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‘None of South Wairarapa’s wastewater plants are compliant’

 

Emily Ireland
[email protected]

All three of South Wairarapa’s urban wastewater treatment plants are non-compliant, documents from Wellington Water [WW] show.

While wastewater issues in Featherston had taken the spotlight in recent years, a WW report stated that both Greytown and Martinborough wastewater treatment plants were also in need of “major investment”.

But the report said current funding levels from South Wairarapa District Council “do not meet this requirement”.

Martinborough’s current wastewater scheme, which irrigated treated effluent to land and water, had been operating since December 2017. Greytown’s had been operating since 2019.

A similar scheme was proposed for Featherston, but there was public opposition at the time, and the consent was withdrawn.

To date, the Featherston wastewater plant was operating on an extension of an old consent.

The WW report stated that Greater Wellington Regional Council [GWRC] had issued “letters requesting explanations of non-compliance” for Greytown, Martinborough, and Featherston wastewater treatment plants, “which Wellington Water has responded to”.

In Martinborough, the current wastewater plan design was “insufficient to avoid non-compliance”, the report said.

“Effluent discharge rate and quality to both land and river exceed current consent limits.

“[There are] significant reliability issues with the land irrigator [not fit for purpose].

“This is contributing to the poor performance of the plant.”

WW said management plans required by consents were in development for Martinborough, and stakeholder engagement planning was underway.

Monitoring and analysis were also being done to understand the effects on the ecology of the Ruamahanga River.

In Greytown, the current plan was also “insufficient to avoid non-compliance”.

“A consent requirement to discharge treated effluent to land is hindered by competing land use,” WW said.

“This is affecting the performance of the plant.

“[There is] further consent compliance risk due to the plant requiring significant management of resources focused on effluent quality.”

WW said it was “undertaking a programme of work to improve the treated effluent discharge rates in relation to the stream flow rate”.

WW said Featherston’s wastewater treatment plant needed ongoing management of resources focused on effluent to comply with consent conditions.

The consent extension would run out next year, and efforts were underway to gain a short-term consent.

A long-term option had not yet been decided, but early estimations indicated it could cost between $30 million and $215m.

Meanwhile, South Wairarapa District Council’s [SWDC] fourth wastewater treatment plant – in Lake Ferry – was compliant.

WW said an operations and management plan for Lake Ferry had been submitted for certification by GWRC.

“Further investment is required to achieve this management plan,” WW said.

Lake Ferry’s existing resource consent would expire in 2025.

At last week’s Martinborough Community Board meeting, SWDC partnerships and operations manager Stefan Corbett said South Wairarapa’s wastewater treatment plants “suffer from very similar deficiencies”.

“There are often inundation problems, so there is more volume than there should be.

“They lack some basic infrastructure. They don’t have screening gates that screen off large items.

“There’s quite a lot of sludge in the ponds, which means they’re not effective.

“And then there’s this consistent problem of how we deal with nitrates in the process.”

Corbett said that if moving bed bioreactor [MBBR] trials in Featherston were successful, “that learning will be spread across other wastewater treatment plants if they have a similar need”.

SWDC chief executive Harry Wilson signalled the extent of the district’s water issues at a recent Annual Plan Zoom session.

“Council is charged with making sure your water supplies are safe, and they haven’t been,” he said.

“Equally – that we don’t contaminate our environment with discharges from our wastewater plants.

“None of our wastewater plants are compliant, and there’s a bit of technical detail on that.

“Water is the big, big thing that is driving council activities.”

The Wellington Water Committee was set to meet on Friday at 10am at the Hutt City Council Chambers.
– NZLDR
Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air

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