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 actual and reasonable costs when carrying out functions
under the Resource Management Act 1991. Where those actual and
Guide to regulating oil and gas exploration and development activities under the Resource Management Act.
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
Regional Transport Committee agenda December 2020
Fonterra Kapuni Annual Report 2022-2023
Taranaki
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Council that the ground conditions
were in line with the consent conditions (23 and 24) of the expired consent. Further, a stormwater sample
page
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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
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
of the time. There were two occasions when CCCWSL were required to use their
exceptional use limit of 79 L/s due to the reservoir levels falling below 80%. In both these instances CCCWSL
advised Council and affected parties of this requirement, as per their consent conditions. Figure 2 shows
CCCWSL’s abstraction for the 2021-2022 monitoring period.
Figure 2 CCCWSL abstraction rates for 2021-2022
2.4 Hydrological inspections and residual flow assessment
CCCWSL provides telemetered