million IMF Units
of Account, an international “currency”, which is equivalent to ~ US$20 million. However,
in recognition of the costs for clean-up of, and damages arising from, recent industry-
related spills, and indeed what installation owners/operators actually carry by way of
insurance (generally in the hundreds of millions of dollars), work is currently underway to
increase this minimum stipulated amount.
Finally, virtually all of the Taranaki CMA falls within an
Sustainable land-use monitoring in the eastern Taranaki hillcountry and coastal sand country (2008).
result in water contamination may not take place unless
expressly allowed by a rule in a regional plan, resource consent or other relevant
regulations. The control of DWI activities through the resource consenting process
and subsequent compliance monitoring is an appropriate regulatory regime. In the
Taranaki region, the discharge of contaminants by DWI requires resource consent
from the Council. The activity falls under Rule 51 of the Regional Freshwater Plan
for Taranaki and is classified
unless the activity is expressly allowed for by a resource consent or a rule in a
Regional Plan, or it falls within some particular categories set out in Section 14.
Section 15(1)(a) of the RMA stipulates that no person may discharge any contaminant
into water, unless the activity is expressly allowed for by a resource consent or a rule in
a Regional Plan, or by national regulations.
Section 13(1)(a) of the RMA stipulates that no person may use, erect, reconstruct, place,
alter, extend,
Greymouth Petroleum deep well injection resource consent monitoring report 2019-2020
Ample Group consent monitoring report 2019-2020
Lower Waiwhakaiho industries consent monitoring report 2019-2020
Radnor B hydraulic fracturing resource consent monitoring report 2018-2019