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Form No 520 Certificate of Compliance

page 07/23- #650412 Page 5 of 8 4.4 State the relevant regional plan[s] and rule[s] numbers this application falls under. Regional Fresh Water Plan  Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Air Quality Plan  Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Coastal Plan  Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ Regional Soil Plan  Rule Number[s] ___________________________________ No Specific Rule  [eg,

10AEE AppendixH

coincided with 102 and 59 mm of rainfall in the preceding two-day~s, ;wi'thelevated"soil11 moistures in the range of 44 and 45 %. Conversely, prior to January 8th 2015, Uruti receh/edonlv 1 mm of rain in the previous eight days, with soil moistures at 32 %, this would'have'resultedTn' minimal outflow 'gaining' from the Haehanga Stream to the groundwater table. company Commercial in confidence 6/2015 page 14745-1 Table 2.4:Stream and Groundwater Elevations (msl) Date Bore Bore

22Furtherinformatoin AppendixR

Bio-Gro "customer site" for a. A minimum of 3 weeks, before spreading (no turning required). - 7 - page Remediation (NZ) Ltd RW-P-751-001-B Organic Production Protocols Greenwaste Composting & Vermiculture b. A cover should be applied to reduce excess moisture retention from rain events. c. The Revital contract spreader will ensure that before the product is spread it has met 2(a) above, and the spreading records will be filed as part of the completed order;

Recount 104 - March 2017

and oil prices. “But we remain committed to providing world-class logistics services for our customers and Taranaki businesses, and supporting our community through our shareholder the Taranaki Regional Council,” he says. A final dividend of $2.462 million was paid to REGIONAL COUNCILLORS New Plymouth Constituency: Tom Cloke David Lean Charlotte Littlewood Bev Raine Craig Williamson 06 753 5586 06 753 3325 027 354 5330 06 757 5825 027 687 4122 North

Recount 102 - September 2016

nicer to look at now, and it’s got to be better for the health of the stream,” he says. “Certainly with the winter rains when the erosion comes through – the big floods – the stabilisation of the creek-banks is way better than it used to be. There’s not the erosion once it’s been planted out and is established.” Donna says that by ordering their plants from the Regional Council a year in advance, they’ve been able to plan ahead and buy species that will attract native

Recount 96 - March 2015

Wetland treasure A Taranaki couple’s award- winning efforts to preserve and enhance native biodiversity on their hillcountry bush block were highlighted at a public field trip to mark World Wetlands Day in early February. Nature celebrated too, sending heavy rain which was welcomed across the region after a very dry January. Despite the weather, 30 people turned out for the field trip at the property of David and Marie Russell at Toro

Tawhiti Catchment monitoring report 2018-2019

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

Irrigation Water Monitoring Programme Annual Report 2021-2022

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

Schedule of charges Annual Plan 2023 2024

hydrometric equipment $680.90 per year Tawhiti 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