oxides were all below levels of concern at the time of
sampling. No offensive or objectionable odours were detected beyond the boundary during inspections,
and there were no complaints in relation to air emissions from the site.
During the monitoring period, WestSide demonstrated a high level of both environmental performance and
administrative compliance with respect to their resource consents.
For reference, in the 2020-2021
1 Schedule 1 section 16 (of the RMA) directs a local authority to make an amendment to its proposed plan that is required by a direction of the Environment Court under section 293.
2 Section 86F (of the RMA) directs that rules in a proposed plan must be treated as operative if the time for making submissions and lodging appeals has expired and, in relation to the rule, no
appeals have been lodged, all appeals have been determined or all appeals withdrawn or dismissed.
page
i i
showed that CCCWSL complied with consent conditions in regards to discharge standards
and abstraction rates. There were no unauthorised incidents recording non-compliance in respect of this
consent holder during the period under review.
The results of the biomonitoring surveys found no evidence of effects as a result of discharges, structures or
water abstraction.
During the year, CCCWSL demonstrated a high level of environmental and administrative performance with
resource consents.
Pukengahu closed
landfills included one site inspection each, along with two water samples collected from each site for
physicochemical analysis.
The monitoring showed that there were no significant adverse effects occurring as a result of the exercise of
the Huiroa or Pukengahu landfill consents. There were no unauthorised incidents noted in respect to either
landfill during the year under review.
During the year, SDC demonstrated a high level of environmental and high level of
environment resulting from the exercise of the air discharge
consent. The ambient air quality monitoring at the Maui Production Station showed that levels of carbon
monoxide, combustible gases, PM10 particulates, and nitrogen oxides were all below levels of concern at the
time of sampling. No offensive or objectionable odours were detected beyond the boundaries during
inspections.
During the period under review, OMV demonstrated an overall high level of both environmental
performance and
The RMA primarily addresses environmental ‘effects’ which are defined as positive or adverse, temporary or
permanent, past, present or future, or cumulative. Effects may arise in relation to:
a. the neighbourhood or the wider community around an activity, and may include cultural and social-
economic effects;
b. physical effects on the locality, including landscape, amenity and visual effects;
c. ecosystems, including effects on plants, animals, or habitats, whether aquatic or
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ecosystems for zinc or
copper, and all other parameters were below levels stipulated by consent conditions.
Biomonitoring results indicated that treated stormwater discharged from the site was not having a
detrimental effect on the macroinvertebrate communities of the unnamed tributary of the Mangaone
Stream.
The results from deposition gauging indicated that there was an environmentally acceptable level of
particulate deposition in the vicinity of the foundry site. No visible emissions or
catchment, a tributary of the Patea River. The Company currently processes
only beef. Wastewater is treated in a two pond system, which is either irrigated to land when conditions
allow, or to the Kahouri Stream, ideally during high flow conditions. This report for the period July 2020 to
June 2021 describes the monitoring programme implemented by the Taranaki Regional Council (the
Council) to assess the Company’s environmental and consent compliance performance during the period
under review. The
nine and
‘minimal’ in one. Where the vulnerability of an estuary
was ‘high’ or ‘moderate to high’, this was largely due to the
effects of sedimentation rather than eutrophication. This
was the case for seven of the 20 estuaries assessed, namely.
Mōhakatino, Tongaporutu, Urenui, Mimitangiatua, Waitara,
Pātea and Waitōtara.
Vulnerability to sedimentation was generally attributed
to high sediment loads from the catchment, and the high
proportion of soft mud