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Message to Wellington 2017

Taranaki Mt Taranaki together with Egmont National Park is the primary visitor asset in Taranaki. Yet the connections to the Park are suffering from under investment. Uncertainty about who is to take financial responsibility for roading operations and maintenance within the Park is not helping. North Egmont, Stratford and Dawson Falls roadends are currently 100% funded by the Crown through the New Zealand Transport Agency but this has been under review for some time with no

Fact sheet 1: Sheep dips in NZ

responsibility to ensure non-work related people, including children and visitors, do not come to harm from the dip site. Accidental drowning has occurred at a plunge dip and personal injury has been known to happen from falls and trips around dips sites. Some dip sites are situated in ‘amenity land’ - areas of public land or public access (e.g. camping grounds) and owners and occupiers need to ensure visitors and residents are not exposed to unnecessary risk. Locating former sheep dip sites There

Introduction and guide to regional rules

104 matters. The Taranaki Regional Council may consider any matter allowed under section 104, including all effects on the environment. If the resource consent is granted, the Taranaki Regional Council may set any conditions on the permit that fall within the Taranaki Regional Council's powers under section 108 of the Act. A non-complying activity is an activity (not being a prohibited activity) which is either defined in the rule as a non-complying activity, or, contravenes a rule

Appendix 8: Chimney heights

uncorrected chimney height Consideration of locality 17 The initial step is to consider the character of the surrounding district which for this purpose will be regarded as falling into one of the following categories: A a rural area, and no other comparable industrial emissions within 1 kilometre of the chimney under consideration; B a partially developed area with scattered houses, and no other comparable industrial emissions within 1

Report 2012-2014

and enhancement activities (well workovers). 1.3 Resource consents 1.3.1 Water abstraction permit (groundwater) Section 14 of the RMA stipulates that no person may take, use, dam or divert any water, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by resource consent or a rule in a regional plan, or it falls within some particular categories set out in Section 14. GPL holds water permit 7067-1 to take groundwater during hydrocarbon exploration and production operations from up

Offshore subtidal rocky reef habitats on Patea Bank South Taranaki

patch reefs on Pātea Bank. This new knowledge is put within the context of existing knowledge of other subtidal reef systems within TRC’s management region (territorial sea). This new knowledge helps fill in major fundamental gaps around coastal habitats and associated ecological assemblages, which fall under TRCs management responsibilities. 1.1 General background The South Taranaki Bight (STB) covers an extensive seafloor area (12,500 km2) and is in part characterised by an extensive

Report 2014

no person may take, use, dam or divert any water, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by resource consent or a rule in a regional plan, or it falls within some particular categories set out in Section 14. The Council determined that the application to take groundwater fell within Rule 49 of the Regional Freshwater Plan for Taranaki (RFWP) as the rate and daily volume of the groundwater abstraction may have exceeded that of the permitted activity (Rule 48). Rule 49 provides for

Taranaki tsunami inundation analysis

areas – map reference sheets 3 Wave Details The wave patterns used in the models are shown in Figure 3. page Taranaki Tsunami Inundation Analysis 4936_AM1708_Taranaki_Tsunami_Inundation_Analysis_Update_2017_Final.docx 4 Figure 3: Tsunami Wave Patterns used in 2D model The highest wave amplitudes were applied at mid-tide levels. The wave heights are applied such that the 2 m wave rises 1 m above and falls 1 m below the normal tide, the 4 m wave