ORC is refreshing its approach to managing air quality. While Otago has made progress in improving air quality in recent years, our science shows we need to rethink how we carry out air-related activities. 

The Regional Plan: Air is due for review, so this is a good time to also refresh our wider strategy, which includes the Plan and other actions aimed at improving air quality.  

Through our monitoring and research, we have a very good understanding of what is affecting air quality and what could be done about it. You can find out more through the links below. 

Now, we'd like to hear your information and thoughts from living and breathing the air in this region.  

Give your feedback on Otago's air

ORC’s role in air quality management

The Resource Management Act 1991 requires regional councils to manage air quality. In Otago, ORC needs to ensure air quality standards are met while also ensuring overall air quality is well managed. Good air is important for the health of Otago’s people and communities. We desire clean air both for ourselves and generations after. 

We carry out science, monitoring and compliance activities and sets rules for air quality. An air quality monitoring network focuses on areas with poor air quality and areas that require improvement. We have a Regional Plan: Air that sets out rules for managing air quality for a range of activities. We also have compliance and enforcement staff responding to air quality issues across Otago, and science and communications staff advising us how and where we need to make a difference. 

You can learn more by visiting our Air care page.

To improve air quality, we need to consider a range of aspects; such as why people make heating choices, how to target support, and how we communicate and coordinate new or improved practices. 

An air monitoring station in Arrowtown.
An ORC air monitoring station in Arrowtown

 

O Te Pū Hau | Air

O Te Pū Hau — the surrounding air and atmosphere — supports all things. In Kāi Tahu traditions, air and atmosphere emerged through traditions. Following the separation of Raki and Papatūānuku, one of their many children, Tāwhirimātea, fled with Raki into the sky and took control of wind and weather. 

Air and atmosphere are taoka — treasured resources provided by the gods to sustain life. They are integral parts of the environment that must be valued, used with respect, and passed on intact to the next generation.  

Air and atmospheric pollution harms and degrades the mauri of this taoka, of te taiao — the environment — and of other taoka such as plants and animals. Poor air quality damages and degrades ancestral lands, mahika kai sites, and other sites such as rock art, adversely affecting the mauri of the landscape and the mana of the people. 

Kaitiakitaka — guardianship of te taiao — requires Papatipu Rūnaka to be actively engaged in air quality management, to ensure Kāi Tahu values are recognised and provided for.

Community drop-in sessions

We will visit communities throughout Otago in late July and August to discuss air quality.

Come along to one of our in-person drop-in sessions between the hours below and talk to staff about the air quality in your town, some of the current air quality issues identified, and some suggested approaches to improve local air quality. 

Balclutha

Tuesday, 13 August | 12–2pm | Cross Recreation Centre, 18 Glasgow Street 

 

Milton

Tuesday, 13 August | 4–7pm | Tokomairiro Community Hub, corner of Union and Shakespeare Streets 

 

Ranfurly

Wednesday, 14 August | 4–7pm | Maniototo Golf Club, 72 Tyrone Street

 

Arrowtown

Tuesday, 20 August | 1-3 and 4–6pm | Arrowtown Community Centre, Jack Reid Park, 12 Centennial Avenue 

Wānaka

Tuesday, 20 August | 12-2pm and 4–7pm | Wānaka Recreation Centre, 41 Sir Tim Wallis Drive 

 

Alexandra

Wednesday, 21 August | 12–2pm and 4–7pm | Alexandra Community Centre, 15 Skird Street 

 

Cromwell

Wednesday, 21 August | 12:30pm-2:30pm and 4–7pm | Cromwell and Districts Presbyterian Church, 10 Elspeth Street 

 

Roxburgh

Thursday, 22 August | 12–3pm | Roxburgh Service Centre, 120 Scotland Street 

Online sessions

If you couldn't make it to one of our drop-in sessions, we have recorded the webinar held on 5 August 2024, where we presented local air quality issues as well as approaches to improving air quality. You can view this recording, and presentation slides, below or watch on our YouTube channel

How to give your feedback

Whether you made it to a drop-in session or not, or have had more time to think, we’d love to hear your feedback. 

Share your thoughts with us via our online feedback form as well as extra details about current home heating and burning habits. 

You can pick up a physical copy of the feedback form at the drop-in sessions and from ORC offices: 

  • Dunedin office:
    Philip Laing House
    Level 2
    144 Rattray Street
    Dunedin 9016

  • Queenstown office:
    Alta House
    Level 1
    Terrace Junction
    1092 Frankton Road
    Queenstown 9300

 

Feedback closes 11.59pm Monday, 26 August.

Give your feedback now

What happens after feedback closes

Once feedback has closed, we will collate and analyse the information received — both online and in-person — and prepare a report to Council. This report will be publicly available and, along with Council’s feedback on it, will inform development of a refreshed approach to air quality management.

We anticipate that this will include a new Air Strategy and Otago Air Regional Plan, with the plan to be notified in June 2025.

If you would like to keep in touch with the Air Quality Management Review process, you can email the team at: policy@orc.govt.nz

The state of air quality in Otago

Our health and the environment need clean air. A HAPINZ study attributed over 3,300 premature deaths per year to air pollution in Aotearoa New Zealand. That’s more than melanoma, diabetes, colon cancer, and road accidents combined. Sadly, some Otago towns rank among the worst in the country for air pollution. 

The National Environmental Standards for Air Quality 2004 (NESAQ) set the limits on pollution for the protection of human health. These are based on guidelines that were set by the World Health Organization (WHO), which have been updated recently with new research and understanding. Some areas of Otago are not meeting the current NESAQ guidelines. 

The key source of air pollution in Otago – in all of New Zealand – is home heating. Air quality is especially poor in parts of Otago because of the unique climate and landscape.  

In places like Alexandra and Arrowtown, smoke gets trapped in winter inversion layers rather than blowing away. While scientific evidence points strongly towards this negatively affecting people’s respiratory health, we also know reliable heating is vital, especially during winter. Electric heating sources like heat pumps need to have a reliable power supply to be suitable replacements, and some heat pumps don’t work well in low temperatures. There's no simple answer – not one that’s safe and quickly achievable at least. 

An inversion layer in Alexandra
An inversion layer in Alexandra

 

It’s not all doom and gloom, though! Otago’s air has been improving, it’s just been slow going. ORC has done a lot of monitoring and research on air quality issues and approaches that could be used to address them.  

You can read a summary of that work through the links at the very bottom of this page. For those who are ready to indulge their inner environment nerd, we’ve linked to some key science reports below to get you started.

Home heating

A warm home is vital in cold Otago winters, and burning wood or coal has been one of the cheapest ways to keep out the chill. Unfortunately, all fuels and burners are not created equal, and the fuels and burner technology people use have a huge influence on air quality.  

Outdoor burning

Outdoor burning is often used in rural areas for things like green waste disposal, disease control and land clearance. Some people also burn food waste and other rubbish, although this isn’t allowed under the current Air Plan.  

Vehicle emissions

We rely on vehicles for personal and commercial transportation, as a convenient and efficient means of travel over short and long distances. However, most vehicles still run on fossil fuels which contribute to environmental degradation by emitting greenhouse gases and pollutants and driving climate change and air pollution. 

Industrial emissions, odour, dust, and agricultural spraying

These emissions often accompany important economic activities – processing, small-scale trades, growing crops, and building infrastructure to name a few. They can cause a range of air quality impacts, but we can take similar approaches to manage them. 

Give your feedback now

Page last updated 9 August 2024.