Guide to regulating oil & gas exploration & development activities under the Resource Management Act
Guide to regulating oil and gas exploration and development activities under the Resource Management Act.
Guide to regulating oil and gas exploration and development activities under the Resource Management Act.
Manawa Energy Mangorei HEP Annual Report 2023-2024
Regional Transport Committee agenda December 2020
irrigation in Taranaki does take place within Zones 2, 3, 4 and 5, which represents a 10 km wide belt of coastal land stretching from Oakura to Waitotara. 1.1.7 Irrigation systems In general there are two types of irrigation methods; surface and pressurised. The majority of irrigation systems currently in operation in the region fall in to the pressurised category. Pressurised systems can be further differentiated based on the method of operation and equipment used. A summary of the systems
this coastal area is considered ’high energy’, and also that there is only a very narrow strip of beach (at low tide only), any waters emerging from the cliff would be swiftly mixed and dispersed. Any effects on groundwater quality or coastal water quality would be negligible. In general, the creation of stable interlocked layers of green waste ensures that it does not fall off, or get blown off the cliffs and down onto the coastal marine area or into the sea. From observations made during
Users: 5223 Tourism Sites: 1 State Highway: 10km Omamari Maunganui Bluff TECT Park (Adrenalin Forest) Utakura: Twin Coast Cycle Trail. Maruia Falls Buller Gorge Lake Rotoroa Cape Palliser Kenepuru Head Cable Bay Okiwi Bay Entrances/exits to Heaphy Track Totaranui Beach and campsite Pongaroa Wharariki Beach Cape Farewell Blackhead Kairakau Beach Waipatiki Beach Strathmore Tutira Raurimu Waihua Tongaporutu Entrances/exits to The Timber Trail
hydrometric equipment (lower) $1,730.30 per year Tawhiti hydrometric equipment (upper) $1,070.30 per year Waingongoro hydrometric equipment $830.50 per year Waitaha hydrometric equipment $8,091.60 per year Rain Gauge Calibration $336.60 per deployment Chlorine Meter $20.80 per use Drone $132.00 per day Multi-parameter Field Meter $112.20 per day Haehanga hydrometric equipment $2,383.20 per year EXPLANATION This scale of charges is used to calculate the Council's
NPDC coastal structures consent monitoring report 2019-2020
12:40 8.7 28.2 7.7 12.9 24 0.5 0.052 2.4 0.016 3 13:33 9.1 28.2 7.9 11.6 21 0.4 0.041 2.4 0.02 4 13:50 9 28.1 7.9 11.6 20 < 0.4 0.037 2.4 0.016 The results of sampling show little difference between the upstream and downstream sites with regard to the parameters tested on the dates sampled, with the exception of total BOD. Variation between sampling dates related largely to recent rain events in the catchment. As has been observed in some previous surveys, several surveys in the 2018-2019
Council that the ground conditions were in line with the consent conditions (23 and 24) of the expired consent. Further, a stormwater sample page 16 was collected from pooled rain water which demonstrated no elevated contaminants were present in the sample. The Council’s position was that the works did not result in any on-going discharge of contaminants to the environment as a process of the skimmer pit development. Additional surface water samples are proposed in the