- Unless managed elsewhere, discharges to land or water are permitted if they:
- Do not contain any hazardous substances, pests, pest agents, unwanted organisms, or organisms of interest
- Do not introduce live aquatic life to a water body where the species is not already present or increase the population of an undesirable fish species
- Do not alter the natural course of a water body or its bed or change the water level range or hydrological function of a natural inland wetland
- Do not cause flooding, erosion, land instability, sedimentation, or property damage, or result in ponding or overland flow
- Are not from or into contaminated land or directly into groundwater
- If the discharge is to water, it complies with the receiving water standards after reasonable mixing and is not within a drinking water protection zone, mātaitai reserve, or taiāpure
- If the discharge is to land, it is not within a drinking water protection zone or 20 metres of a lake, river, coastal marine area, or a bore.
- Discharges to land or water that do not comply with the conditions above require consent as a discretionary activity.
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- Unless managed elsewhere, discharges to land or water are permitted if they:
- Do not result in flooding, erosion, land instability or property damage
- Do not discharge water from one catchment to water in another catchment
- Do not change the water level range or hydrological function of any Regionally Significant Wetland
- If the discharge enters water in any lake, river, wetland or the coastal marine area (or enters a water race or drain that goes to those waters), the discharge does not result in a conspicuous change in colour or visual clarity, or a noticeable increase in local sedimentation, does not have floatable or suspended organic materials and does not have an odour, oil or grease film, scum or foam
- From 1 April 2026, if water flows fall below the reference flow, the discharge does not exceed specified discharge thresholds.
- Discharges to land or water that do not comply with the above conditions above require resource consent as a restricted discretionary activity if they are:
- Not otherwise prohibited
- Only for a period of up to five years
- Do not result in flooding, erosion, land instability or property damage
- Do not discharge water from one catchment to water in another catchment
- Do not change the water level range or hydrological function of any Regionally Significant Wetland
- Not previously authorised under the rule.
- The Council’s discretion is limited to the nature, type, volume, frequency, and location of the discharge; the concentration and loading of contaminants in the discharge; the staged timeframe for meeting the permitted activity conditions, and a wide range of adverse effects associated with the discharge
- Discharges to land or water that do not comply with the conditions above require consent as a discretionary activity unless they are prohibited
- Discharges to water that produce an objectionable odour, or a conspicuous oil or grease film, scum, or foam in any lake, river, or Regionally Significant Wetland; or drain or water race that flows to a lake, river, Regionally Significant Wetland, or coastal marine area; or bore or soak hole are prohibited activities.
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