Your search for ''nvOpzp; AND 1=1 OR (<'">iKO)),' returned 5202 results.

Service stations

access to the local stormwater either through direct discharge or by being washed off the site by rainfall or by poor forecourt cleaning practices. Pollution minimisation The Taranaki Regional Council recommends the following service station requirements as best management practices. Check this information when operating your service station and when establishing or upgrading daily site operational procedures. If all of the items on the list are fully addressed then the potential for

Executive, Audit & Risk minutes June 2020

and Meetings Act 1987, resolves that the public is excluded from the following part of the proceedings of the Executive, Audit and Risk Committee Meeting on Monday 22 June 2020 for the following reasons: Item 5 - Confidential Minutes - 17 February 2020 That the public conduct of the whole or the relevant part of the proceedings of the meeting would be likely to result in the disclosure of information where the withholding of the information is necessary to protect information where …

Annual report 2012-2013

presents recommendations to be implemented in the 2013-2014 monitoring year. A glossary of common abbreviations and scientific terms, and a bibliography, are presented at the end of the report. page 2 1.1.3 The Resource Management Act 1991 and monitoring The Resource Management Act 1991 (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

Biodiversity on land

page 144TARANAKI AS ONE—Taranaki Tāngata Tū Tahi ‘The arrival of humans radically changed New Zealand’s indigenous biodiversity.’ Biodiversity on land Biodiversity on land, or terrestrial biodiversity, includes the plants, animals and ecosystems that are based on land. The arrival of humans radically changed New Zealand’s indigenous biodiversity. Introduced animals have preyed on or competed with native species, or degraded their habitat. Exotic plants also became

22Furtherinformatoin AppendixR

production process 1.2.1. Acceptance of incoming greenwatse All green waste is collected at either a refuse transfer station or brought directly to the site. The site manager inspects greenwaste delivered to ensure it is not contaminated. e Materials specifically excluded are ~ Treated timber ~ Food scraps ~ Household refuse Any unsuitable material to be separated from the green waste (if possible) and sent directly to the appropriate disposal site ~ Cleanfill

Land management study unit

students in: • investigating, using, and understanding the technological products, systems and environments that have developed in their society • identifying and exploring needs and opportunities which may be met through technological activity • creating and evaluating ideas to improve or modify technology in relation to these identified needs and opportunities • designing their own technological solutions • recognising the inter-relationship of technology and society –

Agenda

inhabited part of a rating unit (SUIP): A SUIP is defined as a separately used or occupied part of a rating unit and includes any part of a rating unit that is used or occupied by any person, other than the ratepayer, having a right to use or inhabit that part by virtue of a tenancy, lease, licence, or other agreement, or any part or parts of a rating unit that are used or occupied by the ratepayer for more than one single use. Ordinary Meeting - Confirmation of Minutes 7 page

Poles - why plant them?

deep-rooting. Afforestation with pines, or reversion to indigenous scrub, are not the only options for dealing with erosion- prone land. Much erodible hill country can be stabilised and sustained as farmland by planting poles into pastoral areas. In the past, poles have mainly been used for riverbank or roadside stabilisation in Taranaki. As they grow well in the local climate, they can also be used for stabilising erosion-prone hillslopes. When driving in or out of the region, many examples of their

Info Sheet: AEE requirements for hydraulic fracturing applications

fracture fluids to land at depth under the Resource Management Act 1991 (RMA) must be accompanied by an Assessment of Environmental Effects (AEE) report. Section 5.1 of the report sets out the RMA requirements for a discharge in more detail. The purpose of the AEE is to determine the likely adverse effects that the activity will have on the environment and how these effects can be avoided, remedied or mitigated. The AEE should present such detail as corresponds with the scale and significance

Petrochem Ltd Kowhai-A hydraulic fracturing 2017-2018

groundwater or surface water resources. There were no unauthorised incidents recording non-compliance in respect of the resource consent held by Petrochem in relation to these activities or provisions in regional plans, during the period under review. Petrochem demonstrated a high level of environmental and administrative performance and compliance with the resource consents over the reporting period. For reference, in the 2017-2018 year, consent holders were found to achieve a high level of