enforcement for the period 30 April 2020 to 21 May 2020.
3.2 An update was provided on the Ammonia leak from Silver Fern Farms. Further
information has been requested and the event is still under investigation.
3.3 Members requested to have comments from Iwi included in reports on major issues, it
was noted that if an incident was likely to end up in court, commentary cannot be
included as it could jeopardise the hearing.
3.4 It was noted that there was no ecological investigation into …
Todd Petroleum Mining Company Ltd and Todd Energy Ltd Seismic Surveys Annual Report 2015-2021
three offshore wellhead platforms to the foreshore at mean high water
spring. This permit was issued by the Taranaki Regional Council on 16 June 2003 under
Section 87(e) of the Resource Management Act and granted by Hon Chris Carter
pursuant to the provisions of section 119 of the Resource Management Act on 12 July
2003. It is due to expire on 1 June 2033.
There are seven special conditions attached to the permit.
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8
Condition 1 requires the consent holder to map
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Date 22 November 2022, 10.30am
Venue: Taranaki Regional Council Boardroom, 47 Cloten Road, Stratford
Document: 3124846
Members Councillor S W Hughes Chairperson
D M Cram Deputy Chairperson
M J Cloke
B J Bigham Via Zoom
M G Davey
D H McIntyre
D L Lean Via Zoom
N W Walker ex officio
C L Littlewood ex officio
Representative
Members Mr D Luke Iwi Representative
Attending Mr S J Ruru Chief
development of annual work
plans, operating procedures and contingency plans. Chapters on monitoring and
evaluation of the Plan, and governance arrangements follow.
A glossary, terms of reference for CDEM advisory groups, a map of CDEM plans and
standard operating procedures and a summary of the risk analysis are contained in
appendices I-IV.
Core principles and framework 1.2.2.
This Plan is a statutory requirement of the CDEM Act 2002 (section 48). The Act
requires that Group plans
Purpose: Replace
To discharge farm dairy effluent onto land
Rohe:
Te Atiawa (Statutory Acknowledgement)
Engagement or consultation:
Te Kotahitanga o Te Atiawa Trust Comment on application received
Comments from Iwi
The proposed discharge to land is generally consistent with the objectives and policies set out in Tai Whenua,
Tai Tangata, Tai Ao however the application lacks sufficient detail.
Response to Iwi comments
A response was sent to Te Kotahitanga o Te
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Taranaki Regional Council Monthly Rainfall and Environmental
Data Report for March 2025
Note: The data presented here are provisional data only and may change as a result of quality control at a later date.
1. Rainfall
Map 1: March total rainfall (mm) and percentage of long-term mean (colour key).
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Map 1a. Total rainfall 1 January to end March (mm) and percentage of long-term mean (colour key).
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Table 1: Rainfall March
injection. Ponds 1, 2 and 4 had a good cover of crust.
The burn pile contained prohibited items including treated timber from scaffolding and fibre glass based
product. The environment manger said this would be removed. Pond 6 was less turbid than past visits and
the environment manager advised that pond 6 would soon be discharged to the Inaha Stream as the
paddocks were becoming saturated, and that the Council and iwi would be informed beforehand.
Rubbish was noted around the Bulk Lines truck
outline how the Waitara River Committee, and relevant Iwi authorities that have an interest in the Waitara River catchment, might work with Council in its policy development, consenting and environmental monitoring functions.
_Toc127883382 Bylaws
The Council has established two sets of bylaws. These bylaws are the Taranaki Regional Council Navigation Bylaws for Port Taranaki and its approaches 2009 and the Taranaki Regional Council Flood Protection Bylaw 2020. These bylaws came into effect
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Māori
freshwater values
Tangata whenua (people of the land) hold an inherited
responsibility through whakapapa (genealogical
relationships) to ensure the health and wellbeing of their
ancestral awa (rivers and streams) and other interconnected
aspects of te taiao (the natural environment).
Over centuries of occupation, local iwi and hapū relied on
te taiao to provide physical and spiritual sustenance. The
awa, ngutuawa (estuaries) and repo (wetlands)